Login to BeenDumped
 
Tell a friend about beendumped Tell a friend     Register with BeenDumped Join now   
alone and lonely?

20 Do's & Don'ts of a Functional Relationship

From TheTransitionProcess™ Interactive Lecture

How to attract emotionally healthy people

Been-Dumped is a site dedicated to sharing advice on relationships and divorce. With over 25,000 members it's a great community to be part of.

Been-Dumped member profiles Read members' stories, see who's online.

Relationship Forum Get questions and answers in the forum.

Relationship advice and articles Read luminating articles

We've helped thousands of people just like you!

Once you have Registered this message will no longer display.

1. Who you think you are is important. Like attracts like. Think about it. Do you like who you are?

2. What you want in a relationship is important, and when you are willing to ask for it, you will be able to create it. But only ask for what you want when you are clear about what it is. Until then, don’t go around demanding things you just think you should have.

3. We get exactly what we focus on. The problem or the solution. We make a choice between them with every decision we make.

4. Tell yourself the truth about what you want, not what others (family, friends, spouse) say you should have.

5. Tell everyone else your truth about what you want. Don’t be afraid to share your vision and dreams with those you love.

6. You are not defined by your relationships unless you choose to be. Consider what it says about you if you deed over you soul to one (partner/relationship).

7. Interdependent (two independent functional people) relationships are the only ones that work, long term. (Not dependant or co-dependant)

8. Truth is the first thing necessary to create trust in our relationships. Respect is earned from trust, and love is earned from respect. Intimacy is the gift we get when we risk telling the truth. * See the hierarchy of a functional relationship

9. Fear of intimacy is fear of the truth. Your truth is better for you than someone else's. Just get to know what it is, so you can finally own it, and speak it.

10. If your relationship is not getting better, it is probable getting worse. Life is dynamic and nothing ever stays the same.

11. Every relationship is unique. It takes what it takes to work. If you want it to work, you have to work it. No shortcuts. No 50/50 deals.

12. It is not your job to fix your mate, and it is not his or her job to fix you. Take this relationship and what your mate says at face value and stop reading into it what you’d like to hear. We can work with what’s real. It is impossible to deal with what’s not real.

13. Unconditional love is an inside job. If you haven’t gotten it by now, guess what...start working from within. When you can give it to yourself, you will be ready to give it to someone else. If you can give it to someone else, you will recognize it when it is being given to you. Joy can only be experienced in the present moment.

14. If you both are committed to creating a functional relationship, agree to start doing it today, without any judgments about the past. Be willing to work in the solution and let go of your need to control the outcome, moment to moment, one day at a time

15. Most of our fears about what may happen in this relationship are really fears we experienced in past relationships, and have nothing to do with this person. Come to grips with what's real and what's Memorex! .

16. When in an argument, ask yourself Does this really PASS THE SO WHAT TEST? For you to be right does the other person have to be wrong? Think about it. Life is short. Do not waste it on arguments that have no meaning or purpose. You can always agree to disagree if you need to. Then laugh about it, and go on to the next thing. Start observing your need to argue as just another dysfunctional, immature habit that needs to be broken.

17. When we finally learn to say we are sorry (at 3 or 93), we get to finally hear we are O.K. To error is human, and there is great virtue in all forgiveness, ourselves included. The best way to teach our children this lesson is by watching us demonstrates it.

18. Any negative, hurtful or sarcastic remark is abusive. Like a sharp knife, each word will carve out a chunk of a loving relationship that can never grow back. Please consider the source and outcome of your remarks; before you open you mouth to tell your truth.

19. Never let a day go by without saying and showing how much your relationship and partner mean to you. Never take a moment for granted. Express how grateful you are for your good fortune, however meek or humble it may be. Appreciation and gratefulness have magic in them. It seems the more we express them, the more reasons we are given to say thank you.

20. To have a functional relationship you have to be willing to risk loosing it everyday, by telling your truth. If you don't feel free to tell your truth, start asking yourself why you think it's so important to stay, and what else you are willing to lose besides your self-esteem. …. For starters, you can ask your mate to tell their truth, and be willing to accept it at face value, with no judgment. Now you both get to finally know if you each want a relationship based on what's real for each of you.

...For optimum results, start doing this in the first five minutes of meeting anyone.

Copyright © 1997-2004 E.K.Bernshaw All Rights Reserved

Transitions Counseling

Relationship Advice Products


Recovering from a Broken Heart: A Companion Guide for the Journey from Suffering to Joyful Awareness
Loveshock: How to Survive a Broken Heart (Positive paperbacks)
Latest in the forum
Help Friends currently online
not logged in
Help Newcomers
Help Recommended members

Latest advice and articles:

Help and advice on divorce

Healing After Divorce: Is Counseling Right for You?
Divorce is right up there on the list of life altering events, alongside childbirth, marriage and purchasing a first home. Too often, the actual divorce and end of that relationship are only small pieces in the puzzle of putting your life back together. A significant change in financial status, moving to a new home, helping children through the adjustment and the potential loss of your partner's friends and family relationships may become realities in an already trying time.
Protecting your assets before, during, and after a divorce
Divorces can be financially crippling to the couple involved depending on their financial resources in the first place. Knowing what to do in the first place and then doing it are two important steps that you can take to protect yourself financially.
Keeping the financial cost of divorce down
Along with the many changes that divorce brings to your life comes a change in your financial status- for both parties involved. Many couples will go from a two income family to a single income individual. Other couples will go from a single income family with a stay at home parent to a single income individual and an individual in need of a job.

Relationship help and advice

From Dual-Income to Single-Income: Common Marital Issues When Making The Adjustment
As of the 2004 US Census, there are approximately 5.5 million stay-at-home parents, which shows a 15% increase over the last ten years. With the number of stay-at-home parents climbing, more and more couples are confronting the issues and challenges a relationship faces when one parent forgoes a career to stay at home with the children.
20 Dos & Don'ts of a Functional Relationship
1. Who you think you are is important. Like attracts like. Think about it. Do you like who you are?...
How to Recover from a Breakup as a Teenager
Whether this is your first relationship or your twenty-seventh, dealing with a break up is hard. No matter what the reason was for the break up, it still hurts. Even though this break up may seem like the end of the world now, there are ways to heal your broken heart.
What Went Wrong? When Relationships Go From Hot To Cold
Everything was great. We had been dating for 6 months. We shared the same interests, felt very at ease together, had (often) discussed future plans and had even spent some of the holidays together. Our relationship seemed right on track and just right in general. Then, without warning, he said he "needs some time to think and figure things out. " He stopped calling and rarely returned my calls. When he did, I was often met with silence on the other end of the line. When I asked "what happened", I just got a verbal run around of excuses about how busy he is and/or how much stress he is under right now. What happened? What did I do? I don't know what to think.

Help and advice on mending a broken heart

The Surest Way to Cure a Broken Heart
This is a truth everybody knows because everybody has been through it and it's embodied in our society folk wisdom... Time heals all wounds. Do you intend to suffer from your broken heart 20 years from now? Of course not. But that doesn't help you now... or does it?
The 6 Stages Of A Broken Heart
At one point or another almost everyone has experienced a broken heart. Whether it happened in 3rd grade or a week before your 80th birthday, most of us can relate to the Celine Dion song "All by Myself" (even though we won't admit it). What's important is to get through this passing phase of your life. "Passing" is a verb I chose because you do get over it.
Moving On After Being Dumped
Being dumped is something, which has happened to everyone at some time in their life. How each person chooses to deal with it depends very much on the individual, but there is one thing you can be sure of and that is that it will be painful whatever your age. Learning the best way of dealing with this situation will help to you to recover as quickly as possible and prepare you for moving on.
Haunted: Burying The Ghosts Of Lost Love
Late at night, as you read quietly, before you fall off to sleep... During a busy afternoon as you run through a crowd, hurrying back to your office or home.... Sitting in a movie theater, a restaurant or waiting for the light to turn... A sudden thought or image rises within you. It can come as a small nagging feeling or as a wave of emotion that threatens to overwhelm and drown you in the grief of a memory. Either way it's clear; here comes his/her ghost again.

Help and advice on coping with loneliness

Coping with loneliness
You are not alone as a staggering amount of people suffers from loneliness. Loneliness is a feeling of emptiness and can sometimes result in depression.
Help help      privacy policy      terms of use      corporate information      contact us      link to us
Shopping online      Shopping for Christmas