Fulfilling Relationships - 7 Common Sense Core Elements
by: Karin Syren
Relationships can be complicated is pure understatement. And yet, rather than
shy away from them, we continually seek new ones. They are the pivot point
around which society, an organized pattern of relationships, is formed. An
internet search brings up 255,000,000 entries for relationships! It has always
been a hot topic and will remain so as long as there is more than one person
on planet earth!
But for all this vast amount of material, do we really know any more about
building and maintaining fulfilling relationships than we ever have? We’ve
certainly studied the subject, but the same issues that divided hundreds of
years ago continue to divide.
A great deal of commonsense is necessary to birth and nurture any healthy
relationship. We often seek complex answers to weighty issues when true and
lasting success is found in simplicity.
To begin, let’s look at seven necessary components to any healthy caring
relationship. Perhaps you can assemble a more impressive, more complex list,
but these comprise a core from which you can build, or begin rebuilding any
relationship.
SELF-RESPECT. To treat oneself as worthy of attention, esteem, regard, and
consideration is the first step. Just as charity begins at home, respect begins
with oneself. You cannot give what you don’t have and you cannot respect
another person without a healthy dose of self-respect. Without it, relationships
are hopelessly lopsided and you will soon attempt to get from the relationship
what must come from within. From self-respect comes the capacity to respect
another and relationship is birthed.
MUTUAL RESPECT is the result. This critical element must flow freely through
the relationship, from within yourself to the other individual and back to
you again. It must continue unabated, nourishing the relationship in its life
blood.
MUTUAL AFFECTION. A degree of fondness is necessary in any relationship that
is going to endure past necessity. Many relationships based on self-interest,
without honest affection, can exist briefly but only for a specific purpose.
However, those that endure beyond the reason for their beginnings will be
those that develop a genuine and caring interaction, a fondness which grows
from the other elements. The deeper the fondness, the more powerful the relationship.
Self interest, not to be confused with self-knowledge, is the enemy of all
true affection. Mutual affection assumes a genuine concern for the other, and
never with an “agenda.”
INTIMACY. Some would place intimacy with or even before affection, but the
true personal and private familiarity that is intimacy grows from affection,
and must be based on mutual respect. Today’s society mistakenly puts
intimacy first, and is surprised when mutual respect and affection do not develop
as a result. But true and lasting intimacy, beyond the physical, can only grow
as a result of the first three elements.
COOPERATION. Operating in a common effort, in agreed unity of purpose, builds
relationship strength as surely as any muscle building activity builds physical
strength. We hear it from the time we are old enough to learn from Grover and
big Bird, but many of us cast it aside when we outgrow the playground.
Cooperation implies accountability to something greater than the individuals,
to the relationship itself. Focusing on this perspective will keep pride from
sabotaging this necessary element.
MUTUAL TRUST will be the result. It is reliance based on the truthfulness,
character, integrity, and the proven ability of the other individual, as experienced
over time. Trust is always earned experientially and there’s no way around
it. You cannot demand it and you cannot finagle it. You must make deposits
to the account and only then can you withdraw the trust.
COMMITMENT TO THE RELATIONSHIP. Commitment is an agreement, a pledge, and
it must be fully engaged to count. It’s an all or nothing undertaking.
It has been said that 100% commitment is easy. It’s 99% commitment that
is difficult.
Commitment is nothing more than a decision and, like most decisions, it’s
only difficult if it’s avoided. Sitting on the fence has never been comfortable!
Once the decision is made, the execution follows along easily.
COMMUNICATION. Without this one, none of the rest is worth the ink. Bathe
your relationships in quality communication.
* Listen deeply and really hear what’s being said. Practice being truly
and fully present in a conversation, not merely waiting for the next opening
to interject your pithy comment. Drop your own agenda and listen from a place
of selflessness.
* Make it your practice to speak from integrity, from a place of such soundness
and wholeness that trust will always be the end result.
* Vow to use communication to encourage, refresh and heal, never to inflict
pain.
* One of the quickest and surest ways to a breakdown in communication is to
make assumptions. The purpose of communication is to exchange information.
Always ask, never assume.
* Make your questions open-ended. Questions requiring a yes or no answer will
seldom grow an exchange. Open questions leave plenty of room for an interesting
give and take.
* When asking a question, be genuinely interested in gaining information.
If you’re not prepared to be really interested in the response, don’t
ask the question.
* For communication to be truly valuable, healthy and nurturing to a relationship,
it must occur in an atmosphere of safety. What is said during a time of warmth
and affection must never be used as a weapon during a period of distress or
conflict.
* Successful relationship-building communication must be based soundly in
honesty. This is not by any means a license to inflict pain. It is instead
a refusal to be deceptive, in word or action, toward another individual or
toward oneself.
Examine these important elements of successful relationships with an open
mind and heart and be prepared to honestly assess your own relationships. If
you see a pattern and any are faltering in these areas, take ownership of your
role in the breakdown and begin the rebuilding process immediately.
Lopsidedness in any of these areas leads to dependency or co-dependency in
relationships. Guard against always being on the giving or always on the receiving
end in any of these areas. Balance is the key to each of these principles.
Start to build and rebuild your own relationships with these seven core elements
and soon you’ll be adding to them, consistency, courage, wisdom, humor,
generosity, etc. The list can be truly endless and as unique as your many fulfilling
relationships.
Copyright 2006 So-lu'shunz Management Services
About The Author
Karin Syren, CTACC, is a Life & Leadership Coach specializing in EffectivenessCoaching.
She works with leaders at all levels to increase their personal & professional
effectiveness by guiding them through learning to live powerful & significant
lives. If you want to discover what makes you unique & how to form your
future around it, living more effectively as a result, join Karin for Discovering
Your Purpose, a free teleclass. Learn how becoming a visionary, understanding
Mission, Visions & Goals, will lead you into a life plan & destiny
using your unique gifts and talents, bringing your dreams to pass. Register
at http://www.solushunz.com.
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