Best Relationship Advice you Ever Received...
Relationships are hard. They take a lot of dedication, focus, and work.
Finding the right person to settle down with can often feel like a very
frustrating game of chance. And even when you do find the right one,
you’ll still have your work cut out for you as you make an effort to
maintain your relationship.
If you’re looking for a little guidance when it comes to love, you’ve
come to the right place. The Cheat Sheet spoke with eight top
relationship experts to get some of their best advice. So pull up a
chair and read on for more.
1. Take it easy
The best relationship advice I’ve ever gotten, and that I give, is “easy does it.” Too often we get caught up in fear-based needs to control our partner. This pull becomes a destructive compulsion that corrodes the integrity of the relationship. It replaces respect and compassion with anger and resentment. It destroys the quality of our lives and over time, the relationship.This advice impacted the way I approach romantic relationships in that I allowed for a lot more space, which in turn allowed for less reactivity, more peace, happiness, and respect. The classic struggle of all relationships is finding the right calculus in the togetherness-and-autonomy equation. Typically, when a relationship is under stress, one of the partners asks for physical space to break the tension. This is suboptimal. The best way to incorporate space is by being proactive and providing emotional rather than physical space. To do this, partners need to allow each other the space to be themselves and to have their experiences without trying to control the outcome or think that you are responsible for their lives and reaction. It’s hard work and takes practice, but the rewards are well worth the effort.
2. Give 90%
My parents advised what they did in their own marriage: “both of you
always think about giving 90% to your partner and you both will be very
happy.” They meant it’s so important to think about how your partner is
feeling, to stand in their shoes, to be giving and compromising, and
emotionally generous. That 10% is for the understanding that sometimes
it’s also OK to be a bit selfish, to place your needs first, or stand
firm on something. They also made clear that this only works if you are both giving 90%.
I just celebrated my 26th wedding anniversary. I definitely think about
my spouse’s needs and feelings the majority of the time and try to be
compromising. In return I feel he is 90% thinking of me and how to
consider my feelings and be supportive and loving. Sometimes this means
giving something up, but actually most times this means we both get what
we want and we both feel very loved, supported, and that we are in each
other’s corner. I don’t feel afraid to be giving, because he really has
my best interests at heart. We are a terrific team and often we agree
on what we want. And when we don’t, we tend to take turns supporting the
other’s wants.
3. You are responsible for your own happiness
It’s not my partner’s job to make me happy. It’s my job to make me
happy. Of course it’s easy to feel good when my partner is acting in a
way that I want —but needing them to be a certain way in order for me to
feel good —that’s bondage. Thinking that they’re always going to be in a
good mood and directing their affectionate attention towards me — while
that may be possible during the initial stage of a relationship, is
impossible to sustain long-term. I’m responsible for my happiness. My
partner is responsible for her happiness. We deliberately focus on
things to feel good in our lives and for things to appreciate in one
another.
If you’re looking for someone to complete you —or vice versa—you’re
looking in the wrong direction for the lasting happiness, wholeness, and
fulfillment that you truly seek. Wouldn’t it be better if you could
find a way to feel how you want to feel regardless of what you’re
partner is saying or doing?
This advice transformed every relationship in my life – not just the
romantic ones. Before I knew these things, I was unintentionally
holding my partner responsible for my happiness. When I learned that I’m
responsible for my own happiness and when I learned how to consistently
align with it, my entire world transformed. I now have the freedom to
choose if and when I spend time with someone else, and I deliberately
choose to spend time with others who get this, too. My relationships
are more meaningful, more loving, more free, and most importantly – more
fun! And my overall happiness continues to grow, too, regardless of
whether I’m in a relationship or not.
4. Stop waiting and live your life
When I was single and stressed about finding love, my good friend,
Scott, a confirmed bachelor, told me this. He said, “Lisa, you need to
calm down, chill out, and stop expecting love to be here already. Your
sense of entitlement is killing your ability to attract a good man.”
When I realized he was right, I stopped waking up every day feeling
angry that love hadn’t found me yet. I stopped being resentful that my
friends were married and having lives that felt out of reach to me. I
stopped feeling like my life was on hold. As cliché as it sounds, I
stopped waiting and started living.
Overnight, my outlook changed. My results changed, too. I started
meeting men wherever I went. I went on dates, had fun, didn’t give my
heart away foolishly, and met my husband. I knew he was The One when he
told me, “I’ve always been too nice for the naughty girls and too
naughty for the nice ones.” That had been my experience with men.
My advice for singles who are struggling in their search is to look
within and ask themselves what part of their own life still needs work.
When you clean up your side of the street, you make room for a perfectly
imperfect person to see you, celebrate you, and love you. And remember
that Mr. Right [or Ms. Right] will not be perfect, but will be perfect
for you, just as you’ll be perfectly imperfect for him [or her].
5. Love yourself
You
can’t love anyone more than your willingness to love yourself. Through
this advice I learned about the importance of caring for my mind, body,
and spirit. I liken love to the oxygen mask on a plane. You have to
apply it to yourself before applying it to the person next to you. This
advice improved my chances of winning my wife’s hand in marriage. She
was searching for true love. She wanted someone to spend the rest of her
life with.Conveying to her that I loved myself signaled that I could be
a pillar of strength and compassion.
6. Don’t put boundaries on others
You
can’t put boundaries on someone else—only yourself. If someone is
treating you badly, you can’t change their behavior. But you can ask
yourself why you accept it and how you can put a boundary on yourself so
that you won’t accept it again. It made me take more responsibility for
my role in bad relationships. Instead of feeling like a victim of
circumstance, I was empowered to reject bad treatment and choose a
different person. Also, [remember that] life is a self-fulfilling
prophesy. If you believe you are undeserving of happiness, love and
prosperity, that’s what the universe will give you.
7. Sometimes love is where you’d least expect it
The hottest, most fun, sexiest, interesting, growth-stimulating,
spontaneous, most romantic, most eye-opening relationships or
experiences all were not with people that I thought I would end up with.
Just because a relationship has a shelf life doesn’t mean you shouldn’t
enter into it. This advice allowed me to enjoy each interaction for
what it was and not try to make it something it wasn’t. And at the end
of the day, our life is just a conglomeration of memories and I have
many happy memories to think on. This gives me the freedom to experience
all life has to offer!
Other good advice: “Always be unexpected.” This doesn’t have to be in
grand gestures, but predictability in a relationship = boring = death of
romance. Worst Advice? “Don’t worry, it’ll happen.” If I wanted to
learn French, if someone told me “Don’t worry, it’ll happen,” how stupid
does that sound?! Dating is a skill set like every other and you get
out of it what you put into it.
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