Habits of highly successful couples
By Tussy Afam-Obi
Tuesday,
March 20, 2007
Keeping intimate relationship alive requires strength, motivation, and a little
something called love.
We are guilty of basing our romantic beliefs on fairytales.
Keeping your marriage needs effort and commitment from both parties.
If you
are willing to put forth the effort to keep your relationship alive, then developing
the following seven habits will help you become one of those highly successful
couples.
Habit 1 - Give each other pleasure
Your goal in the relationship
is to give each other pleasure, not to cause pain. Simple, isn't it?
However...
for just a single day, become consciously aware of everything you do, by asking
yourself the question, "Is what I'm about to do or say going to cause my
partner pain or pleasure?"
To help you, each of you should make two lists:
one for all the things your partner does that hurt you, and another for all that
you'd like your partner to do to give you pleasure.
Swap lists, and now
you know exactly what to do and what not to do. No more guessing!
Habit 2
- Create love and friendship rituals
We fall in love through rituals of connection
and intimacy such as romantic dinners, long conversations, going for walks, exchanging
gifts, talking every night on the telephone...
When we fall in love our relationship
becomes the center point of our life, with anything else becoming secondary.
Over
time, when the relationship becomes more settled (particularly after we have children),
this process reverses.
The children, our work, our hobbies, our friends -
take the center stage and the relationship being relegated to the background tending
only to receive our attention in times of crisis.
The remedy to routine
(the main cause of dull relationships) is connection and intimacy rituals.
For
example, every Saturday evening, as a changeover from the working week into the
weekend, take two hours together when you put a "do not disturb" sign
on your busy life.
No phones, no answered doors, no e-mails, no TV, nothing...
Just the two of you and your relationship.
Do what you will with the time,
however it must be an investment in your relationship.
Habit 3 - Create a
safe space for open and honest sharing
Create a sense of safety and acceptance
that allows each of you to express your feelings, problems, expectations and disappointments.
One of our connection rituals is a process called "Clearing" that
creates this atmosphere of safety and acceptance.
EVERY NIGHT before we
go to sleep, we ask each other "what DID NOT work for you today?"
We
give each other a chance to share about all the things that went "wrong"
during the day (whether connected to the relationship or not).
If there are
any solutions that we can mutually agree upon to assist with improvements for
the future, we raise the issue.
When both of us are complete, we initiate
a second round, in which we ask each other "what DID work for you today?"
This is our opportunity to share about all the goodness that we've experienced
during the day, as well as acknowledge each other (and others) for the support
and love we've received.
Habit 4 - Work together to resolve conflict and
crisis
The problem with the way most couples argue is that they attempt to
find solutions before allowing each other the chance to say what they need to
say.
The "Council" process ensures that before you engage in solution
talk, each one of you feels you have been fully heard.
Here's how it can be
made to work in practice:
One person holds an object in their hand, called
the "Talking Piece", which symbolizes that he or she has the floor.
While one person has the floor, the other person is allowed only to listen
without interruption.
When speaking, you should focus on speaking from your
heart (emotional, spontaneous, instinctive as opposed to mental).
When listening,
you are encouraged to listen from your heart (i.e. from acceptance and compassion).
Only after each person has been fully "heard," (in case it is
still necessary) continue through to the process of problem solving.
Habit
5 - Turn toward each other, rather than away
When you pass your lover during
the course of a day, do you stop and rub his/her shoulder, give him/her a kiss
on the cheek, and whisper something nice in his/her ear - or do you just walk
on by?
This is the meaning of "turning toward" as opposed to "turning
away."
Turning toward each other means making each other your number
one priority.
Make sure to find ways to be physically and emotionally close
to each other, such as doing things together that you both enjoy. Take walks together,
have dinner together, listen to music together...