Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Moving On, If You Can't Say "I Love You" in 6 Months

I have a simple theory about the world. The reason why more people aren’t ending up in wildly enthusiastic relationships is simply due to one thing: they’re not getting out of bad relationships soon enough. They stay in something “ok” for months and even years on end, preferring the safety of mediocrity to the angst of loneliness. In the end, they fail to make space in their lives for the right person because there’s no room.

In the creative arts, there is a saying: “Good is the enemy of great.” And I’d say the same applies to relationships. A “great” one won’t come your way unless you’re willing to pass on the ones that are merely “good.” So this is a simple plea: demand strong feelings from your relationship. Demand awe and inspiration at least with some regularity. Do not settle. If you’re not saying aloud (or at least to yourself) “I love you” to your mate by the 6 month point in your relationship, hit the “next” button. Have the courage to believe that something better is out there. Hell, I think you might even be able to know sooner than that, but I’m trying to be reasonable here.

And I know some people take issue with this, saying they were dating three years (or more) before they truly fell in love, and now they’ve been together 40 years now, blah, blah, blah. I don’t deny that can happen, but what happens more often is people who are in limbo for years simply get married because they feel they can’t “waste” the 5 years they’ve been together by splitting up now. They instead go on to waste ten more miserable years together being in an incompatible relationship they don’t have the courage to get out of. When true love strikes, it doesn’t take long to recognize it. When everything clicks, there is very little doubt in your mind. Its laser-accurate clarity will envelope you, calm you, and inspire you.

Now, this theory of high standards has to apply to yourself as well; don’t settle for a mediocre version of yourself if you want to attract an amazing mate. Be someone who chases their dreams only if you want that characteristic in your mate. Be someone who brings as much to the table as you expect from them. If you want someone who lives passionately, has an interesting, fulfilling career, has tons of hobbies, fills the room with their personality and inspires other through their actions, then you need to be that kind of person, too.

This is where many of us fall short. We settle for mediocrity in ourselves and yet expect to end up with the ideal man or woman of our dreams. This is the classic “double-standard”. If the double standard doesn’t apply to you, it’s possible you have too much patience. No one wants to be too judgmental. Part of being an adult is being tolerant and accepting of others flaws. But many of us just stay in something “good” for too long, hoping it will eventually blossom into something mind-blowing. But it doesn’t. It just says “good”.

From what I’ve seen in couples who’ve found “the one”, it usually doesn’t take years to realize it. It’s somewhat early, usually in the first year, and sometimes in the first few weeks. If you’re the right kind of person, who’s done the necessary work on themselves, then you’ll know very quickly. Assuming they’re also worthy of you.

And if you’re not saying “I love you” it’s not a tragic ending, it just means you could probably do better. And you should do better. This is why you owe it to both of you to move on, and give each other room to find a better match. The problem we’ve gotten into as a culture is that we feel like we don’t have the right to break up with someone if they haven’t done anything morally incomprehensible.
But you don’t have to wait until someone cheats on you to break up with them. You can simply leave if your heart isn’t fully engaged. If you’re married and raising kids together, then yes you need to stick with it and give it every shot you can unless you’ve suffered too much to stomach any more. You can exit if you simply feel, “Hey, I like you. We’re having a nice time, but I want more. I deserve to feel more. And so do you.” And this my relationship reader friends, is the guilt-relieving part of my argument; you’re helping them find someone better too, because chances are there’s someone else out there who’s a better match for them than you are. You both just need to keep exploring.

I believe the American divorce rate isn’t due to people who were passionately in love but just drifted apart, although that happens too. I believe it’s more due to people who just never should have been married in the first place, and then finally admitted at age 49 what they probably should have admitted at age 24 when they’d only been dating 3 yrs.

If love is what you want, give your venture enough time to have a chance to flourish, but just as a venture capitalist doesn’t make unconditional investments forever, pull your money at some point if you’re not seeing enough of a return on your contributions. There are plenty of other things out there to invest your time in. You just have to let go of the current one to see them.

You won’t know, until you say no to “good” in order to make room for “great”.

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