Wednesday, March 9, 2016

7 signs you're with the wrong partner

Margaret Paul

You have to start with knowing why you want to be in a relationship, and when it comes down to it, there are only two reasons people do this:

1. To get love, security, validation, and safety, or to have a child. Someone to complete you — to fill your emptiness and make you feel adequate and worthy.

2. To share love and companionship, and to grow emotionally and spiritually.

You need to BE the right partner before you can know if you're with the right partner. That means you need to learn to love yourself, define your own worth, and fill yourself with love to share, rather than pursuing external validation. Ask yourself, "Am I filled with love to share, or am I needy and desperate to get love?”
If your intent is to get love rather than share love, then it's likely that no relationship will ultimately be right for you. You have some internal work to do before anyone will be the right partner for you.
You don't need to be "perfect" at loving yourself, but you do need to be working on learning to take responsibility for your own feelings of worth, adequacy, and safety.
If you fall into the second category (wanting to be in a relationship to give love and to grow), then ask yourself the following questions:

1. Is the person you're with open to learning about themselves and about you?

Being open to learning how to love yourself and others — rather than being closed and defensive — is essential for sustaining a loving relationship. Partners cannot resolve conflict without being open to learning. The question to ask yourself is, "What does this person do in conflict?"
Some people can appear to be open and loving until a conflict occurs and then they get angry, withdrawn, resistant, or overly compliant. If they do close up, how long does it take them to open again? Obviously, if they get emotionally or physically abusive, they are not the right partner for you.
Being open to lovingly resolving conflict is essential for perpetuating a loving relationship.

2. Is your partner capable of caring, compassion, empathy, and acceptance for who you are?

If you find that your partner is incapable of feeling empathy, then he or she isn't the right partner for you. A lack of empathy is one of the signs of narcissism.

3. Do you feel a basic spark of attraction? Do you like to be near this person? Do you like their smell?

If you do not feel physically attracted to this person within the first six months of the relationship, it's likely an attraction will not develop. This person might be a good friend but not a romantic partner.

4. Does this person have a compulsion to win and be right?

This is the opposite of being open to learning and does not bode well for a relationship.

5. Do you share interests?

Can you do certain things together, or is there no overlap in what you like to spend your time doing?

6. Do you have common religious and political values?

Do you agree on topics like spending, parenting, eating, fitness, neatness, and punctuality?

7. Does this person have any addictions that you find intolerable?

Alcohol? Prescription or recreational drugs? Food? Sex addiction and/or porn? Gambling? Shopping or spending? TV, Internet, or video games?
When we love someone deeply, we love their essence — who they really are. But we all have an ego-wounded self, and the worst version of your partner needs to be tolerable to you. Don't expect them to change. You get what you see.
If, when you go through this list, you find there are things that are not tolerable but you keep hoping they'll change, you're not with the right partner. You need to accept or leave. Expecting change will only lead to heartbreak.
Remember, you need to be the right partner to find the right partner. We attract at our common level of emotional well-being — self-abandonment or self-love. The better you are at loving yourself, the better your chance of attracting and sustaining a loving relationship.

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Responding to manipulation

LaShelle Lowe Charde

Responding to Manipulation
You get kind of a sticky tense feeling and know something isn't right.  Someone's words aren't matching their action or their emotion.  On the surface they are focusing on one thing, but underneath it is about something totally different.  It seems that they are intentionally deceiving you in order to meet their needs at the cost of yours. This is how you might describe manipulation.

When you realize manipulation is afoot you likely get angry or begin to withdraw.  With anger you have thoughts like, "He should be direct and just ask for what he wants!"  Withdrawing you may simply feel fuzzy headed and have the instinct to move away from someone you don't trust is authentic.   Unfortunately neither response helps you if you value the relationship and want to move towards honesty.

The first effective thing you can do in the face of manipulation is stay with yourself.  Keep your attention on the sticky tense feeling.  Disconnect from the other person for a moment so that you don't slip into their confusion.  A gem reader, we'll call her Marketa, gave this example.

"My husband and I are separated.  He dropped by one day to pick up some things.  I decided to bring up an issue that had been on my mind and our conversation quickly escalated into a confrontation.  In the midst of this he said,  'I came over to have a peaceful discussion with you about our relationship and now that's impossible.'  He had not previously mentioned wanting to talk."

Marketa got that sticky tense feeling and for a moment was disoriented.  Her husband tried to express his feelings and needs by subtly blaming her while simultaneously putting himself in a positive light.

As soon as she notices these feelings, Marketa tells herself to take a breath and focus inward.  If she responds immediately to his comment, she will likely get caught in a swirl of confusing communication.  Instead, she takes time to feel her feelings and ask herself "what just happened?"  Marketa names for herself that her husband just communicated in a manipulative way.  She knows that any response to the content of a manipulative comment will go nowhere fast.

If she wants to stay connected, she has at least three choices, self-empathy, empathy or honest expression.  For continued self-empathy she may end the interaction at that point and take space to be alone and connect with her own experience.  Expressing herself honestly she might say, "Hearing you say that, I feel disconnected.  Would you be willing to say what's going on for you in another way?"

Responding with empathy she might say, "I am guessing you are feeling frustrated and wish we could just get along.  Is that right?"

Of course, responding in either of these ways is pretty much impossible if Marketa is making her husband wrong for his comment.  She has to have at least one foot in the consciousness that says her husband is doing the absolute best he can in the moment.

Manipulation is a strategy or set of strategies that people learn in their struggle to take care of their hearts.  If they knew and trusted a better strategy, they would be using it.  Have this kind of faith in the core goodness of people allows you to stay compassionate with yourself and others.

Responding to manipulation with an anger storm or withdrawing adds to the cycle of suffering.  You can prepare yourself to meet manipulation by naming for yourself how you will recognize it, how you will ground yourself in the midst of it, and how you would like to either set a boundary or create more direct communication in the moment.

Practice
Take time now to reflect on the last time you encountered what you perceived as manipulation.  Name all the symptoms in yourself and in the other person that had you label the interaction as manipulative.  How did you or would you have liked to stay grounded in that moment?  How would you have like to move forward with setting a boundary or with an attempt to connect?
 

Sunday, January 24, 2016

The argument that keeps coming back

Lashelle Lowe Charde

The Argument that Keeps Coming Back
Any relationship no matter how harmonious is likely to have a consistent point of tension that shows up again and again.  It might show up with different superficial content as the trigger, but some part of you knows it's that old familiar issue wearing different clothes.

When you get hooked by reactivity around this old tension, you find yourself angry and despairing about something mundane, like how the laundry gets done.  Suddenly the laundry becomes a giant unresolvable issue.  Of course, there is some very practical and simple solution to any mundane conflict, but you aren't really trying to solve the laundry issue, you are hooked on the reactive idea that you must find resolution for this deeper issue that keeps coming back.  This is suffering.

You can shift your relationship to arguments that keep coming back in two ways:  cultivating a clear and compassionate relationship to them and taking small steps over time to meet the underlying needs. Let's start with the first one.  

These arguments usually revolve around one or two core needs and greatly differing strategies about how those needs are met.  This might get referred to commonly as "we have different styles", or "s/he just doesn't get that part of me".  For example, perhaps you have a tenderness around being included and your partner enjoys meeting needs for discovery by spontaneously jumping into something without inviting you.  Or perhaps your partner has a tenderness around autonomy and hears your desire to be included as you "trying to control everything".

To develop a more clear and compassionate relationship to the argument that keeps coming back it's helpful to identify the following core elements of it:
  • primary emotions (one or two)
  • Universal needs (one or two)
  • The way you prefer to meet that need.
  • The "filter" or limiting core belief that is usually present and triggering more reactivity.  Here are some examples limiting beliefs along with the related need:
    • Safety:  "The world is a harsh place.", "Emotions are dangerous.", "You can't trust others to be kind."

  • Autonomy:  "S/he is bossy.", "I never get to choose.", "I'll get subsumed by your needs and lose myself."

  • Intimacy:  "I'm not lovable.", "I will be abandoned.", "I'm all alone."

  • Support:  "I have to do it myself.", "People will always let you down.", "No one supports me.", "There's not enough."

  • Being seen/heard:  "I don't matter.", "I'm invisible.", "I have to work hard to get your attention.", "I have to earn your love."

By just being able to name these elements each time they come up you will have more freedom from reactive hooks.  You will be able to say, "Oh, we are in this familiar place, I don't have follow the same painful script.  I can pause here, breath and let it go."

When you are not in the midst of the argument, you can take extra steps to meet the tender needs from that repetitive argument.  Perhaps you and your partner can brainstorm together creative little ways to meet those needs even if the larger circumstances aren't going to change for now.

A key part of any practice with a difficult situation is asking yourself to put your attention on it without pushing or pulling; just noticing and being with the discomfort allows wise action to arise of its own accord.

Practice
Take a moment now to reflect on a repetitive argument and identify the core elements of it: emotion, needs, preferred strategy to meet the need, and limiting or reactive belief.

Monday, January 18, 2016

Teaching others your love language

LaShelle Charde

3 Principles for Teaching Others Your Love Language
There is a certain way that you most easily receive love.  Gary Chapman speaks about this phenomena in a clear and accessible way in his book, "The Five Love Languages"*.  Of course, this doesn't just apply to love, you have a preferred strategy for meeting each of your needs.  You have a particular preference around how you want to be supported, what activities meet your need for play, what builds trust for you, etc.  Meeting the need for love is simply one of the key needs in close relationships.  

When things are going well and there are no big challenges, exchanges of love in any form are often enough to sustain connection.  However, when you are facing big challenges in life, you are likely looking for that deep sense of love and support that you only experience with your preferred strategy.  For example, when things are going well you know that your friend shows her love and support by cooking meals for you and giving you a ride to the airport when you need one (Dr. Chapman would call this love language "acts of service").  You appreciate this even though it is not your love language.  Then, you have a few rough months, your partner breaks up with you, there is conflict at work, and a close family member dies.  You don't have much resource, you just want to be met in the "right" way!  Suddenly the acts of service from your friend aren't enough and you have thoughts that she doesn't really care and isn't a supportive friend.  You think, "She should know that when I am struggling I need words of encouragement and verbal empathy.  Afterall we have known each other for twenty years!"

Unfortunately, no amount of time teaches your partner or close friends how to best support you in a time of great need.  Only you can teach them how to love you by communicating clearly and with great respect for their choice and ability.  Perhaps for you, words comes easily so it may be hard to imagine how the other person could really just not know what to say.  But if you can't accept these kinds of differences, then you will find yourself harboring resentful expectations that leak out in abrasive comments or a gradual pulling away.  

So the first principle of teaching someone your love language is respect for differences.  Subsumed under this principle is the very important consciousness called "giving others the benefit of the doubt" or "assuming good intent".  When you learn to see and appreciate others' good intentions even when their actions don't meet you in your preferred way, you can make requests with kindness and respect.

The second principle is self-responsibility.  If you have unhealed wounding around not being loved and supported in the way you needed most, you may have a reactive pattern of thought that says others should just know.  That's the voice of an angry and hurting child (reactive pattern) that still longs for that original experience being loved fully without having to do anything.  While holding the childlike part of you tenderly on your lap, you can gently let yourself know that you can still have the experience of being loved fully even if you do ask for it in a direct and detailed way.  To do otherwise, would be leaving something as important as love to chance, forever waiting for the "right person" to come along and fulfill that wish.

Self-responsibility not only means that you are willing to ask directly for what you want (which of course means that you have cultivated a certain depth of self-awareness), but also that you recognize that responsibility for meeting your needs rests with you.  Thus, when others say yes to your request it is a gift rather than fulfillment of an expectation.

The third principle is immediacy and repetition.  Immediacy and repetition is nothing new in the world of learning theory.  Applying a skill in the moment it is relevant and having the opportunity to do that many times over with corrective feedback, is how we learn.  Somehow when emotions get involved, you can sometimes imagine that your partner or friend should be able to learn something as complex as loving you with one example and request, not so.  

Let's go back to our example of your friend who offers acts of service when your love language is really about words of encouragement and empathy.  You share something vulnerable and your friend sits quietly.  You remember you want to be self-responsible and let her know what you need.  You make a request, "Sharing just now, it would really help me to feel supported just to hear what you're understanding about my situation.  Would you be willing to say?"

Later in the evening, the exact same situation occurs.  You think to yourself, "Now surely she knows what I am looking for here, I just told her forty minutes ago."  Here's the thing, if there is a loving intention and your friend isn't speaking your love language, then she doesn't know how yet.  It is that simple.  It is up to you to immediately make the request again with respect and kindness.  Acting in the moment keeps resentment from building which enables the other person to receive your request without a sense of demand or criticism.  When your friend or partner is spontaneously "speaking" your love language you will know they have learned it.  This may take days, months, years, or decades.  Learning curves are diverse. :)

Here are some ways to contribute to a sense of ease and connection around teaching your love language to another:
  • Learn the other person's love language and stretch yourself to "speak" it.
  • Find as many ways as you can to show respect for choice and differences.
  • Acknowledge and celebrate good intentions.
  • Acknowledge and celebrate all expressions of love.
  • Highlight and share the depth of impact on you when the other person does offer love in your love language.

Practice
What are the ways you feel most loved?  Take a few moments now to reflect on a time you felt most loved.  What were the key elements of that experience?  What were others offering and what were you doing to receive?  Do you know how the people closest to you best receive love?  Take a moment to make some guesses in your heart.

*The five love languages named by Gary Chapman are:  words of affirmation, acts of service, receiving gifts, quality time, physical touch.

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

3 Ways to avoid dating people who make you feel.................

By Lauren Capp

It’s been said that single people give the best dating advice, but can’t take their own. Despite being the queen of that sentiment, this longtime single lady has learned many things along the way. The most important thing I've learned in my many (many!) years of dating? To live a healthy life, you need to love yourself. And in order to love yourself, you must stop dating people who treat you like crap.
We’ve all had those boyfriends, quick relationships, or last minute Tinder dates that left us feeling hollow inside. These are the individuals who turn confident women into insecure beings and appoint us the title of "crazy." When the need to feel loved gets in the way of a clear head, the ability for someone to take advantage of you becomes effortless.
Don’t let love/lust take away from your own self-love. No matter how attractive or smooth-talking your date is, it's paramount that you continue to embody the confident, kickass woman you know you truly are.
Here are three rules to maintain your self-respect when the person you’re dating isn’t showing you any.

1. If you're second guessing whether this person likes you, it's time to end it.

The minute you start making excuses for why he hasn't texted. The minute you question whether he likes you. The minute that gross pit of doubt forms in your stomach. That's the minute it's time to move on.
You are strong and smart and beautiful and funny and amazing. You shouldnever have to wonder whether someone likes you, especially at the beginning of a relationship. Those first months (nay, those yearsshould be totally devoid of doubt when it comes to how you both are feeling.
Questioning whether your partner is into you is a slippery slope. Don't let anyone else determine your self-worth. The longer you hold onto someone you know isn’t into you, the more insecure you'll become.

2. Don't be the giver all the time.

Whether it's traveling to his place or always picking the restaurant, being the partner who makes (or has to make) all of the decisions eventually adds up and can leave you feeling like the relationship is one-sided. When you start to notice a pattern like this, it's time to take a step back and reevaluate.
To avoid playing games, communication is key. Talk to your partner and discuss that you'd like the effort to be reciprocated. See if they're willing to do the work. The person who is right for you will travel to the moon and back to see you for just a few minutes, no matter how busy their schedule.

3. Maintain your identity and friendships.

A confident partner will love that you have a life, friends and interests outside of the two of you. Listen, I get that it's difficult to make time for all of the things in your life you want to give attention to. And whether you've just started dating someone or are in a long-term relationship, independence from each other can sometimes be hard.
You're either head-over-heels in the honeymoon phase and can't stand to be apart, or you've been together for so long that it might feel strange to make plans separately. But maintaining a sense of yourself that isn't connected to your partner is crucial, not only for your own sake, but also for that of the relationship.
If your partner doesn't understand how you could make plans without him or her, can't fathom why you'd want to do something on your own, that's a red flag. If the person is right for you, he or she won’t keep you away from the life you had before, or from new things you take an interest in.
Just because you're in a relationship doesn't mean you have to share the same exact interests and friends. Discuss your passions and continue to keep them a priority. There's nothing more attractive than a hardworking person who has passion for life and friendships.
Because I am a single woman who has gone through the gamut of awful dates and experiences, I know what not to do now. Nothing good ever comes from continuing contact with someone who doesn’t respect you; it will never end well.
Dig deep and remind yourself that you deserve better. The right person will realize your worth and show you qualities about yourself that you haven’t already seen.

Monday, December 14, 2015

Dos & Don'ts of Reaching out to an Ex

By Julita Cardenas

After breakups, sometimes an amicable silence is what you both want. You’ve said all you need to say and acknowledged that it's over, and now you just want to move on.
But that's not always the case. What if you have more to say? What if you want to apologize? What if you want your ex back? There is no right or wrong way to go about this, but thinking about how the other person will perceive your communication can help you make a better decision.
Here are six do's and don'ts of contacting your ex:

1. Do be up front.

Be clear about what you want when you contact them. When most people get a message or voicemail from their ex, they always wonder, “What do they want?” They'll be curious to know if you want to rekindle the flame or just to clear your conscience. Be direct in your communication.
If you want to get back together you can call or email and say, “I’ve been thinking about you recently and wanted to see how you’re doing. I would love see you and meet for coffee.” If the goal is to revive interest, aim to spark curiosity. When you see each other, convey the feelings you had when you were together. If your goal is to clear a guilty conscience, say what you need to say, via email or on the phone, but don’t string them along. Hopefully they'll take the hint either way.

2. Don't worry about whether or not they'll respond.

Even if you're worried that your ex won’t want to see you, or they'll have a hostile reaction to contact, don’t let that stop you. You might be surprised to know that on some level that person might need to hear from you. If things were left unresolved or unfinished, they will also need a sense of closure.
Many people aren't comfortable reaching out to an ex for closure or to broach the possibility of getting back together. Their feelings might be hurt by behavior from the end of the relationship, when communication was hostile or avoidant. If important things were left unsaid, make the move. Initiate communication. It’s better to try to resolve something than to live with unanswered questions about the past. Saying what you need to say is the best way to move on.

3. Do be respectful of their current relationship status.

Consider the options. You might not necessarily know whether they're with someone else, so you need to consider whose buttons you might be pushing when you make contact. Think about how you would feel if your partner's ex contacted them. You probably wouldn’t even want them to respond. You might imagine telling the other person off on your partner's behalf.
So, it’s important to identify your objectives before reaching out. Do you want to be friends? Do you want to apologize? Do you want to win them back? If you ask to get together, you can say, “If you are single, I’d love to meet for drinks. But that if you're with someone else, I respect that.” Saying something like this will also give you an indication whether they're still interested in you. Decide based on what’s best for the other person. If they're happy with someone else, don’t be aggressive in your approach — even if you want them back.

4. Don't continue to contact them if they don't respond.

If your ex hasn't replied to your messages, voice-mails, emails, pokes, Snapchats, or any other form of communication, it’s time to chill out. They might not want any form of communication with you, especially if the relationship ended on a sour note.
Don’t wait for intervals of three to seven days and then try again for a balance of playing hard to get and not being clingy. Just stop. You can live with the knowledge that you gave it a shot, and then move on with your life. You tried. Don’t beat yourself up.

5. Do keep it light.

Avoid sharing too much emotion in a text or voice-mail. Sometimes people respond to this kind of honesty, but it's best to keep things casual until you meet in person. Remember, upon seeing your ex, you might feel differently about what you want. You might think you want to get back together, but once you see them, you realize the chemistry just isn’t there. Or, you might think you just want to get some things off your chest, but once you get there, you feel a strong attraction and want to rekindle things.
This can definitely be confusing. Unless you know exactly what you want when you contact them and have made what you consider to be an irrevocable decision regarding that, keep your communication light and be direct. Avoid pouring your heart out unless you think that is the best way to get your point across. When in doubt, assess the situation in person.

6. Don't wait too long.

It's important to be truly ready before you contact an ex, but it's also best to avoid postponing it for too long. They won't be waiting around for you. They'll be moving on with their lives. This doesn’t mean they'll forget you or resent you, but if someone else shows up and sweeps them off their feet, they're not going to let the memory of you stop them from taking that leap.
Time changes things. Six months go by and they have a different hair color and a Tinder profile. One year goes by and they have a new job and might be engaged. Seize the moment — if that's what you really want. Your desire to rekindle the relationship, start a friendship, or apologize is irrelevant if you never do anything about it.
Weigh the options. Decide which consequences you can live with and which you can't. Then just do it!

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

People-Pleasing...what to do instead

By  Shelly Bullard

When I started dating the man I’m currently with, we had an interaction that I’m pretty sure transformed my relationships with men forever.
He and I had been getting close over the course of a few weeks, and it seemed like an appropriate time for us to take our physical intimacy to the next level. I could feel his strong desire for me, and while I also felt desire for him, there was a little problem.
I didn’t want to have sex with him.
Not yet, at least.
It wasn’t because I wasn’t attracted to him. It wasn’t because I didn’t want to get close. It wasn’t because there was something wrong with our connection. It was just how I felt.
So I found myself at a relationship crossroads I think many of us experience: I could choose to ignore how I was feeling and fall into the role of people pleaser (as I’d done so many times before), or I could risk hurting him and stand by my truth.
Truth is where connection flourishes and real intimacy takes place.
My decision led to one of the most profound interactions I’d ever had with a man. Here’s what happened:
While cuddling at his place, I could feel my fear and discomfort rising, knowing I was going to have to tell him soon. So, I gathered my courage and started to share.
“I have something to tell you, but I’m really scared to say it.”
I scanned him to see his initial reaction. He seemed emotionally open and compassionate, so I kept going.
“I’m not ready to have sex with you. And there’s a lot of fear coming up for me as I tell you this. I’m scared I’ll hurt your feelings. I’m scared I might disappoint you. And I’m scared that if I do hurt or disappoint you, that you might stop caring for me or back away from me. But I don’t want to lie to you or to myself. This is my truth right now, and I have to stand by it.”
It was terrifying to say those words to him, but it also felt like such a weight had lifted. I was proud to stand by myself like that — to honor my truth! And I was completely shocked by how he responded.
“Shelly,” he said, looking me directly in the eye, unwavering, “the only thing I want from you is your truth. I don’t want your ‘yes.’ I don’t want your ‘no.’ I want what’s real for you.”
I’m pretty sure my mouth dropped open at that point. I was beautifully stunned.
He continued, “When you’re in your truth, I get to be connected with you. But if you fall away from your truth — if you do something that you don’t want to do, just to make me happy — then our connection gets lost. Your truth is how I’m able to connect with you, and that’s what I want.”
Whoa.
I was blown away.
I stared at him, speechless, taking in the immensity of what he had just said. This was a huge gift — and a paradigm shift, no doubt. I realized how significant this interaction was — not only for me but for couples everywhere. His words were so simple yet so profound. I think there are lessons for everyone in that.
Truth is how we stay connected.
Truth is how we grow our intimacy.
Truth is the only way for us to feel known by the people we care about.
Truth is where deep love is formed.
When we focus on pleasing others — which I’ve done my whole life and you might have, too — we lose contact with ourselves. We ignore our truths. We ignore our inner knowing. And therefore, we automatically lose contact with the other person.
You can’t feel connected to someone else if you aren’t connected to yourself. That’s what makes the urge to please others so crazy! It’s a tactic we use to create connection, but it has the opposite effect.
Our sneaky egos tell us, “If you do what he likes, then he’ll like you.” Sure, there’s logic there.
So we follow that impulse, we disconnect from ourselves, we try to be liked, and eventually, we feel disconnected from everything: from our partners, ourselves, the relationship, and even love itself.
That’s not all. When we try to be pleasers, we don’t give our partners the opportunity to know who we really are. We hide ourselves away and wonder why we don’t feel known or loved. The reason is simple: We aren’t showing up in our truth.
Truth is where connection flourishes and real intimacy takes place. It’s a lesson that I’m practicing today, and it’s a lesson I want to offer you, too.
The next time you find yourself at a similar crossroads — where you can take the path of least resistance, or be brave and honor your truth — I encourage you to choose truth.
You might be surprised at the depth of intimacy that’s on the other side of being real.
Please leave a comment below telling us about how people-pleasing has sabotaged your connection with others and how you’re going to honor your truth even more, starting today.

Five Dimensions of Touch

The Five Dimensions of Touch: The Key to Bypassing Sexual Power Struggles  By Barry McCarthy, Ph.D. “Are we going to have sex or not?” ...