relationship advice

in #relationship7 years ago

 I got married two weeks ago. And like most people, I asked  some of the older and wiser folks around me for a couple quick words of  advice from their own marriages to make sure my wife and I didn’t shit  the (same) bed. I think most newlyweds do this — ask for advice, I mean,  not shit the same bed — especially after a few cocktails from the open  bar they just paid way too much money for.  But, of course, not being satisfied with just a few wise words, I had to take it a step further.  See, I have access to hundreds of  thousands of smart, amazing people through my site. So why not consult  them? Why not ask them for their best relationship/marriage advice? Why not synthesize all of their  wisdom and experience into something straightforward and immediately  applicable to any relationship, no matter who you are or how sick of  his/her shit you are?  Why not crowdsource THE ULTIMATE  RELATIONSHIP GUIDE TO END ALL RELATIONSHIP GUIDES™ from the sea of smart  and savvy partners and lovers here?  So, that’s what I did. I sent out the call  the week before my wedding: anyone who has been married for 10+ years  and is still happy in their relationship, what lessons would you pass  down to others if you could? What is working for you and your partner?  And if you are divorced, what didn’t work previously?  The response was overwhelming. Almost  1,500 people replied, many of whom sent in responses measured in pages,  not paragraphs. It took almost two weeks to comb through them all, but I  did. And what I found stunned me… They were incredibly repetitive.  That’s not an insult or anything.  Actually, it’s kind of the opposite. Not to mention, a relief. These  were all smart and well-spoken people from all walks of life, from all  around the world, all with their own histories, tragedies, mistakes and  triumphs…  And yet they were all saying pretty much the same dozen things.  Which means that those dozen or so things must be pretty damn important… and more importantly, they work.  Here’s what they are.   

1. Be Together For the Right Reasons

“Don’t ever be with someone  because someone else pressured you to. I got married the first time  because I was raised Catholic and that’s what you were supposed to do.  Wrong. I got married the second time because I was miserable and lonely  and thought having a loving wife would fix everything for me. Also  wrong. Took me three tries to figure out what should have been obvious  from the beginning, the only reason you should ever be with the person  you’re with is because you simply love being around them. It really is  that simple.” – Greg 

Before we even get into what you should do in your relationship, let’s start with what not to do.  When I sent out my request to readers for  advice, I added a caveat that turned out to be illuminating. I asked  people who were on their second or third (or fourth) marriages what they  did wrong. Where did they mess up?  By far, the most common answer was “being with the person for the wrong reasons.” Some of these wrong reasons included:   

  • Pressure from friends and family.
  • Feeling like a “loser” because they were single and settling for the first person that came along 
  • Being together for image — because the relationship looked good on paper (or in photos), not because the two people actually admired each other. 
  • Being young and naive and hopelessly in love and thinking that love would solve everything. 

As we’ll see throughout the rest of this  article, everything that makes a relationship “work” (and by work, I  mean that it is happy and sustainable for both people involved) requires  a genuine, deep-level admiration for each other. Without that mutual  admiration, everything else will unravel.  The other “wrong” reason to enter into a  relationship is, like Greg said, to “fix” yourself. This desire to use  the love of someone else to soothe your own emotional problems  inevitably leads to codependence, an unhealthy and damaging dynamic  between two people where they tacitly agree to use each other’s love as a  distraction from their own self-loathing. We’ll get more into  codependence later in this article, but for now, it’s useful to point  out that love, itself, is neutral. It is something that can be both  healthy or unhealthy, helpful or harmful, depending on why and how you love someone else and are loved by someone else. By itself, love is never enough to sustain a relationship

2. Have Realistic Expectations About Relationships and Romance

“You are absolutely not going  to be absolutely gaga over each other every single day for the rest of  your lives, and all this ‘happily ever after’ bullshit is just setting  people up for failure. They go into relationship with these unrealistic  expectations. Then, the instant they realize they aren’t ‘gaga’ anymore,  they think the relationship is broken and over, and they need to get  out. No! There will be days, or weeks, or maybe even longer, when you  aren’t all mushy-gushy in-love. You’re even going to wake up some  morning and think, “Ugh, you’re still here….” That’s normal! And more  importantly, sticking it out is totally worth it, because that, too,  will change. In a day, or a week, or maybe even longer, you’ll look at  that person and a giant wave of love will inundate you, and you’ll love  them so much you think your heart can’t possibly hold it all and is  going to burst. Because a love that’s alive is also constantly evolving.  It expands and contracts and mellows and deepens. It’s not going to be  the way it used to be, or the way it will be, and it shouldn’t be. I  think if more couples understood that, they’d be less inclined to panic  and rush to break up or divorce.” – Paula 

Love is a funny thing. In ancient times,  people genuinely considered love a sickness. Parents warned their  children against it, and adults quickly arranged marriages before their  children were old enough to do something dumb in the name of their  emotions.  That’s because love, while making us feel  all giddy and high as if we had just snorted a shoebox full of cocaine,  makes us highly irrational. We all know that guy (or girl) who dropped  out of school, sold their car and spent the money to elope on the  beaches of Tahiti. We all also know that that guy (or girl) ended up  sulking back a few years later feeling like a moron, not to mention  broke.   That’s unbridled love. It’s nature’s way  of tricking us into doing insane and irrational things to procreate with  another person — probably because if we stopped to think about the  repercussions of having kids, and being with the same person forever and  ever, no one would ever do it. As Robin Williams used to joke, “God  gave man a brain and a penis and only enough blood to operate one at a  time.”  Romantic love is a trap designed to get  two people to overlook each other’s faults long enough to get some  babymaking done. It generally only lasts for a few years at most.  That dizzying high you get staring into your lover’s eyes as if they  are the stars that make up the heavens — yeah, that mostly goes away. It  does for everybody. So, once it’s gone, you need to know that you’ve  buckled yourself down with a human being you genuinely respect and enjoy  being with, otherwise things are going to get rocky.  True love — that is, deep, abiding love  that is impervious to emotional whims or fancy — is a choice. It’s a  constant commitment to a person regardless of the present circumstances.  It’s a commitment to a person who you understand isn’t going to always  make you happy — nor should they! — and a person who will need to rely  on you at times, just as you will rely on them.  That form of love is much harder.  Primarily because it often doesn’t feel very good. It’s unglamorous.  It’s lots of early morning doctor’s visits. It’s cleaning up bodily  fluids you’d rather not be cleaning up. It’s dealing with another  person’s insecurities and fears and ideas, even when you don’t want to.  But this form of love is also far more  satisfying and meaningful. And, at the end of the day, it brings true  happiness, not just another series of highs.  

“Happily Ever After doesn’t  exist. Every day you wake up and decide to love your partner and your  life – the good, the bad and the ugly. Some days it’s a struggle and  some days you feel like the luckiest person in the world.” – Tara 

Many people never learn how to breach this deep, unconditional love. Many people are instead addicted to the ups and downs of romantic love. They are in it for the feels, so to speak. And when the feels run out, so do they.  Many people get into a relationship as a way to compensate for something they lack or hate within themselves. This is a one-way ticket to a toxic relationship because it makes your love conditional — you will love your partner as long as they help you feel better about yourself. You will give to them as long as they give to you. You will make them happy as long as they make you happy.  This conditionality prevents any true,  deep-level intimacy from emerging and chains the relationship to the  bucking throes of each person’s internal dramas.  

3. The Most Important Factor in a Relationship is Not Communication, But Respect

“What I can tell you is the #1  thing, most important above all else is respect. It’s not sexual  attraction, looks, shared goals, religion or lack of, nor is it love.  There are times when you won’t feel love for your partner. That is the  truth. But you never want to lose respect for your partner. Once you  lose respect you will never get it back.”  – Laurie 

As we scanned through the hundreds of responses we received, my assistant and I began to notice an interesting trend.  People who had been through divorces  and/or had only been with their partners for 10-15 years almost always  talked about communication being the most important part of making  things work. Talk frequently. Talk openly. Talk about everything, even  if it hurts.  And there is some merit to that (which I’ll get to later).  But we noticed that the thing people with marriages going on 20, 30, or even 40 years talked about most was respect.  My sense is that these people, through  sheer quantity of experience, have learned that communication, no matter  how open, transparent and disciplined, will always break down at some  point. Conflicts are ultimately unavoidable, and feelings will always be  hurt.  And the only thing that can save you and your partner, that can cushion you both to the hard landing of human fallibility,  is an unerring respect for one another, the fact that you hold each  other in high esteem, believe in one another — often more than you each  believe in yourselves — and trust that your partner is doing his/her  best with what they’ve got.  Without that bedrock of respect underneath  you, you will doubt each other’s intentions. You will judge their  choices and encroach on their independence. You will feel the need to  hide things from one another for fear of criticism. And this is when the  cracks in the edifice begin to appear.  

“My husband and I have been  together 15 years this winter. I’ve thought a lot about what seems to be  keeping us together, while marriages around us crumble (seriously, it’s  everywhere… we seem to be at that age). The one word that I keep coming  back to is “respect”. Of course, this means showing respect, but that  is too superficial. Just showing it isn’t enough. You have to feel it  deep within you. I deeply and genuinely respect him for his work ethic,  his patience, his creativity, his intelligence, and his core values.  From this respect comes everything else – trust, patience, perseverance  (because sometimes life is really hard and you both just have to  persevere). I want to hear what he has to say (even if I don’t agree  with him) because I respect his opinion. I want to enable him to have  some free time within our insanely busy lives because I respect his  choices of how he spends his time and who he spends time with. And,  really, what this mutual respect means is that we feel safe sharing our  deepest, most intimate selves with each other.” – Nicole 

You must also respect yourself. Just as  your partner must also respect his/herself. Because without that  self-respect, you will not feel worthy of the respect afforded by your  partner. You will be unwilling to accept it and you will find ways to  undermine it. You will constantly feel the need to compensate and prove  yourself worthy of love, which will just backfire.  Respect for your partner and respect for  yourself are intertwined. As a reader named Olov put it, “Respect  yourself and your wife. Never talk badly to or about her. If you don’t  respect your wife, you don’t respect yourself. You chose her – live up  to that choice.” So what does respect look like? Common examples given by many readers:   

  • NEVER talk shit about your partner or complain about them to your  friends. If you have a problem with your partner, you should be having  that conversation with them, not with your friends. Talking bad  about them will erode your respect for them and make you feel worse  about being with them, not better. 
  • Respect that they have different hobbies, interests and perspectives  from you. Just because you would spend your time and energy  differently, doesn’t mean it’s better/worse. 
  • Respect that they have an equal say in the relationship, that you  are a team, and if one person on the team is not happy, then the team is  not succeeding. 
  • No secrets. If you’re really in this together and you respect one  another, everything should be fair game. Have a crush on someone else?  Discuss it. Laugh about it. Had a weird sexual fantasy that sounds  ridiculous? Be open about it. Nothing should be off-limits. 

Respect goes hand-in-hand with trust. And  trust is the lifeblood of any relationship (romantic or otherwise).  Without trust, there can be no sense of intimacy or comfort. Without  trust, your partner will become a liability in your mind, something to  be avoided and analyzed, not a protective homebase for your heart and  your mind.  

4. Talk Openly About Everything, Especially the Stuff That Hurts

“We always talk about what’s  bothering us with each other, not anyone else! We have so many friends  who are in marriages that are not working well and they tell me all  about what is wrong. I can’t help them, they need to be talking to their  spouse about this, that’s the only person who can help them figure it  out. If you can figure out a way to be able to always talk with your  spouse about what’s bugging you then you can work on the issue.” – Ronnie 
“There can be no secrets. Secrets divide you. Always.” – Tracey 

I receive hundreds of emails from readers each week asking for life advice. A large percentage of these emails involve their struggling romantic relationships.  (These emails, too, are surprisingly repetitive.)  A couple years ago, I discovered that I  was answering the vast majority of these relationship emails with the  exact same response.  “Take this email you just sent to me, print it out, and show it to your partner. Then come back and ask again.”  This response became so common that I actually put it on my contact form on the site because I was so tired of copying and pasting it.  If something bothers you in the  relationship, you must be willing to say it. Saying it builds trust and  trust builds intimacy. It may hurt, but you still need to do it. No one  else can fix your relationship for you. Nor should anyone else. Just as  causing pain to your muscles allows them to grow back stronger, often  introducing some pain into your relationship through vulnerability is the only way to make the relationship stronger.  Behind respect, trust was the most  commonly mentioned trait for a healthy relationship. Most people  mentioned it in the context of jealousy and fidelity — trust your partner to go off on their own, don’t get insecure or angry if you see them talking with someone else, etc.  But trust goes much deeper than that.  Because when you’re really talking about the long-haul, you start to get  into some serious life-or-death shit. If you ended up with cancer  tomorrow, would you trust your partner to stick with you and take care  of you? Would you trust your partner to care for your child for a week  by themselves? Do you trust them to handle your money or make sound  decisions under pressure? Do you trust them to not turn on you or blame  you when you make mistakes?  These are hard things to do. And they’re  even harder to think about early on in a relationship. Trust at the  beginning of a relationship is easy. It’s like, “Oh, I forgot my phone  at her apartment, I trust her not to sell it and buy crack with the  money… I think.”  But the deeper the commitment, the more  intertwined your lives become, and the more you will have to trust your  partner to act in your interest in your absence.  There’s an old Ben Folds song where he  sings, “It seems to me if you cannot trust, you cannot be trusted.”  Distrust has a tendency to breed distrust. If your partner is always  snooping through your stuff, accusing you of doing things you didn’t do,  and questioning all of your decisions, naturally, you will start to  question their intentions as well — Why is she so insecure? What if she  is hiding something herself? The key to fostering and maintaining trust  in the relationship is for both partners to be completely transparent  and vulnerable:   

  • If something is bothering you, say something. This is important not  only for addressing issues as they arise, but it proves to your partner  that you have nothing to hide.
  • Those icky, insecure things you hate sharing with people? Share them  with your partner. Not only is it healing, but you and your partner  need to have a good understanding of each other’s insecurities and the  way you each choose to compensate for them. 
  • Make promises and then stick to them. The only way to truly  rebuild trust after it’s been broken is through a proven track record  over time. You cannot build that track record until you own up to  previous mistakes and set about correcting them. 
  • Learn to discern your partner’s own shady behavior from your own  insecurities (and vice-versa). This is hard and will likely require  confrontation to get to the bottom of. But in most relationship fights,  one person thinks something is completely “normal” and the other thinks  it’s really grade-A “fucked up.” It’s often extremely hard to  distinguish who is being irrational and insecure and who is being  reasonable and merely standing up for themselves. Be patient in rooting  out what’s what, and when it’s your big, gnarly insecurity (and  sometimes it will be, trust me), be honest about it. Own up to it. And  strive to be better. 

Trust is like a china plate. If you drop  it and it breaks, you can put it back together with a lot of work and  care. If you drop it and break it a second time, it will split into  twice as many pieces and it will require far more time and care to put  back together again. But drop and break it enough times, and it will  shatter into so many pieces that you will never be able to put it back  together again, no matter what you do.  

5. A Healthy Relationship Means Two Healthy Individuals

“Understand that it is up to  you to make yourself happy, it is NOT the job of your spouse. I am not  saying you shouldn’t do nice things for each other, or that your partner  can’t make you happy sometimes. I am just saying don’t lay expectations  on your partner to “make you happy.” It is not their responsibility.  Figure out as individuals what makes you happy as an individual, be  happy yourself, then you each bring that to the relationship.”  – Mandy 

A lot is made about “sacrifices” in a  relationship. You are supposed to keep the relationship happy by  consistently sacrificing yourself for your partner and their wants and  needs.  There is some truth to that. Every relationship requires each person to consciously choose to give something up at times.  But the problem is when all of the relationship’s happiness  is contingent on the other person and both people are in a constant  state of sacrifice. Just read that again. That sounds horrible. It  reminds me of an old Marilyn Manson song, “Shoot myself to love you; if I  loved myself, I’d be shooting you.” A relationship based on sacrifices  cannot be sustained, and will eventually become damaging to both  individuals in it.  

“Shitty, codependent  relationships have an inherent stability because you’re both locked in  an implicit bargain to tolerate the other person’s bad behavior because  they’re tolerating yours, and neither of you wants to be alone. On the  surface, it seems like “compromising in relationships because that’s  what people do,” but the reality is that resentments build up, and both  parties become the other person’s emotional hostage against having to  face and deal with their own bullshit (it took me 14 years to realize  this, by the way).” – Karen 

A healthy and happy relationship requires two healthy and happy individuals. Keyword here: “individuals.” That means two people with their own identities, their own interests and perspectives, and things they do by themselves, on their own time.  This is why attempting to control your  partner (or submitting control over yourself to your partner) to make  them “happy” ultimately backfires — it allows the individual identities  of each person to be destroyed, the very identities that attracted each  person and brought them together in the first place.  

“Don’t try to change them. This is the person you chose. They were good enough to marry so don’t expect them to change now.”  – Allison 
“Don’t ever give up who you are for the person you’re with. It will only  backfire and make you both miserable. Have the courage to be who you  are, and most importantly, let your partner be who they are. Those are  the two people who fell in love with each other in the first place.”  – Dave 

But how does one do this? Well, it’s a bit  counterintuitive. But it’s something hundreds and hundreds of  successful couples echoed in their emails…  

6. Give Each Other Space

“Be sure you have a life of  your own, otherwise it is harder to have a life together. What do I  mean? Have your own interests, your own friends, your own support  network, and your own hobbies. Overlap where you can, but not being  identical should give you something to talk about and expose one another  to. It helps to expand your horizons as a couple, but isn’t so boring  as both living the exact same life.” – Anonymous 

Among the emails, one of the most popular themes was the importance of creating space and separation from one another.  People sung the praises of separate  checking accounts, separate credit cards, having different friends and  hobbies, taking separate vacations from one another each year (this has  been a big one in my own relationship). Some even went so far as to  recommend separate bathrooms or even separate bedrooms.  Some people are afraid to give their  partner freedom and independence. This comes from a lack of trust and/or  insecurity that if we give our partner too much space, they will  discover they don’t want to be with us anymore. Generally, the more  uncomfortable we are with our own worthiness in the relationship and to  be loved, the more we will try to control the relationship and our  partner’s behaviors.  BUT, more importantly, this inability to let our partners be who they are,  is a subtle form of disrespect. After all, if you can’t trust your  husband to have a simple golfing trip with his buddies, or you’re afraid  to let your wife go out for drinks after work, what does that say about  your respect for their ability to handle themselves well? What does it  say for your respect for yourself? I mean, after all, if you  believe a couple after-work drinks is enough to steer your girlfriend  away from you, you clearly don’t think too highly of yourself.  

“Going on seventeen years. If  you love your partner enough you will let them be who they are, you  don’t own them, who they hang with, what they do or how they feel.  Drives me nuts when I see women not let their husbands go out with the  guys or are jealous of other women.” – Natalie 

7. You and Your Partner Will Grow and Change in Unexpected Ways; Embrace It

“Over the course of 20 years  we both have changed tremendously. We have changed faiths, political  parties, numerous hair colors and styles, but we love each other and  possibly even more. Our grown kids constantly tell their friends what  hopeless romantics we are. And the biggest thing that keeps us strong is  not giving a fuck about what anyone else says about our relationship.” – Dotti 

One theme that came up repeatedly,  especially with those married 20+ years, was how much each individual  changes as the decades roll on, and how ready each of you have to be to  embrace the other partner as these changes occur. One reader commented  that at her wedding, an elderly family member told her, “One day many  years from now, you will wake up and your spouse will be a different  person, make sure you fall in love with that person too.”  It logically follows that if there is a  bedrock of respect for each individual’s interests and values  underpinning the relationship, and each individual is encouraged to  foster their own growth and development, that each person will, as time  goes on, evolve in different and unexpected ways. It’s then up to the  couple to communicate and make sure that they are consistently a) aware  of the changes going on in their partner, and b) continually accepting  and respecting those changes as they occur.  Now, you’re probably reading this and  thinking, “Sure, Bill likes sausage now, but in a few years he might  prefer steak. I can get on board with that.”  No, I’m talking some pretty serious life  changes. Remember, if you’re going to spend decades together, some  really heavy shit will hit (and break) the fan. Among major life changes  people told me their marriages went through (and survived): changing  religions, moving countries, death of family members (including  children), supporting elderly family members, changing political  beliefs, even changing sexual orientation and in a couple cases, gender  identification.  Amazingly, these couples survived because  their respect for each other allowed them to adapt and allow each person  to continue to flourish and grow.  

“When you commit to someone,  you don’t actually know who you’re committing to. You know who they are  today, but you have no idea who this person is going to be in five  years, ten years, and so on. You have to be prepared for the unexpected,  and truly ask yourself if you admire this person regardless of the  superficial (or not-so-superficial) details, because I promise almost  all of them at some point are going to either change or go away.”  – Michael 

But this isn’t easy, of course. In fact, at times, it will be downright soul-destroying.  Which is why you need to make sure you and your partner know how to fight.  

8. Get Good at Fighting

“The relationship is a living,  breathing thing. Much like the body and muscles, it cannot get stronger  without stress and challenge. You have to fight. You have to hash  things out. Obstacles make the marriage.” Ryan Saplan 

John Gottman is a hot-shit psychologist  and researcher who has spent over 30 years analyzing married couples and  looking for keys to why they stick together and why they break up.  Chances are, if you’ve read any relationship advice article before,  you’ve either directly or indirectly been exposed to his work. When it  comes to, “Why do people stick together?” he dominates the field.  What Gottman does is he gets married couples in a room, puts some cameras on them, and then he asks them to have a fight.  Notice: he doesn’t ask them to talk about  how great the other person is. He doesn’t ask them what they like best  about their relationship.  He asks them to fight. Pick something they’re having problems with and talk about it for the camera.  And from simply analyzing the film for the  couple’s discussion (or shouting match, whatever), he’s able to predict  with startling accuracy whether a couple will divorce or not.  But what’s most interesting about  Gottman’s research is that the things that lead to divorce are not  necessarily what you think. Successful couples, like unsuccessful  couples, he found, fight consistently. And some of them fight furiously.   He has been able to narrow down four  characteristics of a couple that tend to lead to divorces (or breakups).  He has gone on and called these “the four horsemen” of the relationship  apocalypse in his books. They are:   

  1. Criticizing your partner’s character (“You’re so stupid” vs “That thing you did was stupid.”)
  2. Defensiveness (or basically, blame shifting, “I wouldn’t have done that if you weren’t late all the time.”)
  3. Contempt (putting down your partner and making them feel inferior.)
  4. Stonewalling (withdrawing from an argument and ignoring your partner.)

The reader emails back this up as well. Out of the 1,500-some-odd emails, almost every single one referenced the importance of dealing with conflicts well.  Advice given by readers included:   

  • Never insult or name-call your partner. Put another way: hate the  sin, love the sinner. Gottman’s research found that “contempt” —  belittling and demeaning your partner — is the number one predictor of  divorce. 
  • Do not bring previous fights/arguments into current ones. This  solves nothing and just makes the fight twice as bad as it was before.  Yeah, you forgot to pick up groceries on the way home, but what does him  being rude to your mother last Thanksgiving have to do with anything? 
  • If things get too heated, take a breather. Remove yourself from the  situation and come back once emotions have cooled off a bit. This is a  big one for me personally, sometimes when things get intense with my  wife, I get overwhelmed and just leave for a while. I usually walk  around the block 2-3 times and let myself seeth for about 15 minutes.  Then I come back and we’re both a bit calmer and we can resume the  discussion with a much more conciliatory tone. 
  • Remember that being “right” is not as important as both people  feeling respected and heard. You may be right, but if you are right in  such a way that makes your partner feel unloved, then there’s no real  winner. 

But all of this takes for granted another important point: be willing to fight in the first place.  I think when people talk about the  necessity for “good communication” all of the time (a vague piece of  advice that everyone says but few people seem to actually clarify what  it means), this is what they mean: be willing to have the uncomfortable  talks. Be willing to have the fights. Say the ugly things and get it all  out in the open. This was a constant theme from the divorced readers. Dozens (hundreds?) of them had more or less the same sad story to tell:  

“But there’s no way on God’s  Green Earth this is her fault alone. There were times when I saw huge  red flags. Instead of trying to figure out what in the world was wrong, I  just plowed ahead. I’d buy more flowers, or candy, or do more chores  around the house. I was a “good” husband in every sense of the word. But  what I wasn’t doing was paying attention to the right things. She  wasn’t telling me there wasn’t a problem but there was. And instead of  saying something, I ignored all of the signals.” – Jim 

9. Get Good at Forgiving

“When you end up being right  about something – shut up. You can be right and be quiet at the same  time. Your partner will already know you’re right and will feel loved  knowing that you didn’t wield it like a bastard sword.” – Brian 
“In marriage, there’s no such thing as winning an argument.”  – Bill 

To me, perhaps the most interesting nugget  from Gottman’s research is the fact that most successful couples don’t  actually resolve all of their problems. In fact, his findings were completely backwards from what most people actually expect:  people in lasting and happy relationships have problems that never  completely go away, while couples that feel as though they need to agree  and compromise on everything end up feeling miserable and falling  apart. To me, like everything else, this comes  back to the respect thing. If you have two different individuals sharing  a life together, it’s inevitable that they will have different values  and perspectives on some things and clash over it. The key here is not  changing the other person — as the desire to change your partner is  inherently disrespectful (to both them and yourself) — but rather it’s  to simply abide by the difference, love them despite it, and when things  get a little rough around the edges, to forgive them for it.  

“Everyone says that compromise  is key, but that’s not how my husband and I see it. It’s more about  seeking understanding. Compromise is bullshit, because it leaves both  sides unsatisfied, losing little pieces of themselves in an effort to  get along. On the other hand, refusing to compromise is just as much of a  disaster, because you turn your partner into a competitor (“I win, you  lose”). These are the wrong goals, because they’re outcome-based rather  than process-based. When your goal is to find out where your partner is  coming from – to truly understand on a deep level – you can’t help but  be altered by the process. Conflict becomes much easier to navigate  because you see more of the context.”  – Michelle 

I’ve written for years that the key to happiness is not achieving your lofty dreams, or experiencing some dizzying high, but rather finding the struggles and challenges that you enjoy enduring.  A similar concept seems to be true in  relationships: your perfect partner is not someone who creates no  problems in the relationship, rather your perfect partner is someone who  creates problems in the relationship that you feel good about dealing  with.  But how do you get good at forgiving? What does that actually mean? Again, some advice from the readers:   

  • When an argument is over, it’s over. Some couples went as far as to  make this the golden rule in their relationship. When you’re done  fighting, it doesn’t matter who was right and who was wrong, it doesn’t  matter if someone was mean and someone was nice. It’s over. It’s in the  past. And you both agree to leave it there, not bring it up every month  for the next three years.
  • There’s no scoreboard. No one is trying to “win” here. There’s no,  “You owe me this because you screwed up the laundry last week.” There’s  no, “I’m always right about financial stuff, so you should listen to  me.” There’s no, “I bought her three gifts and she only did me one  favor.” Everything in the relationship is given and done unconditionally  — that is: without expectation or manipulation. 
  • When your partner screws up, you separate the intentions from the  behavior. You recognize the things you love and admire in your partner  and understand that he/she was simply doing the best that they could,  yet messed up out of ignorance. Not because they’re a bad person. Not  because they secretly hate you and want to divorce you. Not because  there’s somebody else in the background pulling them away from you. They  are a good person. That’s why you are with them. If you ever lose your  faith in that, then you will begin to erode your faith in yourself. 

And finally, pick your battles wisely. You and your partner only have so many fucks to give, make sure you both are saving them for the real things that matter.  

“Been happily married 40+  years. One piece of advice that comes to mind: choose your battles. Some  things matter, worth getting upset about. Most do not. Argue over the  little things and you’ll find yourself arguing endlessly; little things  pop up all day long, it takes a toll over time. Like Chinese water  torture: minor in the short term, corrosive over time. Consider: is this  a little thing or a big thing? Is it worth the cost of arguing?” – Fred 

10. The Little Things Add Up to Big Things

“If you don’t take the time to  meet for lunch, go for a walk or go out to dinner and a movie with some  regularity then you basically end up with a roommate. Staying connected  through life’s ups and downs is critical. Eventually your kids grow up,  your obnoxious brother-in-law will join a monastery and your parents  will die. When that happens, guess who’s left? You got it… Mr./Mrs.  Right! You don’t want to wake up 20 years later and be staring at a  stranger because life broke the bonds you formed before the shitstorm  started. You and your partner need to be the eye of the hurricane.” – Brian 

Of the 1,500 responses I got, I’d say  about ½ of them mentioned at some point or another one simple but  effective piece of advice: Don’t ever stop doing the little things. They  add up.  Things as simple as saying, “I love you,”  before going to bed, holding hands during a movie, doing small favors  here and there, helping with some household chores. Even cleaning up  when you accidentally pee on the toilet seat (seriously, someone said  that) — these things all matter and add up over the long run.  The same way Fred, married for 40+ years,  stated above that arguing over small things consistently wears you both  down, “like Chinese water torture,” so do the little favors and displays  of affection add up. Don’t lose them.  This seems to become particularly  important once kids enter the picture. The big message I heard hundreds  of times about kids: put the marriage first. 

“Children are worshipped in  our culture these days. Parents are expected to sacrifice everything for  them. But the best way to raise healthy and happy kids is to maintain a  healthy and happy marriage. Good kids don’t make a good marriage. A  good marriage makes good kids. So keep your marriage the top priority.”  – Susan 

Readers implored to maintain regular “date  nights,” to plan weekend getaways and to make time for sex, even when  you’re tired, even when you’re stressed and exhausted and the baby is  crying, even when junior has soccer practice at 5:30AM the next day.  Make time for it. It’s worth it.  Oh, and speaking of sex… 

11. Sex Matters… A Lot.

“And you know how you know if you or her are slipping? Sex starts to slide. Period. No other test required.” – Anonymous 

I still remember back in college, it was  one of my first relationships with a cute little redhead. We were young  and naive and crazy about each other. And, because we happened to live  in the same dorm, we were banging like rabbits.  It was everything a 19-year-old male could ask for.  Then after a month or two, we hit our  first “rough patch” in the relationship. We fought more often, found  ourselves getting annoyed with each other, and suddenly our  multiple-times-per-day habit magically dried up. And it wasn’t just with  her, but with me. To my surprised adolescent male mind, it was actually  possible to have sex available to you yet not want it.  It was almost, like, sex was connected to emotions. For a dumb 19-year-old, this was a complete shocker.  That was the first time I discovered a  truth about relationships: sex is the State of the Union. If the  relationship is good, the sex will be good. You both will be wanting it  and enjoying it. When the relationship is bad — when there are  unresolved problems and unaddressed negative emotions — then the sex  will often be the first thing to go out the window.  This was reiterated to me hundreds of  times in the emails. The nature of the sex itself varied quite a bit  among couples — some couples take sexual experimentation seriously,  others are staunch believers in frequency, others get way into fantasies  — but the underlying principle was the same everywhere: both partners  should be sexually satisfied as often as possible.  But sex not only keeps the relationship  healthy, many readers suggested that they use it to heal their  relationships. That when things are a bit frigid between them or that  they have some problems going on, a lot of stress, or other issues  (i.e., kids), they even go so far as to schedule sexy time for  themselves. They say it’s important. And it’s worth it.  A few people even said that when things  start to feel stale in the relationship, they agree to have sex every  day for a week. Then, as if by magic, by the next week, they feel great  again.  

source (google search)

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