
15 Universal Truths About Love
I’ve
done numerous interviews and talks about what makes for a successful
relationship. I’ve been a marriage counselor for 35 years, and have also
written extensively on the subject of love, most recently a book entitled Love
Cycles, which looks
at how the feeling of love comes in distinct cycles during romantic
relationships. In other words, love is more complicated than we often believe.
With that, here are the 15 things
I’ve observed over time to be the most essential and universal truths about
love.
1. Love is
a feeling.
And like any feeling, it can come
and go — sometimes unexpectedly. Loving, however, is a skill set, and one you
can develop.
2. At its
beginning, romantic love is passionate and exciting — so enjoy the ride.
Keep in mind, though, that the depth of your passion early on is no indication that your lover is a
good person for you to commit to. We need other (less exciting) information to
select a partner wisely.
3. One of
the main reasons relationships fail is that we don’t choose someone who is
right for us to begin with.
This seems obvious, but accepting
this truth will help you be more mindful and self-aware when it comes to determining the difference between love and lust.
4. We tend
to commit to those we think are like us.
And we move into a power struggle
dynamic soon thereafter because we find out they’re different. Then we try to
change our lover into the person we thought they were — or should be. That is
the cause of so, so many conflicts I see in relationships.
5. Nobody
can change another person.
You may get compliance and
agreement, but they won’t last. Learning to practice the art of acceptance is
an effort far more worth your while.
6. We
often look out and see what our partner is doing “wrong.”
But any change we seek has to come
from within us. Relationships are an inside job.
7. Waiting
for your partner to change isn't the same thing as patience.
To be actually patient (with
yourself), learn to accept your partner. Rather than wait for him/her to decide
to change, sometimes all it takes is to make a new move yourself.
8. To find
the right person is to be the right person.
Feeling good in your own skin is
the foundation of a healthy relationship, period.
9. All couples have some irresolvable issues.
The difference between couples
that thrive and couples that dive is how successfully they manage their issues, because every
couple has some.
10.
Nourishing the relationship doesn't happen on its own.
In addition to developing the
skills to manage conflict, you also need to commit to nourishing the
relationship (even when you don't want to). As I said, loving is a skill set —
so make sure to put in the work to have fun together, to try new activities and
to allow miracles to happen!
11. To be
able to nurture the other person and the relationship, we have to keep our own
tank full.
Giving and giving without
receiving is a recipe for burnout. Not only should there be mutual giving in
the relationship, but make sure to give yourself love, too.
12. You can live a full life even if you don't commit to one person.
12. You can live a full life even if you don't commit to one person.
People used
to need relationships
to survive and to keep the species alive. Now, by contrast, we are with
particular partners by choice. So honor the power of your choice.
13. The #1
complaint in couple’s therapy is "I’m not in love with my partner
anymore.”
But once again: love is a feeling.
It comes and it goes, and is never constant. Good relationships have bad
seasons and also dull ones. Most often, the feeling returns — so don't be in
despair if you feel the ebb and flow.
14. It’s
normal for sex to slow down and sometimes seem to disappear in long-term
relationships.
No matter how dull or dead our sex life feels, we can
jump-start it into something passionate and hot all over again, if we’re
willing.
15. To fall in love
takes a moment.
To learn to love takes a long time and is the
most valuable thing we can learn in our lifetime.
I’ve been with my husband for thirty
years of a (mostly) terrific marriage. I attribute this to the commitment we
each made to learn the skills (and practice them) which make love thrive and to
almost create a series of mantras for ourselves out of these points. In some
ways I feel my own life experience are my most important credentials.
Origin :- www.mindbodygreen.com


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