Showing posts with label Discipline. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Discipline. Show all posts

Friday, 24 April 2026

The Quiet Strength That Protects Love

Love is not sustained by passion alone. It is sustained by restraint. That restraint is called discipline which is an act of self-control.

Self-control in a relationship is the ability to govern your emotions, words, impulses, and reactions in ways that preserve respect, trust, and intimacy, even when you are hurt, angry, tempted, or misunderstood.

It is choosing not to say the cruel thing you know will wound your partner.

It is refusing to let jealousy become surveillance.

It is resisting the urge to punish your partner with silence, manipulation, or revenge.

It is understanding that love without discipline can become chaos.


What Self-Control Looks Like in Love

1. Emotional Regulation

 Not every feeling deserves immediate expression.

Being upset does not mean exploding. Feeling neglected does not justify accusations. Self-control allows you to pause before reacting and ask, What am I really feeling? What response will help rather than destroy?

A mature partner responds; an immature one only reacts.

2. Guarding Your Tongue

 Words spoken in anger often leave permanent scars.

Self-control means learning how to disagree without humiliation, correct without contempt, and express pain without becoming cruel.

Some relationships do not die from betrayal. They die from repeated verbal wounds.

3. Managing Desire and Temptation

 Commitment often requires private discipline before public loyalty.

Flirtations, emotional affairs, secrecy, and boundary violations rarely begin as disasters. They begin as unchecked impulses.

Self-control protects fidelity long before temptation grows teeth.

4. Controlling Possessiveness

 Love is not ownership.

Without self-control, insecurity can turn into monitoring, suspicion, and domination. But healthy love gives space, trusts, and does not suffocate.

Why Self-Control Matters

Without self-control:

  • Anger becomes abuse.
  • Disappointment becomes resentment.
  • Attraction becomes infidelity.
  • Conflict becomes warfare.

With self-control:

  • Conflict becomes conversation.
  • Desire becomes devotion.
  • Freedom coexists with commitment.
  • Love becomes safe.

Self-control does not suppress love. It protects it.


How to Achieve Self-Control in a Relationship

1. Know Your Triggers
 Pay attention to what makes you reactive.

Is it feeling ignored? Rejection? Criticism? Fear of abandonment?

Awareness is the first layer of discipline. You cannot govern what you do not recognise.

2. Practice the Pause

 Before responding in conflict, pause.

A few seconds can save years of regret.

Pause before texting in anger.
 Pause before assuming betrayal.
 Pause before escalating.

Space often prevents damage.

3. Strengthen Inner Security

 Many control problems in relationships come from unmanaged insecurity.

Work on self-worth outside the relationship.

A person at peace within themselves is less likely to become controlling, jealous, or emotionally reckless.

4. Set Boundaries With Yourself

 Self-control is easier when supported by boundaries.

Examples:

  • “I will not continue arguments when either of us is shouting.”
  • “I won’t discuss relationship issues while angry.”
  • “I do not entertain emotional intimacy with people outside my commitment.”

Discipline thrives where standards exist.

5. Learn Delayed Reaction

 Not every problem must be confronted immediately.

Sometimes wisdom says, “I will address this when I can do so calmly.”

Urgency often fuels destruction.

6. Develop Humility

 Pride fights to win.

Self-control often looks like apologising first, listening longer, and choosing peace over ego.

Humility is disciplined love.

7. Practice Daily, Not Only During Crisis

 Self-control is a muscle.

It grows in ordinary moments:

  • listening without interrupting
  • keeping promises
  • respecting boundaries
  • managing tone
  • being faithful in small things

You build it before you need it.

Many people think love is proven by intensity.

Often it is proven by restraint.

By the anger you chose not to unleash.
 By the temptation you refused.
 By the hurtful words you swallowed.
 By the ego you surrendered.

That is self-control.

And in relationships, self-control is not the enemy of passion.

It is what keeps passion from destroying the very love it seeks to protect.



Friday, 6 February 2015

It is OK to spank children as long as their dignity is maintained - Pope Francis

Pope Francis gives his speech in the Synod hall on the occasion of the closing ceremony of the IV Scholas Occurrentes World Educational Congress, Thursday February 5th. Photograph: Gregorio Borgia/AP
Pope Francis
Pope Francis said it is OK to spank children to discipline them — as long as their dignity is maintained.

The Pope made this comments during his weekly general audience in the Vatican, where he dealt with the role of fathers in the family.

He outlined the traits of a good father — one who forgives but is able to “correct with firmness” while not discouraging the child.

According to AP news agency, the pontiff commended the behavior of one father who had told him, "I sometimes have to smack my children a bit, but never in the face so as to not humiliate them."

"How beautiful!" Francis is quoted as having said. "He knows the sense of dignity! He has to punish them, but does it justly and moves on."

Defending the pope's remarks, Rev. Thomas Rosica, who collaborates with the Vatican's press office, said Francis was not condoning violence or cruelty against children, but speaking about "helping someone to grow and mature."

"Simply watch Pope Francis when he is with children and let the images and gestures speak for themselves! To infer or distort anything else ... reveals a greater problem for those who don't seem to understand a pope who has ushered in a revolution of normalcy of simple speech and plain gesture," Rosica wrote.

The Quiet Strength That Protects Love

Love is not sustained by passion alone. It is sustained by restraint. That restraint is called discipline which is an act of self-control. S...