The quality of your life is determined largely by the meaning you find in the relationships you choose, but many of us end up with broken relationships that need to be repaired. What’s just as bad is that we waste time with relationships that need to die.
We forget that the time we spend on a toxic relationship is time we can’t spend on a more healthy one. This is true whether it’s a romantic relationship or a close friendship or a family relationship.
The quality of our lives will change depending on the choices we make about shedding what she be dumped and healing the relationship that need to be repaired.
Preview of next week’s show: Why do we so often make the mistake of begging someone else to love us or to choose us? Don’t we understand that when we put so little value on ourselves that we beg for someone to love us, we’re setting ourselves up to be hurt — and we’re sending the other person a signal that we need them more than they need us.
You can’t force someone to believe you are worth making a priority. If you try, you will end up bitter, hurt and angry. If a person doesn’t value you enough to make you a priority, it doesn’t matter what he or she says — even if the words are, “I love you.”
Love is lived out through priorities and actions, not words and wishes. If you wait and beg to become someone’s priority, you’re not showing how much you love someone else. You’re showing how little you value yourself.

Memory Lane is seductive when
Sounds of old music awakened repressed feelings from my past
My teen hijinks were silly fun, not alcohol-fueled drunken groping
Becoming who we’re meant to be is the hardest battle of our lives
My ego threatens to take over when I whisper, ‘I deserve better’
Too many voices with little to say: Politics matters less and less to me
N.C. Eagle Scout can’t graduate after accidentally bringing gun to school
Man’s unconscious night after stroke leaves me uneasy about living alone
Until we experience awakening, we’re blind to truth in our hearts