Forest2 (4)
Relationship Problems, Relationships, Table, The Table or the Fire

The Rules of the Table – Choice you can make in relationship when there is problems

Here is the counterpart teaching, written with the same weight and clarity as The Rules of the Fire, completing the framework:

The Rules of the Table

The Table or the Fire Teaching

A Choice You Can Make in Relationship When There Are Problems

What the Table Represents

The Table represents order that can hold intensity:

  • Covenant over convenience
  • Provision over scarcity
  • Discipline over impulse
  • Relationship over ego
  • Shared life over self-interest

The table is the place where people are formed, not consumed.

The Rules of the Table

When you choose the table, you live by these rules:

  1. Relationship is the priority – The bond matters more than winning.
  2. Process over impulse – Problems are worked through, not acted out.
  3. Shared responsibility – Each person owns their part without blame.
  4. Structure holds emotion – Feelings are welcomed, but they do not rule.
  5. Covenant over comfort – Commitment remains even when it is uncomfortable.

The Benefits of the Table

The table does not offer quick relief – but it offers something greater:

  • Emotional safety
  • Deepened trust and respect
  • Sustainable intimacy and passion
  • Mutual growth and character formation
  • A shared future that can endure conflict

At the table, conflict becomes instruction, not destruction.

The Consequences of the Table

Choosing the table has a cost:

  • Conversations may be uncomfortable
  • Ego must soften
  • Accountability is unavoidable
  • Growth requires patience and humility

But the consequences are life-giving:

  • Repair instead of rupture
  • Maturity instead of chaos
  • Strength instead of damage
  • Love that deepens rather than dissolves

The Core Teaching

  • The table is slower than the fire – but it is stronger.
  • The table restrains what would destroy
  • The table channels passion into purpose

The table transforms conflict into connection

What fire consumes, the table forms.

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Gerald Crawford in Stellenbosch

Gerald Crawford in Stellenbosch

My Personal Motto Is: With experience and study comes insight with insight come wisdom with wisdom comes moments of absolute clarity, transcendence then follows.

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