Love

If You Want A Thriving Connection, Your Relationship Needs One Tiny Thing

Photo: Kateryna Hilznitsova | Unsplash 
Couple embracing

Effective communication skills in intimate relationships involve honesty, especially when it comes to your feelings and emotions.

But, not everyone is equipped to be totally and completely honest with one another. Why is that?

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"He who dares not offend cannot be honest," said one of our Founding Fathers Thomas Paine.

One of the main factors that set great relationships apart from merely good ones is the depth of emotional intimacy.

There are, of course, other factors that contribute but authenticity, vulnerability, and deep emotional connectedness are right up there at the top of the list.

When two people commit themselves to the process of deep diving (into the soul or the psyche), they become, in the words of author and professor Sam Keen, "psychonauts".

Unlike astronauts who explore the outer reaches of space, psychonauts choose to explore the inner reaches of the heart and mind.

Both types of exploration require courage, curiosity, motivation, and a spirit of adventure.

Author of Why Am I Afraid to Tell You Who I Am?, John Powell, said, "Most of us feel that others will not tolerate emotional honesty. We would rather defend our dishonesty because it might hurt others; and having rationalized our phoniness into nobility, we settle for superficial relationships."

The process requires not only a desire to be aware of and in touch with our emotions and perceptions but also a willingness to reveal and share what we are experiencing with others whom we trust to accept and honor our inner truth without judgment.

   

   

Given the fact that most of us tend to be somewhat judgmental towards others and ourselves as well, this is no small consideration.

Becoming a more tolerant and accepting person is not only a possibility even for those of us who are world-class judgment machines, but it is actually one of the greatest outcomes of the deep-diving process.

Connecting to ourselves on a feeling level is for many of us, much easier said than done.

But, with practice, we can learn the language of emotions and become skilled at recognizing feelings when they arise, identifying them, experiencing them, and ultimately, honoring them through our communications and actions.

This process not only generates intimacy, depth, and genuineness in our intimate relationships, but it also enables us to create the feeling of being complete and whole within ourselves.

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When we choose instead to deny or repress feelings, as Powell points out, our relationships and our lives, in general, begin to feel dry, flat, and superficial.

This is the price that we pay when we are more committed to avoiding upsets than we are to living and interacting with authenticity and integrity.

Controlling our feelings is a form of self-manipulation that we perform to control others' responses to us in the hopes of winning their approval or minimizing the chances of them feeling hurt, angry, or displeased with us.

Those couples who share the greatest degree of intimacy and fulfillment are not the ones who experience the least conflict or the fewest upsets but are rather those who are the most willing to relate with both honesty and sensitivity.

They have developed good and effective communication skills and learned how to deal respectfully with the differences that inevitably arise in even the best relationships.

They are, as an author and journalist Daniel Goleman would say, "emotionally intelligent".

It’s a package plan — there is no way that we can thrive in the bliss of affection, empathy, tenderness, excitement, peace, joy, and love without being open to our anger, fear, jealousy, guilt, embarrassment, frustration, grief, and even hatred.

If we want a life in which we thrive rather than whither, we must be willing to accept, as Zorba the Greek says, the "full catastrophe".

As we see it, the real catastrophe is to come to the end of your life only to realize that by playing it safe and trying to avoid risk, you took the biggest risk of all, and lost the most valuable thing that you could lose: a life that was rich with meaning, feeling, and joy.

One that not only filled your cup to the brim but spilled over to fill the cups of others who were moved and inspired by you.

Living an inauthentic life also denies us the possibility of ever feeling truly loved for who we are and, consequently, we inevitably find ourselves caught in a relentless quest for love that can never be satisfied or sustained.

How can I trust that anyone loves me when I haven't shown them who I am?

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So when my partner tells me that they love me, that little voice in the back of my mind says, "You love who you think I am. But, if you knew who I was, you wouldn't love me." 

It’s only when we both reveal ourselves fully that the deepest, purest, most soul-nourishing love can be exchanged.

The remedy for coming back to engage more fully is to first be in touch with what we are feeling and then to express, rather than repress, connect rather than protect, and reveal rather than conceal.

Like any new skill we are acquiring, it may take a while to learn to live open-heartedly.

Old habits, particularly protective ones, often take a while to break. We are not going to be graceful and accomplished right away.

At first, we might feel awkward and clumsy.

It helps to keep this in mind so that we can each be more patient and forgiving with each other and with ourselves as we stumble toward enlightenment.

It's not about doing it right. It's about what the Buddhists refer to as making the "right effort."

As we become more skilled at emotional honesty, we come to know ourselves and each other more deeply.

   

   

Not just about each other, but all that is within each of us — the wounds and sensitive areas, feelings of inadequacy, our mistakes and magnificent failures, the guilt, shame and fears, and our tragedies and triumphs, as well as our greatest dreams, our successes, hopes, accomplishments, and our unique and extraordinary gifts.

Knowing the importance of communication in a relationship brings you the joys of connection, satisfaction, and fulfillment that are beyond measure.

It’s a small price to pay to feel like a blundering idiot while we are learning the skills of emotional honesty and various types of communication.

But, be careful because once you get started on this path you can't stop.

You can't go back to the superficial life again. Not because you shouldn't, but because the benefits and joys of being real, even on a bad day, so greatly outweigh the prices that authenticity requires that there's just no contest.

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Linda Bloom, LCSW, and Charlie Bloom, MSW, are psychotherapists and relationship counselors who have worked with individuals, couples, groups, and organizations since 1975.