Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Declarations of a Healthy Adult Living in Relationships

This post is a copy of my now defunct Friendster blog. Friendster blog just isn't good, so I migrated all my posts from there to here.

Sharing with you another Declaration from the readings given to us during the HAIN RGS in Bohol.
  1. All factors in relationships pass through phases: intimacy, affection, sexual interest/energy, commitment to children and family, compatibility, self-disclosure.
  2. Only at rare moments is the love in one partner the same as that in the other.
  3. Priorities are continually changing for each partner. The integrity of the union may not always be a priority.
  4. No truly loving relationship takes away – or can take away – even one of your basic human rights.
  5. Intimate relationships survive best with constant permission for ever-changing ratios of closeness and distance.
  6. What creates distance in your relationship you may be using unconsciously to get distance;
  7. The best relationship includes space for you to pursue individual choices and to be compassionately attentive to any threat your partner may feel.
  8. No one can control or change someone else nor is it necessary.
  9. No one is loyal or truthful all the time.
  10. No expectations are valid and not even agreements are reliable.
  11. Your partner may not always be a trustworthy friend, consistent, or nurturing (and so are you).
  12. You are ultimately alone and ultimately able to make it alone.
  13. No relationship can create self-esteem. It can only support it.
  14. There is no one person who will make you happy, keep you fascinated, or love you as yourself.
  15. Most people in relationships seldom know what they really want, ask for what they really want, or show what they really feel.
  16. Most people avoid or fear intimacy, consistent honesty, intense feelings, and uninhibited self-disclosure.
  17. Beneath every serious complaint about your partner is something unowned in yourself.
  18. Letting go of blame and the need to be right heals a relationship most efficaciously.
  19. Jealousy and possessiveness, though not desirable, are normal human feelings.
  20. “Goodbye” is rarely said clearly. Most people ease away wordlessly and avoid full confrontation.
  21. No one is to blame when a relationship ends.
  22. The end of one relationship will always require a space before another relationship can begin healthily.
  23. It is normal for memories, regrets, the wish for revenge and a recurrent sense of loss to far, far outlast the end of a relationship.
  24. One of your (or your partner’s) parents is a phantom, but active presence at the beginning, middle, or end of your relationship.
  25. The powerful appeal of somehow new may tell you more about your neediness than about the charms of the other person.
  26. Relationship is a spiritual path since it consists of a continual shedding of illusions.