The following was taken from alt.polyamory. With permission from Brian
Poly for Dummies
1. Tell the Truth.
Lasting relationships are built on honesty. Honesty isn’t hard and it gets to
be a habit. Bite the bullet, tell the truth. If your relationship can’t
weather it, you are in the wrong relationship; but it probably can. Telling
the truth is easier than lying, all rumor and myth to the contrary. Lies are
a lot of work. They weigh you down and isolate you. Small lies get lonely
and seek out bigger lies. Don’t ask one lover to lie or keep secrets from others. Secrets breed
distrust. Secrets build walls and discourage intimacy. Know the difference
between privacy and secrecy.
2. Know Yourself.
This is the most important tool and sometimes the hardest to find. Spend
quality time with yourself and find out what you’re like. Most people never
do. Learn to tell when you are moody or unreasonable or defensive or
hyper-sensitive or blinded by New Relationship Energy. Know your limits. If
you are not able to be a good friend or lover to someone, tell them. Discover
where you could do better. Learn what’s healthy for you and what’s not.
Learn when to take a walk and cool off; grown-ups need time-outs too. Figure
out what your priorities really are and live by. If your life doesn’t reflect
your priorities, change your life, not your priorities and today, not in some
better future.
Many people never see the consistent patterns in their own behavior that are
obvious to everyone else, like always pursuing the same type of lover or
acting just like their father did. They are blind to themselves. What don’t
you know about yourself? You can transform your addictions into a preferences
and eventually into a choices, but first you have to know about them.
Take time to discover things like: what baggage are you carrying from your
childhood or your last relationship, what do you need and what do you only
want, what pushes your buttons and why, how are you still growing up, which
things are you willing to compromise on, what are your core motivations, what
makes you jealous or insecure or competitive, at what point are you
over-extending yourself, what are your patterns, strengths and weaknesses,
etc. A lot of this goes back to honesty.
3. Take Care of Yourself.
Work on you. "Grow your own garden in your own soul, don’t wait for someone
else to bring you flowers." Instead of looking to other people for validation
or satisfaction or happiness, learn to make it yourself. This is a vitally
important skill for living, not just relationships. You will always be at
someone’s mercy - until you learn to satisfy your own needs. Once you do, you
gain a freedom and confidence that can never be taken away. You can meet
people as equals and choose to enjoy life together instead of carefully
exchanging needs in a scarcity-driven emotional economy. Ironically, a person
with this kind of independence is very attractive. (Just when we don’t need
it. Thanks.)
Take time by yourself to think about what you need to work on and give
yourself the space to do it. Take care of yourself, be kind to yourself, like
yourself, love yourself, accept yourself, forgive yourself, respect yourself,
serve yourself, nurture yourself, just be yourself and please, sharpen a knife
and cut yourself some slack. Everyone is too hard on themselves. Everyone’s
mirrors are warped. Yours are too; learn to compensate. Learn emotional
first aid. Get your own shit together. Be number one in your life. Deal
with your childhood/parent issues; if you don’t bury your ghosts, they’ll bury
you. Your relationship with yourself is the foundation of all others.
4. Take Responsibility.
Own your feelings. No one can make you sad or angry or happy, they are your
emotions. They exist in your head and nowhere else. You own them. You.
There are always choices. Accept that sometimes you are going to feel good or
bad for no reason at all - not because of the people or events in your life.
When you make someone else accountable for your feelings, your disempower
yourself.
Playing the victim or martyr is just a way to manipulate people. To say, "I
hurt you because my parents hurt me", is to surrender your life to other
people and to the past. Be here now. Take charge of your own feelings and
actions and life. You are responsible for seeing that your own needs get met.
(Yes, even your sexual needs.) Don’t tell other people "do me, make me
happy, protect me, save me." Learn to take care of yourself.
Relationships take work. If there are problems in one of your relationships
or if your life is a mess, stand up and carry your share of the responsibility
(and no more), even if you don’t think you deserve it. Taking responsibility
is not taking blame, it’s taking control. Remember leaving home. As you
take more responsibility over your life, you have more freedom, not less.
5. Encourage Growth.
Remember to care about your lovers as human beings. It’s surprisingly easy to
forget. Support them in advancing their careers, spiritual pursuits,
educations and ambitions. At their own pace and in their own way. Help them
to heal and understand themselves better. Encourage them to take time by
themselves and give them the space they need. Help them cultivate strength.
Ask them to do the same for you but tell them how; they can’t read your mind.
One way to encourage growth is to give those you love the freedom to love
others.
Some people find neediness and weakness very attractive. Maybe they think
they’ll be abandoned if their loved ones become strong. They might try to
keep people weak and needy so they’ll stay. They might give generously but
with conditions and strings attached. This is not unconditional love - it may
not be love at all - it might just be aggressive need.
Growth can be stunted by difficult emotions like insecurity or fear of
abandonment. One way to manage a limiting emotion is to meet it head on.
"The only way out - is through." Don’t hide from it; that just gives it
power. Dive in and weather it and survive it and examine it. Your fear is
far worse than reality. Learn that and the emotion loses its power and you
grow stronger. You can even use emotions like jealousy, insecurity, etc. to
learn about yourself. Pay attention to them, they are valuable.
6. Respect.
Respect is for equals. Honor people’s limits and boundaries. Listen when
someone says ‘no’. Demand the same. Never tolerate abuse of any kind. You
deserve better. Be polite to your partners, they deserve it more than anyone
in your life.
It’s too easy to take partners for granted. Make commitments for a limited
time and not for a lifetime. "Will you marry me for another year?" It helps
you stay aware. Try not to save all your best stuff for one partner and
exclude other partners, especially when they are together. Treat them evenly
or someone will feel slighted. Words like "best", "most" and "favorite" force
comparisons and make people compete and make someone lose. Find a way for
everyone to win.
Respect relationships as well as people. Think of each relationship as a
separate entity. It could be healthy or sick. It has a natural shape; don’t
try to force it to be something else. Find out what is it and let it be just
that. Resist the desire to use a relationship to get your head in order; a
lover is not a life raft. If you need therapy, see a doctor.
It’s easy to project your expectations onto other people. "Maybe they’ll
change." Don’t try to force a person to be someone they are not. People are
package deals; accept them for who they are, good and bad, or don’t accept
them at all.
If you want respect, keep your word. Keep to the spirit of your agreements;
don’t squabble over semantics looking for loop-holes to exploit. When you
make an agreement in the kitchen, keep it in the bedroom.
7. Communicate.
If you want healthy relationships, strong communication skills are a
necessity, not a luxury. Trouble usually starts when talking stops. Things
come up all the time that have to be worked through patiently and lovingly,
even when you’re having a bad day. It gets easier over time, but it takes
work and a willingness to break up scar tissue and tear down walls.
Communication skills are what make a person a great lover or a dud.
Arguing skills are not communication skills. Arguing better than someone
doesn’t make you right, it just makes you better at arguing. Some people
strive to ‘win’ an argument at all cost - even if it costs them their
marriage.
Listening is more important than talking. And harder. Listen actively and
don’t just hear. Make eye contact. Be here now, don’t wander. Paraphrase
their words to see if you heard them right. Notice your own words and
feelings as you listen. Listen to unhappy feelings without needing to fix
them. Listen to disagreements without taking sides. Listen to non-verbal
communication, which usually speaks more clearly than words. Be aware of how
the people in your life are loving you.
Some talk is not communication. If you get lost in the woods and pass the
same landmark several times, you are making the same mistake over and over.
Raising your voice or speaking harshly makes you harder to understand, not
easier. Avoid saying "always" and "never" in disagreements; they just dig up
the past and revive old mistakes. Use "I" statements instead of "you"
statements. "I think you’re wrong" is easier to accept than "you are wrong."
Express yourself clearly; people can’t read your mind. Learn to ask for what
you want. Tear down the wall between your feelings and your words. If you
set limits and boundaries, communicate them. Make sure everyone knows what
they are getting into. Learn how to defuse arguments. If necessary, learn
how and when to say goodbye. Actions communicate better than words. Show
people that you love them. Share kindness and affection and laughter. And
when in doubt, rub their feet.
8. Attitude.
Having tools isn’t enough, you have to really want to use them. Ya gotta
wanna. Your disposition will make it work or blow it at any time. Find a way
for everyone to win. Make important decisions unanimous. Don’t go to sleep
angry; talk it out. Shine a positive light on difficult situations too; many
relationships wither from negative energy. Try not to turn little problems
into big ones. Look for solutions, not someone to blame. Be direct, not
covert. Practice tolerance, patience, flexibility, generosity, understanding,
forgiveness. Learn to apologize. Laugh at yourself.
Be wrong; you can’t learn from mistakes if you always gotta be right. Let it
go; be happy instead. Listen more than you talk. Give someone else the last
word. Take the high road. See things through their eyes; empathy is the cure
for anger. Stay calm and remember to breath. Let down your walls, trust,
open up, risk and let yourself be vulnerable. Without vulnerability there is
no intimacy. Emphasize friendship over romance. Take your time. Savor what
you have instead of dwelling on what you don’t have. Practice truly
unconditional love. Share. Learn.
Resist the desire to ‘protect’ someone by telling them what you think they
want to hear. "Especially do not feign affection." If you’re not sure about
love, say so. If your relationships are not a high priority in your life, let
people know. Encourage honesty in others. Above all, be honest with
yourself. Are you looking to build a family or for a little sexual variety?
Fear is usually what prevents honesty. Make it safe for people to tell their
truth.
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