Heartbreak

10 Reasons Why Relationships Don't Last

10 Reasons Why Relationships Don't Last

SOME BASIC RELATIONSHIP PROBLEMS

From the ebook Relationships of Conscious Love at www.armonikizoi.com

WHAT HAPPENED?

We were so suited for each other, so in love, so happy together. We had so many dreams. Our first moments together were full of joy, happiness and the excitement of being close to someone who loved us and understood us. We were so sure that we would live “happily ever after.” We never thought we would arrive to this state miscommunication, misunderstanding, distancing, indifference and even competition, aggressiveness and verbal violence. What happened? How did this happen? What can we do to become as to be loving as we once were?

SOME REASONS WHY RELATIONSHIPS DETERIORATE

1. Lack of education in effective communication. We have not been educated in how to communicate openly and honestly. This will be discussed in detail in later chapters but can also be investigated on our web site http://www.HolisticHarmony.com.

2. Poor examples - Role models. We learn through imitation. We contain within us much more of our parents’ programming than we are aware of. We have recorded subconsciously the ways in which our parents behaved and communicated (or did not communicate) between themselves, with us and with others.

We now mechanically repeat this type of communication with our partners, children and friends. We tend to create the problems similar to those that existed in our childhood role models. If our parents were self-suppressing and non-communicative, we tend do the same. If they were competitive and aggressive we are likely to act in a similar way. In some cases, out of reaction, we may do the opposite, but this is also a programming.

If we are having communication problems with our loved one, it may be useful to work on transforming our childhood experiences. What we believe to be a problem with our spouse, may actually be simply a projection of a problem with one of our parents.

3. We do not take responsibility for our reality. Our beliefs create our reality. If we want a new reality, we will need to change our beliefs about ourselves, others and the world around us.

It will do no good whatsoever to blame the other for what we are feeling. He or she will just harden his stance and stay that way. No one likes to be criticized or blamed. Even if down inside we know that we are wrong, we do not like to admit it as long as we are being blamed.

4. We expect the other to fulfill our needs and expectations. We believe that the other, in some magical way, is going to supply us with what is lacking within us. No one can give us inner security or self-worth if we do not have it. If we want to create a harmonious relationship, we will first need to be in harmony with ourselves, which means developing inner security, strength, self-confidence and self-acceptance in all situations.

5. Fear of what the others think. We create considerable tension when we want to place limits on or seek to change our loved one’s behavior so we can be accepted by others. When we pressure a loved one to change, not because what he is doing is morally wrong, but because we need society’s approval, he or she feels we are putting others above him in our heart. We are placing our needs for acceptance or recognition above our love, acceptance and respect for our loved one and for how he or she needs and wants to function. Perhaps we should ask, “What is more important to me -this affirmation based on appearances, or maintaining a deep and loving relationship with my partner?”

This is an especially important question for us as parents to ask ourselves concerning our children. Do we want to force our children to fit into a social mold and risk losing our communication link with them, or do we prefer to risk losing social recognition for the sake of maintaining our communication? Remember: we are not talking about sacrificing ethical values, but rather subjective and often quite superficial and materially oriented social values.

6. Lack of energy. I have seen a number of relationships fall into disharmony and even separation because one or both of the partners let their energy level fall to a dangerously low level causing them to become a negative element in that relationship. When we do not care for our bodies, minds and spirits, they begin to function defectively, creating negativity for ourselves and those around us. We have less clarity, less patience, less understanding for others’ needs and problems.

A person without energy is naturally ego-centered because he needs to take. He is naturally defensive because he feels he needs to protect himself. He does not feel safe. When one person in a relationship is in such a state, problems are created for everyone. When both are in this state, the relationship cannot endure.

We have an obligation in any relationship, whether it be emotional, professional or social, to offer others a being with quality. No one likes an emotionally polluted environment full of complaints, criticism, negative thoughts, negative feelings, blaming, fear, hurt, anger or depression. We would all like to live in an environment flowering with positive emotions of love, joy, laughter, pleasantness and positive thoughts and feelings.

That requires energy. We can create and maintain a high level of energy by eating properly, and practicing exercises, breathing techniques, deep relaxation techniques and positive thinking on a daily basis. We also need to get enough sleep. Vitamins may also help. For details concerning these techniques check out our web site.

7. We carry the past around within us. We do not live in the present. Throughout the years, we have formed a mental image of who the other is and now we see our image and not the person.

This image is unfortunately permeated with many misunderstandings and wrong assumptions concerning the other, which we have created, through our inner subjective beliefs and programming.

We distort our perception of reality and of the others’ motives. We often think that the other is trying to harm us when this is not, in fact, his or her motive. The other is simply functioning out of ingrained needs and beliefs. He or she is probably not even aware that what he or she is doing is offensive to us. If the other is aware, he or she may find it difficult to understand why we are bothered by a certain behavior. The other may also be unhappy that we are creating this hurt within us through his or her actions because this is not his or her motive at all.

We tend to hold a running account of how many times the other has hurt or disappointed us, in some way, and when we interact with him or her, we have this “balance sheet” hanging in front of our eyes. Holding on to the hurt of the past prevents an opening to who the other actually is in the present. This accumulated resentment or feeling of injustice obstructs our clear perception and communication in the present.

We must learn to forgive and approach our loved one as if for the first time, forgetting whatever he or she may or may not have done in the past that has hurt us. If we can remember that there is a divine law which allows only what is necessary for our evolutionary process to occur, we will realize that our partner (or any other person) was only the means by which this experience came to us.

We have been the creators of everything anyone has ever done to us. This may be difficult to swallow, but it is true. Thus, there is no one to forgive except ourselves for creating such a reality for ourselves. Let us forgive ourselves and the others and start each day a “new” relationship with those close to us.

8. We cannot imagine harmony. Many of us cannot imagine a harmonious relationship. This may be because we have experienced negative childhood role models, or perhaps we have lived for so long in a negative relationship (or have had a series of negative relationships) that we cannot imagine ourselves in a positive one.

In such a case, we would benefit from learning to project positive thoughts and images while in deep relaxation. While in the relaxed and concentrated state, we can imagine the person we want to improve our relationship with immersed in light, well and happy. We can bring to mind five positive qualities we can respect in the other. In this way, we create a positive image of the other person. Then we can imagine ourselves together with the other in a happy, harmonious relationship. We can imagine ourselves communicating in various ways: talking, dancing, loving, walking, working together, etc.

Some of us have difficulty in imagining such a positive relationship. In such a case, we should realize that our own negative subconscious (or conscious) thought-form is a serious obstacle toward creating a happy relationship.

In some cases, although it may seem that the other is the aggressive one who is doing injustice to us, as long as we are unable to imagine a more positive reality, our negative expectations are as much responsible for what is happening as is his or her behavior. The solution is to work on changing our image of ourselves and the other, and of how our relationship can be.

9. Inner Conflicts. Inner conflicts often externalize as conflicts with our loved ones. When beliefs, needs, values or desires conflict within us, we project those conflicts onto those around us, especially those closest to us. We believe they are in conflict with us, limiting or resisting us, when in reality, one part of ourselves is limiting or resisting another. Then, when we harbor feelings of resentment or blame toward the other, he or she in turn feels abused, as he or she feels innocent of our accusations.

The other, in fact, will often take the opposite side in a conflict, not because the other really believes so much in that, but more so because we, through our doubt, are sending him or her subconscious messages that force him or her to take this opposite stance so we can work this issue out on a conscious level.

We believe the other is conflicting with us, but the reality is that we are conflicting with ourselves through him or her. When we have come to an inner reconciliation between our various conflicting needs and beliefs, we will find that the other will be freed from his temporary antagonistic role and the external conflict will disappear.

For example, we might start a new diet, follow a new path of self-improvement, or exercise a new freedom, behavior or activity. As long as we doubt or have an inner conflict about making these new changes in our lives, the others will resist, criticize, ridicule and even become aggressive with us. This will last as long as we remain unsure of these changes or our right to make them. It is also prolonged by our need to prove to the others that we are right by arguing or converting them to our new way. This is a serious mistake that must be avoided. It creates unnecessary conflict.

10. Need conflicts. We will discuss the problem of need conflicts in our relationships and possible solutions to them in later chapters.

We will discuss how to overcome the above mentioned obstacles in our efforts to create conscious love relationships in the upcoming chapters.