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He Said, She
SaidThe Relationship
Triangle
Most people get involved in a relationship for the right
reasons and leave a relationship for the wrong reasons. In
fact, most of us have been guilty of it at one time or another
and of being a complete spaz demanding we get our way in the
relationship. Remember the movie He Said, She Said? A constant
power struggle ensues when you make the relationship all about
you. So why do we do it?
I believe the reason this happens is that we make unhealthy
relationship choices. In our deepest inner desires, we
naturally long for companionship and love in our lives. In our
haste, we choose unwisely and compromise for that "next person"
that comes along to satisfy that longing. In this context, it's
easy to bend and flex because in the beginning we still don't
know that person. Then as we do get to know them, we find
ourselves making more compromises because we don't have the
guts to fess up to our mistakes and all sorts of other
irrational reasons rambling through our head to avoid hurting
someone else. Bad move, fess up.
In our relationship goals, we need to be much more aware of
ourselves, our habits, our desires, our likes and dislikes. The
focus should not be on the person, the focus should be on the
relationship. Even in the dating context - it could lead to
something serious - we should focus on the relationship goals.
What is it you want in a relationship? Who are you in a
relationship? What do you need from the relationship? And, and,
and... take stock and stay open to change, improvements,
discovery and more.
When you can answer these questions more clearly and you find
yourself able to understand what you can give to the
relationship, you choose your partners more wisely. You also
communicate more openly and honestly because it is less about
you and more about the relationship. The other person can
listen better because it is more about the relationship and
less about them. And adjustments can be made so much more
smoothly from both sides when we communicate on the
relationship.
So look at it like a triangle. You on one side, your partner on
the other. Instead of eyeballing and measuring each other, look
to the peak - the Relationship. That's your goal, that's your
partners goal, and you look only at yourself in comparison to
the relationship goals. You're teammates, you see the goal, and
now you can work more effectively together.
It's not about me, it's about the relationship. Can I give
that to achieve this in the relationship? Do I want that? Yes,
then let's do it.
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broken links to: info@endlessrelationships.com
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