Sônia Maria
Dias:
“The family is the only
divine institution on
earth”
The
founder of the Casa de
Emmanuel Spiritist
Centre (CEmm)
in Rio de Janeiro state
talks about her
experience
of 25 years in marriage
counselling
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A Spiritist from birth,
Sônia Maria Dias (photo)
talks in this interview
about her links with the
Teachings and especially
family life, an issue of
uttermost importance.
Sônia, who lives in the
Brazilian city of Rio de
Janeiro, is one of the
founders of the Casa de
Emmanuel Spiritist
Centre, which marked in
March its 19th
anniversary.
|
Tell us first about your
involvement in family
issues and marriage
counselling. |
I have worked in
marriage counselling for
more than 25 years. I am
involved in a number of
other activities in
Spiritism, including
choir singing and a
Christmas dinner for
people who live rough,
but I believe our
Couples’ Meetings as the
most important event.
The family is the only
divine institution on
earth. The first event
Jesus attended was the
Wedding Feast at Cana.
He attended the request
from his mother and
transformed the water
into wine, giving life
and colour to the event,
allowing it to go ahead.
“The best school is the
home,” says Emmanuel in
O Consolador. In
The Spirits’ Book,
question 775, we
read that: “What
would be the effect upon
society of the
relaxation of
family-ties?” “A relapse
into selfishness.” What
we aim to offer is an
opportunity for the
couple to reflect on
their life together. The
event is for couples
only. Our premise is
that if the relationship
between the husband and
wife is not doing well,
nothing will do well.
The couple is the main
foundation of the home.
We do not discuss the
children. We suggest
that the couple attend
other meetings or events
where they have the
opportunity to deal with
that. Our attention, our
dynamics, everything is
focused entirely on the
couple. Our meetings
last a whole day.
There is a big hype
about the modern family.
What, in your opinion,
should not be lost in
this process?
Being together, spending
time together, family
time. We need to create
situations, events to
encourage the
participation of
everyone in the family:
going out, eating, out,
cinema, theatre, to sit
down and have a chat, to
have a laugh etc. I
remember the lunches we
had together, with my
mother and father, the
dinners, the Christmas
parties. Such occasions
are extremely important
if we want to keep the
family together and to
create strong family
bonds.
The divorce is now
allowed in most
countries. But what are
the challenges faced by
those who divorce from a
material, emotional and
Spiritual point of
view?
The breakup of a
marriage is a brutal
act, it brings up
discomfort at many
levels: your situation
changes, the other
person is no longer
there, there is no
longer that partnership
and complicity of the
couple. In emotional
terms, you need a lot of
courage to overcome a
breakup. And you need to
make a big effort to
keep a civilized,
peaceful relationship,
which is very difficult.
Many people tell their
children that they split
up from daddy or mummy,
not from them. But that
is not the case. The
family is broken up, the
bonds get looser and the
children suffer. From a
Spiritual perspective,
the soul goes upside
down. I have seen many
cases in which former
husband and wife develop
odd behaviour, they bear
a grudge and begin
plotting revenge. But,
of course, in some cases
things have a different
outcome. Things improve
after the couple splits
up.
What is your view on
adoption? It has become
increasingly common.
What is the Spiritist
approach to the issue of
adoption?
First of all, no one
should adopt a child out
of pity. We should not
adopt to fill an
emotional gap, be it the
lack of our own
biological children or
following the death of
our child. The person
who is adopted must
become a full family
member, not the object
of charity. The parents
must be seen as parents,
not as a charitable
couple. Both sides – the
parents and the child –
will be going through a
very delicate and
profound process of
readjustment before the
Law of God, in the same
way as the rest of us
who are on earth.
It is increasingly
common for people to get
remarried, taking their
children to form new
family units. What is
the best way of keeping
a good balance in such
complex relationships?
People indeed marry,
split up, marry again…
Why don’t they allow a
bit more time before
they have children? Not
many man and women these
days put their own
interests to rest in
order to protect their
children from the
upheavals of new
relationships. The
children should be the
top priority. People
should be very careful
and check whether this
second or third partner
will be ideal to live
with their children. In
Nosso Lar, Our Home
André Luiz tells us that
most husband-and-wife
relationships on earth
are karmic. That is why
there are so many
clashes, so many
failures. We need to be
extra careful before
embarking on yet another
relationship.
In the old days, the
children fought for
their independence, to
earn a living and
support themselves. Now,
they tend to stay at
home for as long as they
can. What is your view
on that?
It is a new family
model. Very few young
people earn enough to
have an independent
life, which these days
costs so much. Staying
at home is easier, it
brings emotional support
for some and lack of
maturity and prospects
for many. In our schools
we no longer have
leaders. The teachers
are no longer leaders.
Parents, in their daily
struggle to make ends
meet, are no leaders
either. Young people
find the leaders they
lack on television, in
the sports world, among
the celebrities. Those
people know what life is
about, many young people
say. And young people
very often lack the
ambition or belief to
fight for their own
ideals. And what the
find is sex, trivialized
in every corner of the
cities.
Finally, what is your
advice to those who are
willing to get married
to raise a family?
Get married! Get
together, united by the
bonds of affection and
mutual respect, trying
to understand and know
each other and to
emphasize the good
aspects of each other.
Marriage can give our
lives balance and
meaning, as we decide to
share our lives with
someone else. But the
life as a couple needs
some daily warming up,
with the condiment of
affection, each one
trying to conquer the
other one every single
day.