Skip to content

Meditations on God

  • Robert Van Valkenburgh

  • To Be Seen And Loved Requires Risk

    Sometimes we find ourselves stuck in a feedback loop of loneliness and pain, the only solution for which is vulnerability and trust.

    Some of us spend our whole lives waiting to be seen and loved for who we are instead of for who others want or need us to be. We learn that our ability to be loved and cared for is conditional upon what we give of ourselves to others and not who we are at the level of our deepest truth. This often leaves us feeling as if we only have two choices: to be loved for being someone we are not or to be unloved and alone.

    As the result, we spend much of our life either running toward others as a way of trying to get attention, love, and affection or we spend our lives running away from intimacy as a means of self-protection. Often, it is some confusing combination of both and we try to be loved by being something we are not which results in us not being loved for who we are, proving our pain and loneliness, and pushing us back into isolation. In other words, we create our own abandonment feedback loop.

    If we are fortunate enough to meet someone who actually sees us and loves us, not only for who we are, but for who we are capable of becoming, we face a dilemma. Our history tells us to be on edge, waiting for the other shoe to drop, waiting to be betrayed, abandoned, and hurt, and to leave before that happens because it is better to be alone by choice than it is to be left alone, but this only guarantees that we will be forever lonely which is not what we actually want. The only way to break this cycle is with trust, by being vulnerable, by showing up as we are, by breaking through our old truths, our old beliefs, and our old patterns, and allowing ourselves to be seen as we are, come what may.


    Holistic Budo: As it is in budo, so too it is in life. As it is in life, so too it is in budo.

    Robert Van Valkenburgh is co-founder of Taikyoku Mind & Body and Kogen Dojo where he teaches Taikyoku Budo and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.

    All photos by Robert Van Valkenburgh unless otherwise noted.

    Follow Robert Van Valkenburgh and Holistic Budo on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Tumblr, and LinkedIn.

    If you found this post helpful or meaningful in some way, please feel free to Share, Comment, and Subscribe below.

    Share this:

    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    Like Loading…
    June 8, 2020
    abandonment, behaviors, cycles, faith, family, hope, hurt, love, pain, patterns, relationships, risk, trust, vulnerability

  • Authenticity Is A Choice Not An Excuse

    Authenticity is not an excuse to behave badly.

    None of us gets to walk around doing or saying whatever we want to without consequences. Ideally, this is a lesson we learn as children, but most of us need to be reminded from time to time as we get older. In fact, one of the many important roles that our friends and family play in our lives is to keep us accountable for our words and behavior when our so-called authenticity is overriding our sensibility.

    It is not that authenticity is unimportant. On the contrary, a well-lived life demands that we are authentic both to ourselves and to others. However, authenticity is not a shield we can hide behind as a means of blocking incoming criticism when what we do or say is selfish, hurtful, or destructive.

    True authenticity is not used as a means of excusing ourselves from caring about what others think. Instead, authenticity, in the positive sense, is synonymous with consistency of words and deeds in our private, public, and business lives. We will get very different results if we are authentically abrasive, confrontational, or mean-spirited than we will if we are authentically present, compassionate, and generous.


    Holistic Budo: As it is in budo, so too it is in life. As it is in life, so too it is in budo.

    Robert Van Valkenburgh is co-founder of Taikyoku Mind & Body and Kogen Dojo where he teaches Taikyoku Budo and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.

    All photos by Robert Van Valkenburgh unless otherwise noted.

    Follow Robert Van Valkenburgh and Holistic Budo on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Tumblr, and LinkedIn.

    If you found this post helpful or meaningful in some way, please feel free to Share, Comment, and Subscribe below.

    Share this:

    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    Like Loading…
    June 7, 2020
    accountability, authenticity, compassion, consistency, destruction, generosity, kindness, meanness, positivity, truth

  • Unity With Purpose

    Unity is an empty vessel to be filled with whatever form of good or evil we choose.

    We often throw around word like unity, community, or tribe as if they are inherently positive concepts. The truth, however, is that they are neutral. It is as possible to be united around evil causes, ideas, and behaviors as it is to be united around good ones.

    In order for our unity to be noble and righteous, its purpose and resultant manifestations must also be noble and righteous as well. If we start with false ideals or values around which to unify, or perhaps with no ideals or values at all, our unity will be nothing more than a powerful force for dissonance, chaos, and destruction. Before we unite, we must establish that around which we are uniting and we must ensure that our actions constantly align with this purpose.

    In order for unity to result in positive change in the world, it must be based on positive values with positive goals. Garbage in, garbage out, as the saying goes. Before we get together, unifying around some idea, belief, or cause, we should ensure that what we are unifying around is not only true, but also good.


    Holistic Budo: As it is in budo, so too it is in life. As it is in life, so too it is in budo.

    Robert Van Valkenburgh is co-founder of Taikyoku Mind & Body and Kogen Dojo where he teaches Taikyoku Budo and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.

    All photos by Robert Van Valkenburgh unless otherwise noted.

    Follow Robert Van Valkenburgh and Holistic Budo on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Tumblr, and LinkedIn.

    If you found this post helpful or meaningful in some way, please feel free to Share, Comment, and Subscribe below.

    Share this:

    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    Like Loading…
    June 6, 2020
    community, ethics, goodness, morality, morals, purpose, righteousness, tribe, unity, values

  • From The Corner (On Bullying)

    A bully is a person who pushes another person into a corner against their will, and then keeps pushing, and pushing, and pushing.

    We often think about bullying as a physical altercation wherein a bigger, stronger, or more powerful person is abusive of a smaller, weaker, or less powerful person. Physical abuse, however, is just one way that bullying manifests. Most of the time, bullying is more subtle and more psychological or emotional than it is physical.

    Simply put, bullying is the act of forcing another person into a state of fight or flight against their will. Bullying is any forceful imposition of will against another person wherein that person is put into a position from which they feel the need to defend themselves. This does not mean they have the ability or desire to defend themselves, but that they are forcefully placed into a position from which they feel the need to do so.

    As we see more and more these days, bullying does not even have to take place in person in order to have severe, negative emotional and psychological effects on the bullied. Bullying can be as subtle as a forced argument or debate on social media, in an email chain, on text messages, over the phone, or face to face, or it can be as blatant as a person in a position of greater power physically abusing, assaulting, or even killing a person in a position of lesser power.

    While most outcry and outrage for the victims of bullying only comes out when tragedy strikes, we should be forever mindful of the fact that bullying usually starts small. It starts with a word, a posture, or a tone of aggression intended to back another person into the corner, into a place where they either fight back, freeze, or run. Sadly, many people never make it out of that corner.


    Holistic Budo: As it is in budo, so too it is in life. As it is in life, so too it is in budo.

    Robert Van Valkenburgh is co-founder of Taikyoku Mind & Body and Kogen Dojo where he teaches Taikyoku Budo and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.

    All photos by Robert Van Valkenburgh unless otherwise noted.

    Follow Robert Van Valkenburgh and Holistic Budo on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Tumblr, and LinkedIn.

    If you found this post helpful or meaningful in some way, please feel free to Share, Comment, and Subscribe below.

    Share this:

    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    Like Loading…
    June 5, 2020
    abuse, authority, bully, bullying, fight, fighting, flight, force, free will, freedom, power, protest, protesting, self defense, will

  • Accepting Less As More

    By offering our minds only two extremes, we are much more willing to accept a compromise that we would have otherwise rejected outright.

    When I was a teenager and my friends and I started driving, one of my friends had a trick he would use when he wanted to turn the volume of the music down in his car without it feeling too quiet. He would turn the volume of the relatively loud music down really low for a little while, lower than he was actually going to listen to it, and then he would turn it up to the mid-level volume he wanted. By using this method, he would trick his ears into accepting the new volume, which was quieter than when he started, as sufficiently loud compared to the very low volume he used as a transition.

    At first, I thought this was kind of funny, but then I noticed that it actually worked very well and, eventually, I started using this trick myself. When I found that the volume of the music in my car was too loud, instead of simply turning it down to where I wanted it, which would feel a bit like a loss at first, I would turn the music down to a point where I actually wanted it louder, and then I would turn it back up to an acceptable mid range, which my mind would gratefully accept as at least being better than the low volume I wanted even less than the original loud volume. If I would have adjusted the volume directly to this new normal, my mind would have rejected it and felt slighted, but by first going to another extreme, coming back up to a lower volume felt like a relief, even a gift.

    Perception is a funny thing in this way. By moving from one undesirable extreme to another, we are much more willing to accept a middle ground, a compromise of our desires and even our values, that we may have otherwise rejected outright. When compared to extreme noise and extreme quiet, this compromised state feels comfortable. It feels safe. It feels like we wanted to be there all along in spite of the fact that, if we went there directly from our original state, we would have felt much differently. Instead of rejecting this compromise, we welcome it and are thankful for it because at least it is not the intolerable opposite extreme of what we once had.


    Holistic Budo: As it is in budo, so too it is in life. As it is in life, so too it is in budo.

    Robert Van Valkenburgh is co-founder of Taikyoku Mind & Body and Kogen Dojo where he teaches Taikyoku Budo and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.

    All photos by Robert Van Valkenburgh unless otherwise noted.

    Follow Robert Van Valkenburgh and Holistic Budo on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Tumblr, and LinkedIn.

    If you found this post helpful or meaningful in some way, please feel free to Share, Comment, and Subscribe below.

    Share this:

    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    Like Loading…
    June 4, 2020
    acceptance, compromise, extreme anchor, extremes, inception, mental tricks, middle ground, mind games, mind tricks, music, negotiating, negotiation, never split the difference, protest, relief, split the difference, the art of war, volume

Previous Page Next Page

Create a website or blog at WordPress.com

Loading Comments...

    • Subscribe Subscribed
      • Meditations on God
      • Join 270 other subscribers
      • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
      • Meditations on God
      • Subscribe Subscribed
      • Sign up
      • Log in
      • Report this content
      • View site in Reader
      • Manage subscriptions
      • Collapse this bar
    %d