Sunday, April 7, 2013

After The Breakup and Dating Decisions and Moving Forward

 "Special Two Part Blog Series"
 

After The Breakup ...

If you have not gotten over your past lover within 2 to 3 years you need help...

When did the honeymoon end in your relationship? Was it the first time you realized that your mate wasn’t all you had hoped for? Or maybe it was when you discovered that sometimes their cheerful optimism could turn to resentment or depression for no apparent reason. Do you remember your first fight? How about the first time that you wondered whether you had made a mistake in your selection of a partner? If you’re typical, then you’ve had the experience of disappointment, frustration, confusion, resentment or helplessness more times than you’d care to admit since you exchanged vows. If you’re like most of us, you may have taken these feelings as an indication that something could be seriously out of line in our marriage or relationship. And if you’re human, you’ve probably attempted to influence your partner’s feeling, attitudes or behaviors only to discover that you’d now created a new problem.

Most of us spend between twelve and twenty years of our lives in school yet nowhere are we really informed as to the specific requirements of sustaining and enhancing the quality of our relationships. We hope, believe or pray that despite our ignorance of the nature of interpersonal relationships that we can make it work anyway. And when the inevitable upsets arrive, we may feel defeated, angry, or despaired.

Though conflict may not be avoidable in marriage, it is not necessarily a foreshadowing of doom. Differences in opinions, feelings, temperaments, and even values, are an inherent aspect of relationship. In fact, we generally select partners who will help us to expand our inner and outer lives by offering a life perspective, which differs from our own. Unfortunately, opening up to these opportunities for growth can be excruciatingly uncomfortable. Often it is easier to tell ourselves that “it’s just not meant to be.” And yet how many of us are acquainted with couples who called it quits in frustration, only to turn around and play out the same pattern with another person?

What if the object of relationships was not to eliminate or even minimize conflict but to work with it in an effective, responsible and conscious way? What if each breakdown that occurred between you held the seeds of the possibility of becoming a more loving and wiser person. What if your experience of your relationship had more to do with you than it did with your partner? What if there were no mistakes or wrong choices in the selection of a mate, and you really do have the perfect partner for the lessons that you’re in this relationship to learn?

The purpose of these questions is to generate an inquiry and to begin the process of going beyond the models, expectations, and beliefs we all have about relationships. In this way we discover and create new possibilities. The biggest barrier in the development of a high-functioning partnership is our own preconceived beliefs, about being in relationship.
Observing the suffering of other couples that are struggling in their marriages, it’s easy to presume that things inevitably break down sooner or later and that for most couples, the breakdown is permanent. It’s easy to wonder, “Who’se next? Is it us?” The tendency to feel resignation and hopelessness in the face of fear is a choice, often made out of a desire to avoid looking more directly at some of the more difficult questions, such as

 “How might I have contributed to the current situation?” “What beliefs about myself or others might I be validating by holding on to my position?”

“What is it that I’m so attached to being right about and why?”
What, if anything, might I have done that I need to reveal to my partner?”
“What fear is underneath my fear of losing (or staying in) this relationship?”
“What unfulfilled needs or desires have I failed to disclose to my partner, and why?”
“What forms of manipulation (examples: intimidation, nagging, fault-finding, guilt-tripping, shaming, raging, withdrawing) have I used to try to coerce my partner into accommodating my desires?”

“Am I making my partner responsible for fulfilling needs within myself that are my responsibility, and not theirs?”

The common thread that runs through all of these questions is that they are all self-referential. They require us to redirect the focus of our attention away from our partner and look instead at ourselves, to look at our part in the chain of events that led us to the point where we currently stand. Doing so does not absolve them of their responsibility in the breakdown, but it empowers us to focus our energies on the only person that we have the power to influence in this scenario, and that is ourselves.

Taking our attention off of our partner will enable us to embody a higher level of vulnerability and encourage them to feel less defensive and consequently more inclined to listen to our concerns and needs with a more conciliatory attitude. Such openness is likely to promote a greater likelihood that he or she will be more willing to reciprocate by responding more non-adversarially themselves, thus interrupting the cycle of defensiveness that turns ordinary differences into destructive conflict.

There is of course, no guarantee that their response will be reciprocal. Our vulnerability is merely an invitation to respond with vulnerability. It is not assurance that such a response will be forthcoming.

There is, however no better way to find out how willing your partner is to undefend themselves than by providing an example for what this can look like by disarming yourself of your own defenses.
When we can interrupt these patterns, we can move beyond the concerns of day-to-day survival, and raise new questions having to do with greater possibilities such as “How great could our relationship really be?” Once we understand that there is so much more that is possible than we may have previously realized, old dreams are reawakened and new ones come into being along with a newfound confidence to implement them.

Paradoxically, it only when we accept that there is no magic involved in the process of relationship-building, and no perfect partner with whom we can effortlessly co-create the partnership of our dreams, that we begin to experience the degree of ease and joy that we had previously hoped for.  But first we need to free ourselves of our limiting beliefs and expectations. Like the saying goes, to find the partner of your dreams you must first become the partner of your dreams. In so doing you will become irresistible to that person that you have been waiting for, whether you haven’t met them yet or whether you’ve been married to them for thirty years!



BREAKUP TIME FRAME TABLE:

1st year - healing process and in counseling

a. support from counseling, family and close friends
 

2nd year - we begin to heal and move forward with dating and meeting others

a. dating and meeting another is healthy

3rd. year - by now, we should be able to let go through numerous help and support methods from friends, family and counseling 

a. We should begin dating, trusting and committing to another

* AGE: Theirs no age barrier theirs just stubborn and ones inability to move forward that only robs us emotionally and "stops" us ---------------> mentally from fulfilling the most important aspect of life, 

"our true love and soul mate".  

Dating Decisions and Moving Forward 

 

Couples who commute in the same direction are happier with their relationships 
Moving in with a romantic partner is not only an important relationship decision in and of itself, but it comes with it a series of exhausting micro-decisions. How much rent or mortgage can you both afford, and how should you divvy it up? Whose furniture should you bring, and whose furniture gets left behind? Do you want the two-bedroom without a dishwasher, or the one-bedroom that’s near a grocery store? And, one of the most important choices: where’s the best place to live geographically?
Common sense says that you should get a place that is in between your two places of work, to minimize your commute time. But, according to recent research on romantic relationships, you may want to choose a place that allows you to both travel to work in the same direction instead.

In a recent series of studies ('Spring 2013/British institute'), Huang, an Asian marriage specialist based in Hong Kong China,  and colleagues1 ran three different studies looking at the association between two seemingly random variables: marital satisfaction, and the direction in which the spouses commute to work. The researchers found that couples who commute to work in the same direction are actually happier in their marriages. These effects held controlling for a wide range of other factors, such as how long the couples had been together, whether or not they had kids, whether they left for work together, and how much of a difference there was between each partner’s commute time. Furthermore, the researchers obtained a similar effect experimentally, with strangers in a lab study. It seems that travelling in the same direction really is good for relationships.

Why does travelling in the same geographic direction, as opposed to travelling in opposite directions, contribute to relationship quality? The researchers argue that it’s because travelling in the same direction makes romantic partners feel like they are pursuing common goals. The behavior of physically travelling in the same direction is metaphorically linked to working toward the same things. This metaphorical link can be seen in the language that we use to describe common goals (e.g., “we’re moving forward”) versus competing goals (e.g., “we went our separate ways”, “they took the project in a different direction“). By physically travelling in the same direction each day, couples may be more likely to feel that they have more goals in common with their partner, which is an important part of relationship quality.

 So, if you’re looking to move to a new place with your partner, consider the route that you’ll both have to take to get to work. Rather than find a place that’s in between your two places of work, which would lead you to travel in opposite directions each day, you may want to consider a location that allows you to commute to work in the same direction, instead. These studies suggest that doing so may make an even more positive impact on your relationship than getting that extra 20 minutes of sleep in the morning.

The couple that prays together stays together ...
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God bless,
Kendra Young

Pisces and Taurus Compatiable 99% 

http://piscescompatablity.blogspot.com/



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