Showing posts with label happily ever after. Show all posts
Showing posts with label happily ever after. Show all posts

Thursday, 24 December 2015

The Reactions That Can Make (or Break) a Relationship

Source: iStock
Source: iStock

The Reactions That Can Make (or Break) a Relationship


Relationships require a delicate balance of love, respect, and admiration. Part of maintaining that balance is remaining aware of how you react during communication. You can choose a positive, negative, or neutral response, and punctuate those responses with verbal and non-verbal cues. You may not think very much about how you respond, but reactions can have a significant impact on the health of your relationship.

Predicting relationship failure

Psychologist John Gottman investigated the impact of seemingly innocent exchanges. He asserts these exchanges, which he calls bids, can more accurately predict the success or failure of a relationship than arguments. Gottman says these exchanges are more than words; they are emotional signals. The way you react to a bid or signal can make or break your relationship. You can either bid positively, negatively, or in a neutral manner (what Gottman refers to as bidding toward, against, or turning away). He found that the more often couples chose to bid toward, the less likely they were to divorce. Licensed Mental Health Counselor Zach Brittle gave this example:
To understand turning, you have to first understand bids. A bid is any gesture — verbal or nonverbal — for some sort of positive connection with your partner. Bids can be simple or complex and can represent a request for conversation, humor, affection, support, or simply for attention. Most are actually pretty easy to spot and respond to: “How do I look?” “Can you pass the guacamole?” “Will you help me change the bedspread?” Other bids are more complicated: “Want to go to yoga with me?” “Let’s learn how to play the guitar.” “Do you feel like fooling around?”

How you can improve your communication

Source: iStock
Source: iStock
Gottman says a marriage can be a success if a couple learns to balance their negative and positive feelings about each other, rather than letting negative thoughts consume them:
What can make a marriage work is surprisingly simple. Happily married couples aren’t smarter, richer, or more psychologically astute than others. But in their day-to-day lives, they have hit upon a dynamic that keeps their negative thoughts and feelings about each other (which all couples have) from overwhelming their positive ones. They have what I call an emotionally intelligent marriage. … The more emotionally intelligent a couple — the better able they are to understand, honor, and respect each other and their marriage — the more likely that they will indeed live happily ever after.
In The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work, Gottman outlines seven key principles that can help a couple grow closer and stay together:

1. Enhance your love maps

A love map is what Gottman calls the part of your brain that remembers the details of your partner’s likes and dislikes. He also refers to it as making cognitive room for your relationship. Gottman says it’s important to continue to keep note of what is important to your partner so that you can stay connected:
They remember the major events in each other’s history, and they keep updating their information as the facts and feelings of their spouse’s world change. When she orders him a salad, she knows to ask for his dressing on the side. If she works late, he’ll tape her favorite TV show because he knows which one it is and when it’s on…They know each other’s goals in life, each other’s worries, each other’s hopes.

 2. Nurture fondness and admiration

Maintain a sense of awe and admiration for your partner. Always try to find something to love about him or her. Look for ways to remind yourself why you fell in love.
“If a couple still have a functioning fondness and admiration system, their marriage is salvageable,” said Gottman. “Fondness and admiration are two of the most critical elements in a rewarding and long-lasting romance…They cherish each other, which is critical to keeping their Sound Relationship House intact and preventing betrayal.”

 3. Turn toward each other instead of away

Include your partner in your day-to-day life. Learn to relish the seemingly unimportant activities in life together. For example, instead of leaving your partner to watch the news alone, join him or her on the couch and just snuggle in each other’s arms. Gottman says this is essential to forming a connection:
Couples who engage in lots of such interaction tend to remain happy. What’s really occurring in these brief exchanges is that the husband and wife are connecting — they are human beings turning toward each other. Couples who do so are building mutual trust. Those who don’t are likely to lose their way.

4. Let your partner influence you

Source: iStock
Work together as a team and show respect for each other. Also learn to see both sides during an argument and master the art of compromise. Gottman emphasizes that for a relationship to thrive, a couple must form a partnership:
Accepting influence doesn’t mean never expressing negative emotions toward your partner…the problem comes when even mild dissatisfaction on the wife’s part is met by a barrage from her husband that, instead of toning down or at the most matching her degree of negativity (yelling back, complaining, etc.), goes beyond it.

5. Solve your solvable problems

Learn to work on issues in your marriage that can be easily solved. When you let problems fester, resentment will build over time. This can lead to the slow erosion of your relationship. Said Gottman, “Even making just a small and generic shift in the trajectory of your marriage can have a dramatic, positive effect over time. The catch, of course, is that you have to build on the change and keep it going. Improving your marriage is a kind of journey.”

6. Overcome gridlock

Take time to identify what is stalling progress in your relationship. Gottman asserts that gridlock occurs in a union when one has unfulfilled dreams. He says sometimes marriages hit a bump in the road when partners are not addressing or respecting each other’s life dreams.
“It’s natural to make the fundamental error of assuming that the distance and loneliness are all your partner’s fault. In truth, they are nobody’s fault. In order to break the pattern, you both need to admit playing some role (however slight at first),” advised Gottman.

7. Create shared meaning

Draw one another closer by creating your own rituals and special times that belong only to you. Create your own space separate from the hustle and bustle of this harsh world. Provide each other with a sense of comfort and safety. Upon coming home, you partner should feel there is no other place he or she would rather be.
View the original article here
Fish2FishDating.co.uk

Tuesday, 4 February 2014

Is he the one? What makes a great Soul Mate relationship? By Lisa Turner

Is he the one?
...is he the one?

Is he the one? What makes a great Soul Mate relationship? By Lisa Turner


There’s a theory that somewhere out there is the perfect partner for you. You’ll meet. There will be music and doves. You’ll fall in love and live happily ever after. If you’ve bought into this myth yet failed to find “the one” then don’t beat yourself up. It’s an idea that’s as old as fairy tales, and just as unrealistic. Relationship expert Lisa Turner explains!


The idea that there’s only ONE person for you and that you need to find them puts enormous pressure on you to pick the right one, and if you think you have found him, it then puts enormous pressure on the Relationship to be perfect forever.

However the truth about soul mate relationships is far more empowering and fun. And it works something like this. According the psychologist Carl Jung’s theory of Perception is projection, we can only perceive in others what is within ourselves although that may be hidden deep in our unconscious. That which is at most unconscious we project onto our most intimate relationships. So all those annoying habits that our partners do are within us, only we aren’t conscious of them which is why we are aware of them (and annoyed by them) in our partners.

Now this is great news. Because it means your true soul mate is the person who will help you grow the most.

So rather than looking for the one, it’s more empowering to create a Relationship that works and here are the signs of a healthy relationship.

· He empowers you and uplifts you. Being with him makes you feel great and you know you are stronger as a team than you are when you’re alone.
· You feel great when you’re on your own and even better where you’re together. This is called synergy.

· He encourages you to do what you want and what is truly good for you, rather than sulking or grumbling because it might mean you would be spending time apart from him.

· He’s honest with you, even if it means telling you what you don’t want to hear, but is good for you. False flattery doesn’t do you any favours, so he’ll be honest about where you are, and still help you to get to where you want to be.

· He makes you feel good about yourself. So do watch out for anyone who belittles you, undermines you or makes you dislike yourself.

· You are both happy to be with each other, and also happy to spend time apart. You each know that spending time doing what you Love energises and revitalises you so that when you are together again the sparks fly.


Soul Mate Myths
1. You’re not complete until you find your soul mate - This is the basis for a dysfunctional co-dependent relationship that’s based on need.

2. When You Meet Your Soul Mate You’ll Fall Deeply In Love And Live Happily Ever After. Not necessarily, your soul mate is the person who will help you to grow the most. So a relationship with your soul mate might be anything but smooth sailing.

3. Soul mates will have exactly the same interests - Rather than interests it’s values that make a great relationship. But they don’t need to have the same values they simply need to respect each other’s values. Specifically each person needs will be aware of what’s important to the other person and respect that. Finding each other’s values and how to satisfy them is what makes relationships so exciting, and can bring challenges too.

4. Soul Mates never argue
Actually they will likely argue a lot. being with your soul mate means you feel comfortable and safe enough to have disagreements. Feeling that you shouldn’t ever argue puts huge pressures on the relationship because should a disagreement arise (and they will) they then assume that it means they aren’t with the right person. So even a minor disagreement means that one or both start thinking “he’s not the one” and to imagine they need to separate and find the real “one”. Soul mates will disagree and it’s the emotional maturity they bring to it that makes them such great soul mates.

Twin flame
The theory is that Twin Flames are created when a single soul was split into its male and female parts. The theory is that these two people were then born and their purpose in life is to seek out their twin flame who would complete them.

Unfortunately not only is the idea that any human is half a person without another person fundamentally disempowering it also doesn’t make much sense.


How could anyone have half a soul? Even mathematically this makes no sense. A soul is infinite. If you divide infinity in half – you still get infinity (trust me I used to be a mathematician). So from this perspective it simply doesn’t work.

To believe that you need someone ELSE to complete you or to make you feel ok is based on the premise that you are somehow incomplete, lacking or not ok on your own. Any relationship based on this are doomed to failure because they will ultimately become co-dependent.



About the Author: Lisa Turner is an emotional reslience expert, media commentator and the founder of personal development company Psycademy. She regularly appears in national newspapers, magazines, on the radio and on the TV, providing help and advice across all areas of emotional and spiritual wellbeing.