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  • Relationships are complex and sometimes confusing, because humans are. Were unpredictable,

  • were annoying, we don’t always know what were doing or what we want. And then were

  • supposed to merge with another person of this species and have it all work together seamlessly.

  • Well be getting into all of that.

  • So, I’ve found that most videos I see on the topic of relationships focus on things

  • to be aware of in the other person, and not so much things to be aware of within ourselves.

  • And it’s easy to point fingers on others; the things that we expect from them, the things

  • we want from them, the things that are wrong with them.

  • How about the things with you? And with me?

  • I want to focus on both, because theyre equally important, and I specifically want

  • to focus on three ideas or things or whatever to call it, that I’ve come to learn. Those

  • things are:

  • 1) Be honest from the beginning 2) Don’t commit to potential; and 3) Endings are not

  • failures.

  • This is going to be a chit-chatty video. Were just hanging out. Two friends. You and I.

  • You all seem to enjoy the previous video I did similar to this one, and I really enjoyed

  • making it so here we are.

  • So, what do I mean by being honest from the beginning?

  • Were animals. We see a potential mate and we do what we can to attract them. We may

  • not puff out our chest or lift our arms up like some other species do. Instead, we try

  • to look and behave our very best, as one should. We all like to see someone put in the effort.

  • But there’s a difference between putting your best foot forward and putting a foot

  • forward that isn’t even yours.

  • How can a person be honest?

  • Honesty isn’t about spilling all the tea about your family drama and your bad habit

  • of leaving socks on the floor or your childhood bullies, all on the first date. It’s simply

  • about not deliberately censoring, manipulating or exaggerating your true self in order to

  • make yourself seem more desirable by pretending to be someone or something you really aren’t.

  • So, to provide an example, when you meet someone or when youre with someone, don’t be

  • like “I wake up at 6 every morning and go for a run and then I go to the animal shelter

  • and volunteer for two hoursif you don’t do that. Don’t tell someone youre a chocolate

  • person when in reality you prefer vanilla. Don’t pretend to be a social butterfly when

  • youre really a homebody. Don’t say youre okay with smoking and alcohol if youre

  • not, or that their busy work schedule isn’t going to be a problem, if it is.

  • So as you can see, the honestly train goes both ways; don’t pretend to be something

  • that you aren’t, and don’t pretend to be okay with what someone else is, if you

  • aren’t.

  • Why is it so important?

  • The foundation of a relationship, the tone, the norm, the expectations, the boundariesthose

  • are usually set in the early stages. At least the very core of it. And if those are based

  • on a false reality, eventually that façade will fade, the mask will slip, and the relationship

  • will suffer, because suppressed desires and ways of being tend to re-surface in one way

  • or the other. Perhaps in 5 months, or perhaps two years into a relationship.

  • Now, if you feel like you can’t be honest about who you are with someone, you either

  • a) need to work on yourself, and that includes learning to simply accept yourself, to actually

  • become someone youre proud to be honest about being or b) youre simply in the wrong

  • company.

  • The fuzzy thing about honesty is of course that, while you might be fully committed to

  • it, there’s no way for you to know whether or not the other person is. Some people will

  • be dishonest, they will lie. I think that’s simply a reality that we need to accept. Just

  • don’t be one of those people, because they always lose at the end.

  • Moving on to the second idea/lesson. So, what do I mean bydon’t commit to potential”?

  • Sometimes, we pretend to be okay with something that a person says or does or is, because

  • were hoping or expecting that that specific attribute of theirs will change. And sometimes,

  • it can. For example, I’m not typically someone who likes going out a lot, but if the person

  • I was with enjoyed going out more than I do, there’s a chance I’d start enjoying it

  • more too. But I wouldn’t want them to commit to the idea that someday I will. If I meet

  • someone who says they don’t ever want to get married while I do, I shouldn’t commit

  • to the idea that one day they will change their mind.

  • So, how do you avoid committing to potential?

  • You ask questions, and you honestly evaluate the answers and the actions that follow.

  • Acknowledge someone’s true colors and decide if their color palette matches with yours.

  • If it doesn’t, be honest, even if sucks because it might go against what you had hoped

  • for.

  • Basically, don’t look for a project to turn into a suitable partner. That doesn’t mean

  • that you should look for someone who is perfect and that perfectly aligns with you from the

  • very start, because that’s not really what reality looks like and we will get to that

  • later, but the person that you are today, should align with the person that they are

  • today. You don’t align with who they could be, or who you could be.

  • Now on that note, let’s talk about expectations and compromise.

  • If youre looking for someone who is going to match every single one of your 100 bullet

  • point list of a dream mate, youll be searching forever. And if you do happen to stumble upon

  • them, run.

  • There will always be things that could be better. There will always be things that are

  • annoying. There will always be different perspectives and opinions and ideas. There will always

  • be disagreements. Because were different people.

  • Let’s say youre 25 and you meet someone who’s also 25. It means that you each are

  • bringing 25 whole years of experiences to the table, that includes everything from your

  • childhood and your upbringing to every single friendship and relationship each of you have

  • ever had and all the other things that make up who we are. It’s a beautiful thing, but

  • it’s also complicated.

  • And this is where compromise comes in.

  • I think there’s a healthy kind of compromise and an unhealthy kind of compromise. There’s

  • the compromise that is perfectly reasonable and there is the compromise that is unreasonable.

  • The only people who ultimately decide what those things are, are you and the person youre

  • with.

  • Now, some people are very reluctant to compromise. I call it under-compromise.

  • “I refuse to stop leaving my dirty socks on the floor, it’s who I am, accept it or

  • leave it.” Or “I can’t remember to kiss you goodnight every night even though I know

  • it would make you happy, I’m not that kind of person.”

  • And then there are the people are too prone to compromise, where they completely loose

  • themselves. I call it over-compromise.

  • “I’m going to stop talking to everyone in my family so that I can spend all my time

  • with you.”

  • And I think what I’ve learned is that, in any relationship, there will be times when

  • over-compromising is necessary. Someone might get sick or lose their job or simply have

  • a few bad days. And there will also be times when someone will under-compromise. Someone

  • might just not feel like it or they might be going through something.

  • That’s what a relationship is; there will be ups, there will be downs, there will be

  • highs, there will be lows.

  • And this brings me to my last point; endings are not failures.

  • You know sometimes, things just end. It’s part of life. Not all things are forever.

  • Does that mean we failed? You failed? They failed? The relationship failed? Each to their

  • own, but that’s not how I see it.

  • Sometimes life gives us opportunities to learn and to grow. And even to create memories and

  • stories. And we should do the best we can to learn to embrace it, even if they come

  • in a way that we hadn’t expected or hoped for.

  • On that note, let’s end this chat session with a quote that I really, really like. It’s

  • by Emery Allen and it goes like this: “Not everything is supposed to become something

  • beautiful and long-lasting. Sometimes people come into your life to show you what is right

  • and what is wrong, to show you who you can be, to teach you to love yourself, to make

  • you feel better for a little while, or to just be someone to walk with at night and

  • spill your life to. Not everyone is going to stay forever, and we still have to keep

  • on going and thank them for what theyve given us.”

  • That was all for today’s video.

Relationships are complex and sometimes confusing, because humans are. Were unpredictable,

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