Jun 11

Compatibility is about flexibility. Someone you can adjust these differences to, and at the same time truly accept the changes. One of my favorite couples who see my coworker regularly are a couple in their sixties. Even if they had no problems they had always had the time to go visit their marriage counselor, my mentor.  So one morning I caught them while waiting for the jam on my door to get fixed I decided to talk to them. It was simple, I asked about how they met. They seemed so sweet that they didn’t need counseling. The old man told me that that was just how he wanted to manage things. I simply wanted to know how they met. They were such a perfect couple.

“I worked in a shoe factory and her mother was the one that supplied us leather. One time she had been sent to talk to the manager and I was a day fresh in the position after getting promoted. I thought she was the most beautiful girl I had ever seen yet, but I knew that we were very different. Her family was very rich, and I was just starting to make a living for myself. So I thought, maybe I should just make friends with her, I guess there’s nothing wrong with having someone as beautiful as her for a friend. But when I reached out to her and started to discover the beauty in variety and acceptance, I felt that my world became a much colorful place. And then we became the best of friends. One day I decided to tell her the fact that I loved her, and risked our friendship, but I would definitely have regretted not telling her despite what I had laid down the line. We’ve been married for forty two years now.”

On that note, I’d like to clear out that it doesn’t work all the time, but it is always great to have a good friend by your side. Another thing that great relationships have factored in would be their capability to move forward as individuals. Some clients who started seeing other people shortly after a bad breakup guaranteed more problems than growth, as a result of a rebound relationship and a lack of peace of mind. There’s always time to start seeing other people, but if you need to go figure out some personal ordeals, then by all means do it. That way, your new relationship does not suffer, and you get to present yourself in a new and refreshing fashion. There’s what we call a whirlwind romance, and those are for the lucky people. That’s what the Young Woman had. She ended up with her best friend, after being friends for five years, and discovering that it was not the end of the world for her. They dated for 4 years and got married. Then again, even I had to start all over again. And you know what, I wouldn’t have wanted it any other way. I love my wife. It all works out in the end.

In general, if you know your way around relationships, it doesn’t necessarily mean it will work for everyone you meet. This is a world full of individuals with different attributes and personalities that sets them apart from one another. Even the experts sometimes fail. That’s why there’s divorce, but then again, there’s a way to fix things. And that’s where marriage counselors come in. This isn’t about blowing my own horn, we’re people too, and we DO encounter problems of our own. Communication, trust, understanding are the keys to a great relationship and I think everyone has heard that from just about any “good advice giver”. Just make sure that you find a friend in that person and in yourself. Because when the romance subsides, there’s always another relationship to catch your cloud and take you back to where you both started.

Jun 11

Being in this field for nearly 10 years, I’ve seen and heard almost all the stories possible about what constitutes a great relationship and its opposite. I’ve met women who have survived a really traumatic relationship and men who have been through equally painful ones.

It makes no difference at all; whether it be a man or a woman and all the other politically incorrect equations about gender – fact is fact: there are a few things that should guide us into the lives that we desire, in whatever field we wish, especially when it involves our romantic relationships.

Not so long ago, I’ve dealt with one client who had just gotten out of a relationship of two years. She was young, barely in her mid twenties. This was a young woman who’s never been in a relationship before, and did not have any sort of standard when it came to how she should be treated as a woman; a victim of verbal abuse, and later on physical abuse.

This carried over as our session lasted months on and off. She would come by every so often whenever she needed to let out some steam, when she would remember the bad episodes in her previous relationship. From what I’ve gathered, she and another client went through the same problem. This time I was dealing with a man.

He was your average guy who was very smart and silent, who preferred things were put to place and got together with a woman with a tub of insecurities. This showed me a pattern. So other than just having him unleash his burdens to me, I asked about the history of the person he was with at the time. She had excess baggage and that was something textbook did not expound to me very much.

The results were the same. They became victims of co-victims. At one point I thought of setting them up, except that they both really didn’t want to start seeing other people – a result of the traumatic relationship.

Piecing things together, 2 years after, the Young Woman came back and told me how much her life has changed after she had found someone a year after her painful experience. “It was not easy”, she explains. “I was still fresh out of the trauma, but my friendship with this guy I’m now with saved us both.” They hung out everyday, and she did the opposite of what she used to do. “I made sure that the feelings were real, and these are things you shouldn’t base on the first date alone. The best foot forward pattern is always an option for every relationship –even I used to subscribe to that. So, I became my true self the entire time (or so I’d like to think) and thank goodness I didn’t have to try so hard because our friendship gave us that advantage.”

Recollecting stories of relationships from my friends, clients and personal experience, I saw one common denominator. It was the friendship and mutual respect and understanding. This can stretch as far as two people who have totally different tastes in everything, and that’s supposedly another issue altogether, but then again, when you’ve been friends for quite sometime now, all that seems to become next to unimportant.