4 Shortcuts To Building A Rock-Solid Relationship, According To Psychologist Of 20+ Years

Tips for how to find joy in each other again.

Couple has a rock-solid relationship because they know the shortcuts. petrunjela | Canva
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If you and your partner are both the reluctant rock and the toasted marshmallow, you can learn and understand how to save your marriage and have a healthy relationship, without ignoring either of your needs, with the right marriage advice. When you've understood, adopted, and internalized the four foundations for personal and relationship health, you can create a healthy lifetime love relationship that will meet your needs for the rest of your life.

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RELATED: 5 Sneaky Warning Signs Your Relationship Is In Big Trouble

Here are 4 shortcuts to building a rock-solid relationship:

1. Learn constructive dependency

Attachment theory scientists and Emotionally Focused Therapists will tell you that "you are as needy as your unmet need." You have likely been highly influenced by pop-psychology co-dependency phobic culture.

You may believe that it is dangerous to need anyone too much and that doing so could enable their bad behavior. Please remember that the pop co-dependency concept was never grounded in research or intended to be applied to how we as healthy human beings are wired to get our needs met.

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Attachment science has made it clear that human beings have deep needs for emotional connection with one special person from cradle to grave. Studies show that emotional communication and reciprocation are core processes for psychological and physical health.

Author and expert Sue Johnson and other attachment researchers refer to having your needs met by the person you love as a constructive dependency.

So, you can have a dependency without enabling it. Constructive dependency is not enabling. And it's not being a toasted marshmallow. It's not about disengaging and being a reluctant rock.

Constructive dependency is solidly and unapologetically owning and expressing your need to be loved, cherished, and protected. You need the person that you love to do this. There are a thousand ways that you depend on the person that you bond with.

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Denying the importance of your internal needs for love and validation is not healthy. Neither is denying the external needs you share for parenting, food, fun, and shelter.

You and your partner both have needs that must be met. Being afraid or unwilling to acknowledge those needs is the foundation for dysfunction. Both of you must be honest about what you truly need from the other. From there, you must become intentional about meeting those needs.

Only then will you stop looking and feeling, as many say, overly needy. You can begin to make your unhappy marriage happy again by opening up a conversation about what your needs are and how much you rely on each other.

Many people are afraid that this kind of vulnerability will lead to their being taken advantage of. If so, you may need a therapist to help you with this conversation.

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If you do not make your unmet needs explicit, then hoping that they will be met remains at risk and will eventually fail. A skilled Emotionally Focused Therapist can help you get to the place where you can get your needs met and meet the needs of your partner.

RELATED: 3 Easy Steps To Divorce-Proof Your Marriage

2. Learn emotional self-regulation and co-regulation

Emotions are the heart that provides the source of bonding and need fulfillment. Infants bond with their parents and get their needs fulfilled through emotional communication. While adults do not like to admit it, their need for emotional communication is no different.

Unless you are blocking them or have a neurological condition, your emotions tell you when you are afraid or need to be held. Emotions tell you what disgusts you and what makes you happy.

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Sue Johnson says they are energy in motion, the chief driver of your thoughts and behaviors. Both infants and adults rely on others to help them regulate their deepest emotions. You naturally turn to lovers, family, and friends when you have strong emotions.

There's an expectation to be emotionally understood and reassured, especially by the person that you love the most. You'll not be able to express your own needs or meet your partner's needs if you struggle with anxious, depressed, or withdrawn emotions.

If you have chaotic ups and downs or easily triggered emotions, others will mistrust, avoid, and even become angry with you. Emotional language is powerful. The poetry and promises of love are nearly always expressed in emotional language.

It is a person’s sincere emotions that move us to care for, support, and protect. Emotionally cut-off clients try to convince me that emotions are not important. So, I ask them: "What is the one thing that separates an A movie from a B movie?"

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Most clients reply that it is the quality of their acting. Then, I ask what is it about the quality of their actions that makes B actors less believable? My answer: It is the authenticity of their emotional expression.

Emotional sincerity is what makes you believable to your partner. You need to dig deep and find those real and raw emotions if you want to warm your partner’s emotions.

If you get angry and defensive when you're feeling hurt or sad, your partner will not trust you or warm up to you. If you attack and shame, rather than express how small and stupid you feel, your partner will probably attack you back.

But what you need is their holding and reassurance. You are self-regulating when you learn to express real authentic vulnerable emotions without blaming or shaming others.

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You are co-regulating emotion when you can feel compassion for your partner's emotional insecurity and provide comfort. Expressing your soft vulnerable emotional needs is vital if you want to master the next healthy relationship foundation.

RELATED: 10 Unmistakable Signs Your Marriage Can Be Saved

3. Believe that your negative cycle — not your partner — is the enemy of your relationship

Why do you feel like the person you love and cherish turning into your most dangerous enemy? In most cases, it is not because your partner does not love you. And it is not because your partner is dangerous. Your partner is not your enemy.

What makes your partner feel like your enemy is the negative cycle of arguing that it takes both of you to create. When you criticize, shame, and blame your partner, they will get angry. And you will get angry back.

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This is a negative cycle. And it can go on for hours. Sound familiar? You trigger each other because you love each other and cannot bear to be viewed negatively.

Stop the negative cycle. By learning how to slow your arguments down, and by stopping yourself before you get angry and defensive, you can stop the negative cycle.

Ways To Build A Rock-Solid Relationship Zmaster / Shutterstock

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You need to remember how to self-regulate and co-regulate your emotions. You must remind yourself that even though your partner's misunderstanding feels like a threat, they are not your enemy.

They are still the honey bunch, lover pie you've given your heart to. You have a need to be heard, understood, and loved. You cannot get your deepest needs met if you are constantly in negative cycle arguments that you are making your partner’s fault.

4. Find your way out and up with A.R.E.

A.R.E. stands for accessibility, responsiveness, and engagement. This is the foundation for maintaining and growing secure attachment bonds. 

  • Accessibility

In a nutshell, you will heal your marriage, and get your needs met by being accessible when your partner needs you. You will return that text. And you will remember to let your partner know how you can be reached. You'll let them know if you will be home late.

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Accessibility is about making your primary relationship "primary." Your partner must be your primary source of love and comfort. All other relationships, even your relationship with your children, must be your second level of emotional support.

  • Responsiveness

Being responsive is the magic part of the dance of love. You will be in flow with your partner's needs when you learn to naturally be responsive to them.

Every responsive move you make will be returned in loving responsiveness to your needs. Loving responsiveness is a way of making love through the normal routines of life. It is hearing and responding to the heartfelt needs and desires of the one you love by giving her or him the gift of your attention.

  • Engagement

You can only sustain your responsiveness by staying engaged. So many people in relationships have the best intentions to be great lovers.

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But they find themselves falling short over and over. Intention without sustained engagement is a lost cause. You cannot stay tuned in to your partner when you are distracted by social media, TV, or other competing priorities.

Ways To Build A Rock-Solid Relationship Page Light Studios / Shutterstock

The quality of your time together depends on your ability to keep focused on the signals that your partner is sending you. You will not be able to respond to your partner's needs if you are not engaged. When you're accessible, responsive, and engaged, you will meet your partner’s needs.

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This way, you will both get your needs met. As a result, you will be given back everything that you give.

So, how does an unhappy marriage affect you and why do these four foundations fix that? The brains of human beings are wired to constructively depend on other human beings.

There is a theory that humans survived and Neanderthals didn’t because their children grew up faster and, thus, didn’t learn to depend on others the way humans did. When we teach our children to depend on us, they thrive by constructively depending on others. Healthy couples are very aware of how much they need and depend on each other.

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Emotional self-regulation and co-regulation are essential if you want to make your needs known. Sending clear authentic signals allows your partner to see and respond to your needs. This, of course, is foundational to relationship health.

Nearly all unhealthy couples get trapped in negative cycles of conflict. Playing the blame game is destructive to the fabric of your relationship. In time, it will destroy your attachment bonds and leave you alone with your unmet needs.

By realizing that the negative cycle arguments, not your partner, are the enemy of your relationship you can place your focus where it needs to be — joining your partner to understand how you trigger each other. Then, you can both communicate your needs to each other in a vulnerable authentic way that you can be heard and responded to.

Lastly, the holy trinity of accessibility, responsiveness, and engagement is the way to keep paying attention to and meeting each other’s needs. We do this through the ups and downs of day-to-day living.

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So, practice and be patient. Some of this may be new or overwhelming for you. You may be thinking it's too late to change things. Absolutely not.

Understanding how an unhappy marriage affects you is the first part of the puzzle. And your new understanding of these four foundations, along with courage and desire, will take you far. It's okay to take it slow.

It's okay when you don't get it right the first time around. Are you ready to make your unhappy marriage happy again and get your needs met?

RELATED: 10 PhD-Backed Habits That Can Make Your Relationship Better Than 98% Of Other Couples

Michael W. Regier, Ph.D. is an experienced clinical psychologist, Certified Emotionally Focused Couples Therapist, and EFT Supervisor who co-authored Emotional Connection: The Story & Science of Preventing Conflict & Creating Lifetime Love.

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