Saturday, March 10, 2012

An Accurate Barometer Of The Nature And Status Of Your Relationship And Marriage

An Accurate Barometer Of The Nature And Status Of Your Relationship And Marriage
Did you ever want a really accurate barometer of the nature and status of your relationship and marriage? One so accurate that it could tell you whether you needed to be deepening commitment or bailing out as of this minute? I have one for you, and one of your fellow readers spotted it!

I keep saying that I have the smartest readers on the planet, and I dare anybody to argue with me, because I have some pretty solid proof. Many of you pick things up from my book and newsletters that while sitting there in plain sight, most people would just skim right over and not notice how incredibly useful they are and what an impact they could make on the rest of their life because they're too busy looking for things like magic bullets or validation for their mistakes.

Such a pearl is displayed here, brought out by Joe, one of my top students, from a recent newsletter, and "Jeff" in Queensland, this one just happened to be something that you need to pay extra attention to, Buddy:

Hey David,

Reading through the entire text of today's post I found this passage:

"Committed relationships are either synergistic partnerships or they are something that will destroy you; there is no middle ground. If your relationship isn't fulfilling you and giving you cause for celebration, it's killing you, either through the slow poison of the erosion of your self-worth and self-respect, or the explosive shockwave of excessive demands and manipulation that continue until you are wiped out, when the fatal blow is delivered, the break-up, accompanied by the news that everything you did just wasn't quite good enough."

...to be a revelation and the best barometer I've seen. It's been printed out and will be posted and read every day. Often I feel like a slow learner, but I also know that lessons tend to be repeated until we gain the requisite knowledge.

Jeff brings out two VERY important points, and I want all of you to study and reflect on them, because your life and happiness depend on them. Yes, it is that serious!

First, the obvious, that your relationship or marriage is either making your life better or it's sucking it dry. There is no middle ground. And you may say, "Well, it's not so bad. I can tolerate it. It's better than getting out and having to date again, even if I'm not particularly happy." Masculine bovine feces! (B.S.!)

If the latter is your response, you're just killing time, waiting, and enduring. One of the wisest men I ever knew was fond of saying, "Son, you can't kill time without injuring eternity." (I wonder if he picked it up from the same church sign that I saw it on!) And it's true. Every minute you spend in a bad relationship is a minute you can't spend finding and enjoying a good one, trapped in your "comfortable unhappiness."

And "sucking it up" is the act of a coward in this case; a real man will love himself enough to fix the situation if it can be fixed or find a new situation if his current one can't. Commitment to a doomed situation isn't commitment to anything except status quo and the easy way out if you're just using it as an excuse to not take necessary action. You'll eventually learn that "wait and see" is most often a strategy for disaster when trouble is knocking at your door.

Don't take my word for it, either. Drop by our forum, http://forum.makingherhappy.com/, and read the stories of the men who waited to act and see what happened to them, and how easily their troubles could have been avoided by acting earlier, when they first saw the symptoms of trouble, instead of sitting back waiting to see if it was really trouble or if it might just go away if ignored for long enough.

The other, less obvious but equally profound thing that Jeff points out is that we will make the same mistake over and over until we learn better. It's sort of a corollary to "He who isn't familiar with history is doomed to repeat it." It won't do you any good to exit a bad relationship if you don't make the effort to learn how to enter into and maintain a good one, one that is based on love and attraction instead of need, lust, etc., and one in which there is genuine, deep compatibility, open and fulfilling communication, and fun and adventure.

So there are the big questions: How are you getting along? And what are you going to do about it? Is it good, but can be better? Is it salvageable? Is it doomed? Can you kick it up a notch? Notches even? If this one is bad, can you find a wife? Or just the next future ex-wife? If you find a wife, can you hold her love, respect, interest, and attraction? Or will you bore or frustrate her into affairs, or into shutting down so that you have affairs?

That's a pretty scary list of questions for most people. Are you one of them? If so, would you like some answers?

I have them for you, really! Ask anyone who has ever read and applied my book, "THE Man's Guide to Great Relationships and Marriage" to their relationship or marriage. Some have found that they could indeed kick things up, others that they could fix some pretty serious problems and then kick things up, often to better than they had ever been. Others have found that they were in a marriage that was doomed before it ever came together, and found their way out gracefully, peacefully, and with their dignity (and assets!) intact, and went on to find a good partner and a happy life.

So what will you do? Sit and sulk, saying, "Well, it could never work for me?" Or will you go to http://www.makingherhappy.com/ and download your copy of this book that has worked for everyone who has used it and start making the kind of changes that make the difference between suffering, merely existing, and living? I STRONGLY suggest you do the latter, because life is too short to do anything else.

In the meantime, live well, be well, and have a wonderful day!

David Cunningham "Being a man is something to which one should aspire, not something for which he should apologize." --David Cunningham

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