Relationship Specialists Help

De Lexique des bibliothèques
Sauter à la navigation Sauter à la recherche

You could have come to an area within your relationship where you happen to be asking yourself questions like this one: 'How on earth did I ever believe we were meant for each other?' This information will look deeper in to the topic of relationship disillusionment and help you know what happened.

You could not like to easily accept this statement though the fact is that at any given time, you marry the correct person, given the circumstances, the knowledge and wisdom you have, the feelings which are present or the situation and requirements of society and time. With time you gain more wisdom and insight and feelings do change.

If you have not already, you might want to understand the stages you cycle through in almost any intimate relationship. We usually start to get to learn someone and if we mutually like each other we start what is called the courtship phase.

If this initial 'getting to know and feel safe with each other' period brings a sense of feeling safe with each other we literally fall in love and enter the honeymoon period. This stage brings with it a cocktail of hormones and emotions that could permit you to see each other within the best possible light as well as Keep Reading unattractive traits hidden despite the fact that they may be obvious to innocent bystanders.

If you commit yourself to a person in the first six to 18 months of a relationship, there is a good chance that you will be still within the honeymoon period and simply choose not to determine certain facts that later make you wonder why you ever married this person.

They are not the only purpose why we could easily get married to what later seems like the wrong partner. If you look closely at the motivation to get married it is not just love and compatibility that makes people say 'yes, I do'. Some might see marriage as a way out of living with mum and dad, getting some freedom, financial security, a long wished for child and family, status, a way to fit in with friends, a way to fit in with religious or societal requirements or simply what everyone else is doing around that age and not wanting to remain single.

On a deeper level and through my work concentrating on relationship development I generally see that just about every relationship has the possibility to teach you something about yourself. The question is whether you want to sign up for the ride.

You can find obviously times where a relationship is no longer sustainable and it may be better to discontinue the marriage. To find out whether this really is the situation speak to a relationship specialist about it.