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We love pizza,
our pets, our parents and our significant other, yet how we really feel
about each of those is extremely different, Horton said. In a relationship
study, Robert J. Sternberg, in his book A Triangular Theory of Love,
asserted that there are three main types of relationships needed for couples
to develop complete love. Healthy relationships are more than 'good luck'!
- First,
the “liking relationship,” couples share a personal connection
and support each other.
- The second
relationship, infatuation, develops when passion and physical attraction
stimulates the relationship.
- In the
third relationship, couples are committed to each other and to the relationship.
In order for a couple to have complete love, the liking, infatuation
and commitment relationships must be present.
However,
Horton says many couples may not have complete love and points to how
men and women view love differently as a primary reason and this can add
significantly to the establishment of a healthy relationship.
Research
shows that men frequently see love as a game, focusing on the physical
aspect, while women are more traditional and relationship cautious.Thus
the diiffrences in genders tohow a healthy relationship is viewed.
In general,
women look for stability and shared interests, whereas men just want to
have fun. Despite this, both men and women view compassion and self-giving
to be imperative. - essentials in the ongoing survival of a healthy relationship.
According
to Sternberg's Triangular Theory of Love, there are eight types of love
possible, depending on the combinations of the three elements: Intimacy,
Passion, and Commitment.
- 1 Nonlove
(all three missing)
- 2 Liking
(intimacy)
- 3 Infatuated
love (passion)
- 4 Empty
love (commitment)
- 5 Romantic
love (intimacy and passion)
- 6 Companionate
love (intimacy and commitment)
- 7 Fatuous
love (passion and commitment)
- 8 Consummate
love (intimacy, passion, and commitment).
Examine your
"love story" HERE
So then
what does constitute a 'Healthy' relationship?
A healthy
relationship exists when you and your partner can manage conflict and
existing differences by means of mature communication rather than threats
or acts of despair. To figure out whether or not you and your spouse are
capable of such a relationship, considering the following questions for
evaluation.
- Healthy
relationship Tip 1:
Do both you and your partner protect and nourish the relationship?
- Healthy
relationship Tip 2:
Is it a priority? Or is work priority over you?
- Do both
you and your partner know how to be responsible for each others own
needs and for the care of your relationship?
- Healthy
relationship Tip 3:
Do both you and your partner feel "special" to the other.
- Healthy
relationship Tip 4:
Do arguments or fights not lead to abuse or threatened break-ups?
- Healthy
relationship Tip 5: Do both you and your partner communicate
wants, needs, feelings, and emotional issues with little or no shame?
- Healthy
relationship Tip 6: Is there unconditional love if not unconditional
agreement in your relationship?
- Healthy
relationship Tip 7: Is your relationship nurturing, comfortable,
and fun?
- Healthy
relationship Tip 8: Do
both you and your partner make a point of tending to the needs of each
other willingly and lovingly?
- Healthy
relationship Tip 9: Is your sexual relationship mutually
satisfying?
- Healthy
relationship Tip 10:
Do both you and your partner keep agreements, a sure sign of maturity
in a relationship.
- Healthy
relationship Tip 11: Are both you and your partner honest
with each other?
- Healthy
relationship Tip 12: Does any level of abuse exist within
your relationship?
- Healthy
relationship Tip 13: Do
both you and your partner feel you can share anything with each other
without feelings of guilt?
- Healthy
relationship Tip 14: Do neither you or your partner feel
as though you are making a "great sacrifice" to stay in the relationship?
- Healthy
relationship Tip 15: Are each of you able to work, tend to
your children (if you have them), and care for each others aspects of
their life without threatening the relationship?
- Healthy
relationship Tip 16: Are both you and your partner comfortable
with old relationships from each other's pasts?
HEALTHY
INTIMATE RELATIONSHIPS
What follows
are twelve useful guidelines for couples. They have been found to be of
great importance to happy, intimate, passionate, and committed long-term
relationships. They are derived from research on the 10-15% of couples
who have been together for over five years, ...and who are, to a large
extent, living the "happily-ever-after" we all hope for. If you can utilize
these suggestions, you will be taking an important step toward joining
this elite group of loving couples. Sit down soon with your partner and
this fact-sheet and give your relationship a potentially wonderful gift
by patiently working to improve those things that deserve your attention.
If you find these tips genuinely helpful, we suggest you save this information
sheet for reference for those inevitable times when things are not going
well in your relationship. The following is a list of factors that are
now known to be some of the important things that separate the truly happy
from the unhappy couples.
- Healthy
Relationships: 1. PRIORITIES:
The happy and satisfied couples make a very clear commitment to each
other to make their relationship (including their sexual relationship)
good. They give their relationship the time and attention it deserves.
They place quality time together at the top of their list of priorities.
Other things that demand their time are sometimes canceled or delayed.
Dinners are sometimes put on hold while they talk or make love. They
may be late for a party or work or a visit to relatives. They are careful
to arrange weekends or vacations alone... without the children, or friends,
or mother-in-law. They sometimes turn down invitations and they carefully
examine events or tasks called "obligations."
- Healthy
Relationships: 2. TIMING:
A good and satisfying relationship can happen only when there is time
for it. The current structure of families and the American work ethic
conspire to lead us into a predictable trap. Couples put off intimacy
and conversation while they "get things done." Cleaning the house, washing
the car, talking to relatives on the phone, watching TV, etc. replace
the loving behaviors they used to engage in at the outset of their relationship.
If anything good happens, it comes late at the end of a fatiguing day,
or put off until the weekend or vacation. Happy couples don't stop making
"dates" with each other and seize upon expected and unexpected times
and opportunities. They make time, take time, and pay a lot of attention
to each other.
- Healthy
Relationships: 3. RECOVERY:
The happy couples are quite unique in that they quickly recover from
arguments and hurt feelings. They have been found to use a method not
often recommended by counselors and therapists of the past. They are
often able to temporarily put aside relationship problems to experience
something enjoyable together. They put off further arguments while they
go to a concert, out to dinner, a party, or even to make love. Then,
soon after having a good time together, they often use these good feelings
to quickly resolve issues that unhappy couples spend a lifetime fighting
about. The healthy couples try to work on important disagreements in
this way ONLY when they are both at their best.
- Healthy
Relationships: 4. TOUCH:
The happily satisfied couples touch each other a lot. Most of their
touching is sensual and not explicitly sexual or genital. They hold
hands, snuggle on the couch while they watch TV, hug, kiss, take baths
together, give massages, etc. Couples who go days or longer without
any prolonged affectionate touch are starting from scratch when they
decide to be intimate. Unlike the affectionate couples, they have a
lot of work to do in order to make something interesting happen. Sex
is not that much different than daily behaviors for the fulfilled couples,
but it is a major shift for the less affectionate pairs.
- Healthy
Relationships: 5.
ROMANCING:
Content couples know the importance of surprise, tenderness, compliments,
and special little gifts. (Big, expensive gifts don't predict happiness
in relationships, but regular little ones do.) They continue "until
death do we part" to behave in a romantic, sexy, and seductive manner
toward each other. Touches, unexpected phone calls to each other, candle-lit
dinners, naked weekends together, extravagant compliments, flowers and
little "thingy" gifts from the drug store, etc. are common events. The
gifts and phone calls are especially important since they communicate
clearly what words cannot …that, "I am often thinking of you when we
aren't together." These couples avoid the deadly danger of taking each
other for granted. If they have gone too long being busy with other
things, they apologize and do something about it.
- Healthy
Relationships: 6.
ANTICIPATION:
A major feature of actually feeling "in love" is that wonderful sense
of anticipation when thinking warmly about our partner. One day a busy
executive received an envelope from a messenger. Inside was a note from
his wife to whom he'd been married for 19 years. It said, "Wanted...
handsome man for a grand night of passion! See you at 7:00 PM!" Also
inside the envelope was a room key to a nice local hotel. The man said
he got very little work done that day! Happy couples plan ahead and
make invitations to their lover. They know the importance of keeping
passion alive. They regularly create anticipation by, for instance,
phoning their partner at work and making a "hot date" for that evening.
They describe their passion and may even offer a "menu" for the anticipated
loving event. Contrast this to the typical couple, where the only anticipation
comes after he or she says, "Wanna do it?" This category requires regular
thought and creativity, but the outcome will usually be more than worth
the relatively small amount of effort.
- Healthy
Relationships: 7. PLAYFULNESS:
Happy couples do "work" at their relationships and take them seriously,...
but not somberly. They play at making their partnership fun and healthy.
They understand the extremely high value of humor and laughter. What
other couples react to as tragedies, these couples are sometimes able
find humor in. When bed slats break, the telephone rings, it rains on
your picnic, etc., these couples respond with "Wasn't it funny", not
with hysterics, anger and anxiety. They just do the best they can and
understand that they are merely human. They take loving and fun-filled
care of "the child within" themselves and their partner.
- Healthy
Relationships: 8.
COMMUNICATION:
All studies show a direct association between the quality of a couple's
communication skills and the quality of their relationship. The latest
research studies tell us that NON-verbal communication may be even more
important than strictly verbal communication to intimate relationships.
These couples certainly don't always sit around talking about their
relationship, but there is an open agreement between them that when
something needs to be said, it will. And, they don't just talk about
the problems in their relationship. They spend even more time talking
about the things they love about their partner and partnership.
- Healthy
Relationships: 9. SHARING:
As an important part of their communication, these content couples share
the big, important issues such as dreams and fears. They often tell
each other the stories of their lives, sharing their understanding of
how their past influences the present. Sometimes the more courageous
even share their fantasies with each other.
- Healthy
Relationships: 10. PARENTING:
Every study on the topic has clearly shown that there is a reduction
in several important areas of marital satisfaction from the birth of
the first child until the last child leaves home. Ironically, children
are an ever-present danger to the health of your relationship. This
is more true today than ever before due to the high number of single
parents and blended families, which add other potential problems to
an already present difficulty. The happiest couples maintain a commitment
that their children are not going to have a large negative impact on
their love and romance. They do all they can to ensure that their partner
doesn't often feel second to the children (or anything or anyone else).
These parents make sure that their children respect their privacy, which
happens best when the parent also has respect for the child's privacy.
It is almost easy for some of these parents to minimize the negative
impact of children on the relationship, because the children are comfortably
aware that they are loved, and that mom and dad (or parent and partner)
are very much in love with each other. With very rare exception, it
is extremely helpful to the child's development to observe regular genuine
affection between parents (or parent and partner).
- Healthy
Relationships: 11. EQUALITY:
Modern studies have universally demonstrated that the only healthy long-term
relationships are between people who feel and are equal. Couples who
are attempting to have a 1950's type of relationship in which the man
makes most of the big decisions and the woman gets to pick the color
of the kitchen towels, are not working in the long term. Regardless
of one's opinion of the women's movement, the revolution has already
occurred. Those who are attempting to stop or turn back the clock are
ultimately meeting with dismal failure. The extremes of relationship
power imbalances in which physical and mental abuse occurs are the least
successful today.
- Healthy
Relationships: 12. CONFLICT RESOLUTION: Recent research tells
us that couples who deal with disagreements by withdrawing, ignoring
their partner's feelings, and escalating the intensity of the arguments
are heading toward a failed relationship unless healthier styles of
conflict resolution are developed. It is vital that the woman send clear
(mostly non-verbal) signals about her desires for distance or closeness;
and, it is equally important that the man pay close attention to her
signals, interpret them correctly, and respond as quickly as possible
if the relationship is run smoothly.
As you look
over these twelve tips for relationships, you may note that the big secret
to a happy long-term relationship is no big secret at all. These things
are generally common sense. But the research in this field indicates that,
once again, common sense is not always so common. As mentioned at the
outset, it is obvious that only 10-15% of couples are able to keep doing
most of the things that seemed to come so easily when they first fell
in love. For reasons that researchers don't completely understand, this
small proportion of couples pay attention to these essentials and keep
doing the things which result in fulfilling relationships. These people
are exceptional in no other way that we can tell. They are not smarter,
richer, better looking, "sexier", or more educated than you. This is encouraging.
It says that anyone who is knowledgeable and attentive can have a happy
intimate relationship.
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