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I
know you're hurting. It doesn't have to be this way.
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Focus on how you feel when YOU are loving. Does loving someone feel good regardless if its returned? Is your loving someone conditional on them loving you back? If so, why? |
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Do you feel loved when your partner isnt around? If not, why not? Do you accept yourself, appreciate your qualities? |
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Have you talked to your partner about what things cause you to feel loved? (Dont get caught up in if they loved me, theyd know, cause they dont.) |
"We don't have anything in common anymore."
You love each other and that's why you got together in the first place, but you don't really seem to have much in common anymore. Youre into philosophy and art. They're into sports. You like books and going for walks, and she always wants to go sailing. But you tell yourself that marriage is a sacrifice. A give and take. Youve been told you should put aside your own interests to make the relationship work. You have to compromise, right? But when you give up what you love for the sake of the relationship, you end up resenting the person and conclude you don't have anything in common.
Useful Questions:
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What would happen if you did what you wanted, and they did what they wanted? |
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How much time do you have to spend with your lover to feel you have a successful relationship? How did you arrive at that amount? What would it mean if you had separate interests? |
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Do you see yourself and your partner as two separate people who choose to be together or do you feel obligation? |
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Do you believe Love means to sacrifice.? If so, why? |
"We can't talk about that."
Every time you approach certain subjects, it turns into an argument. Unconsciously you decide to avoid that topic in the future because you don't want to fight. You don't want the conflict. You believe fighting means the relationship is on rocky ground or is threatening to the relationship. You want to stay together, if you fight, you might separate. So you become afraid to talk about one or two subjects. Over time, that list of "don't touch that one" becomes more and more numerous. And as the list of avoided topics grows, it starts to feel like you can't talk with each other anymore. You feel distant and detached. You start wondering how much longer you can live like this. The silence grows.
Useful Questions:
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Examine your beliefs about love and arguing. Are you afraid of being hurt in relationships? Does disagreeing with someone always mean hurt feelings? If so, why? How could you do it differently? |
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If you feel your best when you are free to be ALL of who you are, what is the point of limiting who you are with the one you love? |
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Is honesty in
your love relationship ever a wrong move? Why do you believe that? (Read more about how honesty effects relationships) Talk to your partner about your concerns while keeping the focus on YOUR feelings and not their behavior. (Helpful hint: Be watchful of terms like you always, you never, you make me feel. Try this instead: When you do this, I make myself feel this) |
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Learn to be more accepting of your partner by becoming more accepting of yourself. |
"It would be easier to start over with someone else."
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Some time has passed in the relationship and you've both built up lies. Some big ones but mostly small ones. The intentions behind the lies was to protect yourself and your partner from pain. But now, your problems seem overwhelming and you can't talk openly and honestly about them because you've already established a certain pattern of communication. It seems it would be considerably easier to just start fresh with a new partner. One where you could be yourself without fear.
Useful Questions:
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Is honesty in
your love relationship ever a wrong move? Why do you believe that? (Read more about how honesty effects relationships) |
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Get clear on what you've lied about to your partner. |
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Figure out what you're afraid would happen if you were honest with them about those issues. |
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Talk to your partner about your concerns of being TOTALLY honest. Keep the focus on YOUR feelings and not their behavior. |
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Muster up the courage to tell them what you've lied about. Repeat to yourself, "No matter what happens, I will be okay." |
"If you loved me you would....."
Unmet expectations take a large toll in relationships. In having expectations, you're expecting your partner to be a certain way in order to believe they love you and care about you. If you don't get what you expect, you conclude all kinds of things about the relationship that may not be true.
Useful Questions:
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Do your expectations have to be fulfilled for you to be happy? If so, why? |
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Do you expect your partner to conform to your wants? What does it mean when they don't? |
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Do you have preset rules in your love relationships? If so, what are they and why? |
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Do you find yourself often saying he should or she should? |
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Do you have any If you loved me you would...[fill in the blank]'s? If so, what are they? Can you think of a time you didn't do what someone wanted you to do? Did you love them, even though you didn't do what they wanted? Could it be the same with your partner? |
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Do you use anothers words and actions as evidence or proof that they love you?. If your partner does that thing or activity you want, then do they love you? If they don't, is that a sign they don't love you or care? If yes, why? |
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Understand everyone has different wants, desires, and beliefs about what is loving. |
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Be Honest. |
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Examine what expectations you DO have, then openly discuss them with your partner. Find out what theirs are. |
Home
| Defining Love | Is Love Painful? | Relationship Types
Key To Success | Problems
| How We Fight
Improving Your Relationship |
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