Relationship Advice For Men
The two key
ingredients for building a good relationship between men and women are trust and communication. And of these
two, trust is the most important.
Self-knowledge is the beginning of communication. It’s very hard, in the midst of a
relationship, to admit that you have wants. It’s so very easy to downplay your wants and desires and needs to avoid
pressuring your wife or partner. This even happens in professional relationships. If you ever find yourself walking
on eggshells to avoid saying something that might upset your partner, you’ve only yourself to blame.
Ultimately, what happens with this is that your subconscious will attempt to get what you’re
denying yourself and will start using a certain tone of voice, word choice and inflections to try to manipulate the
person you’re relating to into giving you what you want but won’t acknowledge.
If you look at it from your partners' point of view, they’ll accede a few times, which will tell
your subconscious that this is a successful strategy – and before you’re even aware of it, you’ll be doing
push-me/pull-you psychological warfare tactics suitable for prisoner interrogations on the people you love, which
will cause them to stop trusting you.
This habit and pattern is very difficult to break once you’ve got started. It’s even harder to
repair the damage if it’s gone on very long. Trust, once lost, is hard to regain.
The key to beating this pattern is to sit back and look at those things in your relationship
that scare you. And to explain to your wife or partner that they scare you and to go over those fears one step at a
time, in detail.
One common fear in a relationship is a fear of being replaced, a fear of being abandoned. This
is particularly common in the early phases of a relationship, after the first blush of infatuation has run its
course. This manifests itself with one partner or the other being constantly "needy" or "clingy", which will, if
not addressed, manifest itself in the pattern of behavior described above. Unfortunately it can ultimately lead to
your wife or partner doing exactly what you fear the most - cheating on you. It’s not hard to see this turn into
full-blown jealousy, particularly if you see your partner giving someone else the behavior patterns you want to see
turned on you. Eventually, a common ground is established, trust is built and a foundation for a lifelong
partnership is made.
Ways to combat these fears boil down to being up front and honest with your wife about what you
fear. It’s a scary thing to confront these issues because, by admitting what you’re afraid of, you’re letting your
insecurities and doubts show to the one person you’ve let get close enough to you to do you serious emotional
harm.
Once you’ve set your fears on the table for cross examination, the next step is to set
boundaries. Know what your boundaries are, discuss them with your partner and discuss hers, as well. Respect and
negotiate your boundaries carefully and review them on a regular basis. As you grow closer, some "thou shalt nots"
in relationships may soften or harden.
And above all else, to thine own self be true.
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