Relationship Advice: 10 Tips for a Blissful
Relationship
Relationship Advice: 10 Tips for a Blissful Relationship
By Jeff
Herring
1.Often in marriage, especially in the
early years, there is a choice: You can be right or you can be
happy - not both. Choose wisely.
As a friend of mine said after his first year of marriage:
"I finally figured out that the sun will come up tomorrow if we
do it her way."
2.Learn the gentle art of cooperation. Related to wanting to
be right, competition in a marriage is corrosive _ it eats away
at all the good stuff.
If you are going to compete, compete together to have the
very best marriage you can have.
3.Talk about the important stuff. Most couples spend more
time planning a vacation than they do planning for their
relationship. Create a relationship vision by asking: "If we
could have it exactly like we want, how would it be?"
Build from there. If you get stuck, ask or hire someone to
help.
4.Forgive as much or more than you would like to be
forgiven. Sometimes forgiveness is a gift you give yourself,
especially when you do not feel like it. Forgiveness can
release you from the pain of the offense.
5.Celebrate what you want to see more of. Appreciation can
go a long way.
6.Listen to the heart more than you listen to the words.
Focusing on the words can lead to endless and meaningless
debate: "No, that did not happen on Tuesday, it happened on
Monday!"
Focusing on the heart behind the words can lead to
resolution of conflict and to taking care of each other.
7.Don't be a Darren Stevens.
In the old sitcom "Bewitched," Samantha merely had to wiggle
her nose to make incredible things happen. Darren was always
trying to get her to stop using her magical powers.
Even as a little kid, I thought the guy was nuts. He could
have had anything he wanted. Instead he tried to get Sam to
stifle her gifts. Encourage your partner in her gifts.
8.Check out your communication. While it's easy for two
people to talk to each other, sometimes it is more difficult to
really communicate with each other. Practice these two
sentences: "What I think you're saying is . . . did I miss
anything?" and "Please, tell me what you think I just
said."
9.Take responsibility for your contributions to the
struggle. In 20 years of doing marriage counseling, I've yet to
see a relationship problem that didn't have two sets of
fingerprints all over it. Yet, we tend to focus on what the
other person is doing. "If only you would . . . . ,then
everything would be OK."
One of the quickest paths to frustration and failure is to
try to change someone else. Take responsibility to change your
contribution to the problem, whether it's what you are doing
and/or how you respond to what your partner is doing.
10.Don't assume that just because you are married, you know
how to be married. Pay attention to what works for other
couples. Read all you can. Go to seminars. Everybody needs a
coach. Find one. It's a lot less expensive than divorce,
financially and emotionally.
Jeff Herring is a Relationship Coach, Speaker, and
Syndicated Relationship Columnist. Visit SecretsofGreatRelationships.com for more
relationship tips and tools, a free internet newsletter and
free e-programs to enrich your relationship.
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