Is There Any Hope Ever To Have a Great Relationship?
Posted: Friday, July 03, 2009
by Alisa Miller
http://alisa-miller.com
As I am writing these words the statistics are piling up against me. The UK office designed to follow and report on demographics shows that one out of every five women chooses to have a career over having a family and kids and websites such as Sugardaddy and its copycats are walking a fine line between the dictionary definition of prostitution (i.e. exchanging money for sex) and a stylised service-industry approach to finding no-strings attached companionship for a while.
All of this threaten to make romantics, romanticism and romantic love so last century that even admitting to knowing what it is and what it stands for threatens to typecast you into an antiquated age-bracket. Yet, I really believe it should not be this way. Finding someone to love and having that love reciprocated is a deep-seated, primal drive that has more to do with instinct and less with intellect than we would comfortably ever admit. We all want to have someone. We all feel the need to be loved. It is this drive which, as we try to take the fear of rejection and the uncertainty of commitment away, gives rise to all the other forms of transactional, hi-tech, instant-gratification love' we encounter.
So, I can almost hear you say, what's the answer expert? The honest answer is that there is not one. If you are really looking for an A-B-C guide to romance, love and relationships you are really doomed to being fooled and getting disappointed all the time. In order to get the most out of a relationship you need to do the unthinkable: you need to be honest, first with yourself and then with your partner. This means that you take a risk, open yourself up to getting hurt, become vulnerable on purpose. It also means that you build trust. The kind of trust that's hard to come by in any other situation apart from within a relationship with your partner that is emotionally, physically and psychologically satisfying.
That is the only chance you really have of developing the kind of relationship that will make you happy, fulfilled and help both you and your partner develop. So forget the gimmicks, the recipes and the various websites promising some kind of transactional deal for a painless relationship. Instead, do what you deep down know you need to do: get real.
This Article has been viewed 203 times. (Not updated in real-time.)
No comments yet.We want your comments! If you can read this, you don't have javascript enabled, so you can't use this comment system. Please enable javascript.