Category Archives: Relationships

Self Awareness in Relationships

What do you bring to the table?  This is typically an uncomfortable thing to think about or discuss, but at the end of the day you are always bringing something to the table, whether intentionally or not, and you should be aware of what you’re bringing.  Be comprehensive in your answer to this question: include both the good and the bad.  (One thing to watch out for is leeching: try to give more than you take when possible).

Who am I to others?  This is one of the most important skills to have, and one of the most difficult skills to learn.  This is important because you are rarely who you think you are to others–you might think you are being nice, but other people might think you’re mean due to differences in values, interpretation, perception, etc.  One way to get an idea of who you are to others is to ask for honest [anonymous] feedback.  Another way is to replay your interactions with others, and imagine what you would think if you saw yourself behaving and acting the way you did.  (Explaining may sound like complaining, constructive criticism may sound like insults, etc.)

Responsibility.  Always take responsibility for what you can. You are responsible for who you are, you are not responsible for how people react to who you are, but you should take their feedback into consideration.  I used to think people didn’t like me because they were bad people, but when I become more self aware, I realized I was being a bad person without knowing I was.  Turns out people had legitimate reasons not to like me.  Don’t blame others, take responsibility. If people react unexpectedly to something you do, either you don’t understand that person well enough to predict how they will respond, or you are not presenting yourself in the way that you think you are.

Don’t Be Self-Centered.  While you should take responsibility for yourself, don’t go too far: if someone acts differently towards you, don’t be so quick to immediately blame yourself.  People have lives outside of their interactions with you, so avoid falling into self blame, guilt, etc.  Instead, emphasize with them by trying to see things from their point of view–what might be going on to cause them to act differently.  Maybe when they made a face when they saw you, they just ate something sour, rather than they really don’t like you.  (Read Nature of Your Own Identity)

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Common Relationship Mistakes

Making quick judgements: small events can skew your perception and impression of someone else in the wrong way if you don’t verify and validate. For example, if a guy ruffles the head of another guy, I once assumed that must mean they are really good friends, since why would you let a stranger do that?  Turns out they were barely acquaintances.  A more common example is when a guy and a girl arrives together, and people assume they are a couple when they aren’t.  Read Who Am I? and Nature of Your Own Identity.  

Projecting the past: when you meet someone new who reminds you of someone you know, and you project, unfairly, the previous experience onto the new one.  While it is OK to use history as a predicting mechanism, don’t mistake prediction for truth.  Everyone deserves a chance to be judged independently for who they are.

Mistake Standards for Preferences: It’s OK to have preferences: to like sports and not like pickles; to like extroverts or prefer online forums.  Some people, you get along with better than others.  That is your preference: don’t mistake this for superiority, which is what you are saying when you accuse one person of being “better” than another.  You are friends with Bob and not Bo because you prefer Bob’s characteristics over Bo’s, not because Bob is superior to Bo.  On the flip side, if someone does not like you, it does not mean you are not good enough: it is a preference, not a standard.

Nice relativity: not being nice does not make someone mean, doing mean things does.  Also, unless you understand where the person is coming from, don’t make quick judgments–everyone has a different definition of what is nice, and what is mean, and they also have a different expectation for different people.  What someone might think is nice, someone else might think is normal, polite manners.  What someone else thinks is mean, might just be normal behavior to someone else.  Saying no is not mean, people have a right to say no.

Money and Desire: I used to think wanting money/etc. made someone a bad person. I have since learned that this is false: it’s OK to want things, and it is not the desire itself that makes a person bad.  It is in how that desire manifests into decisions and actions that determines whether a person is good or bad.

Pedestal – When you are overly judgmental in an extremely optimistic manner.  No-one is perfect (Overcome Perfectionism), if you see no cons it just means you haven’t found them yet.  Life has both good and bad, so it’s about finding the right combination for the relationship.

Identity Insecurity – If you don’t know who you are, then you are likely to give yourself up to the other person.  This is fine if that’s what you want, but if you want to be your own person, you need to know where you stand in order to make a stand when you need to. (How to Find, Understand, Construct, Who You Are)

Self-Confidence Insecurity – Lack of confidence in yourself, commonly because you have low self worth.  Read What is Self Worth to get it and Confidence to understand it.

Behaviors

Sacrifice: is an over-glorified way of demonstrating care, and it needs to be understood since it is frequently mis-used.  Sacrifice alone is not a sign of care: if you are doing something that isn’t ideal because you care about someone, you should ask yourself if there was a better way to plan ahead so that you didn’t have to make that sacrifice, while still achieving your goals.  Thinking that way makes you smart, not uncaring.  Only sacrifice when you need to, and not unnecessarily.  However, with that being said, unnecessary sacrifice can deepen a bond if used correctly: say you spend extra time on a gift for someone.  You sacrificed some free time, but you didn’t have to sacrifice any serious commitments–breaking a promise to someone else so that you can scramble to find a last minute gift would be bad planning and unnecessary sacrifice.

Lots more to read in my post on Insecurity and Overcome Illogical Thoughts of Insecure People

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The Nature of Relationships with People

Here are some important things to know about relationships.

Relationships have states, and that state can be based on time and context.  Time refers to how when you first meet, you are strangers, then you might become acquaintances, friends, close friends, like family, family.  Context refers to how at school you are a student, but at home you are a son or daughter, and in a club you might be president while at work you are an employee, etc.

Relationships have health, and the health behaves like a plant: it grows stronger if you water it, and weaker if you stop.  If you stop interacting with someone completely, the relationship has been suspended.  Sure you can resume the relationship, and if you are close enough friends, it will feel as though the relationship never ended, but the truth is that it did end for the duration that you were apart.  Don’t mistake a healthy relationship state (like close friend) for a healthy relationship health (traveling through life together).

Relationships take time and are not guaranteed: just because you want to have [deep] [meaningful] relationships, doesn’t mean you will get them quickly, or even at all.  You must wait and hope because it is out of your control.  It is out of your control because a true relationship is genuine: there’s only so much work you can do before you’re no longer true to yourself.

People Lie: Verify everything before accepting it as truth.  (Doing it too much is paranoia–focus on validating important information rather than everything.)  Fact checking “world facts” is easy with Google, but fact checking “people facts” is harder: be wary of gossip.  However, people have a right to privacy, and sometimes you don’t deserve the truth: it is not your right to know, so if someone lies to you, they may have good reason to–don’t force it out of them.  Example: Parents don’t want child to know the child was adopted.

See the Theory of What are Relationships? (add a like to this post to what are relationships?)

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