7. You’re dependent
There’s a thin line between companionship
and support and dependency. If you depend on your partner — that is, if you absolutely
cannot live without her or him — you’ve crossed that line. The pressure is now
on your partner to fill whatever’s missing in you — a pressure s/he will learn
to resent. If you expect your partner to bring everything while you bring nothing
to your relationship — and I’m talking finances as well as emotional support, here
— you’re in trouble. (Note: I’m not saying that you need to contribute equally
to household finances — what I’m saying is that if you’re not contributing to the
household budget, and you’re not contributing anywhere else, things are out of
whack and that’s never good.)
8. You expect Happiness
A sign of a bad relationship is that one
or both partners expect either to make the other happy or for their partner to
make them happy. This is not only an unrealistic expectation to lay on yourself
or on them — nobody can “make” you happy, except you — but it’s an unrealistic
expectation to lay on your relationship. Relationships aren’t only about being
happy, and there’s lots of times when you won’t and even shouldn’t be. Being able
to rely on someone even when you’re upset, miserable, depressed, or grieving is
a lot more important than being happy all the time. If you expect your partner
to make you happy — or worse, you’re frustrated because you aren’t able to make
your partner happy — your relationship isn’t going to fare well when it hits a
rough spot.
9. You never fight
A good argument is essential, every now
and then. In part, arguing helps bring out the little stuff before it becomes major,
but also, fighting expresses anger which is a perfectly normal part of a human’s
emotional make-up. Your relationship has to be strong enough to hold all of who
you are, not just the sunny stuff.
One reason couples don’t fight is that
they fear conflict — which reflects a lack of trust and a foundation of fear. That’s
bad. Another reason couples avoid arguments is that they’ve learned that anger
is unreasonable and unproductive. They’ve learned that arguing represents a breakdown
rather than a natural part of a relationship’s development. While an argument isn’t
pleasant, it can help both partners to articulate issues they may not have even
known they had — and help keep them from simmering until you cross a line you can’t
come back from.
10. You expect it to be easy/you
expect it to be hard
There are two deeply problematic attitudes
about relationships I hear often. One is that a relationship should be easy, that
if you really love each other and are meant to be together, it will work itself
out. The other is that anything worth having is going to be hard — and that therefore
if it’s hard, it must be worth having.
The outcome of both views is that you
don’t work at your relationship. You don’t work because it’s supposed to be easy
and therefore not need any work, or you don’t work because it’s supposed to be
hard and it wouldn’t be hard if you worked at it. In both cases, you quickly get
burnt out — either because the problems you’re ignoring really don’t go away just
because you think they should. or because the problems you’re cultivating are a
constant drag on your energy. A relationship that’s too much work might be suffering
from one of the attitudes above, but a relationship that doesn’t seem to need any
work isn’t any better.
Your choices
There isn’t any one answer to any of the
problems above. There are choices though: you can either seek out an answer, something
that addresses why you are hurting your relationship, or you can resign yourself
to the failure of your relationship (and maybe the next one, and the next one,
and…). Failure doesn’t always mean you break up — many people aren’t that lucky.
But people can live quite unhappily in failed relationships for years and even
decades because they’re afraid they won’t find anything better, or worse, they’re
afraid they deserve it. Don’t you be one of them — if you suffer from any of these
problems, figure out how to fix it, whether that means therapy, a solo mountain
retreat, or just talking to your partner and committing yourselves to change. |