Trust in Relationships - Must Know
Trust in relationships is vital. It evolves over time. Once gone, it takes longer and it’s harder to rebuild than to gain it in the first place. Lost trust creates a lot of long-term damage in any relationship.
Falling in love is easy - becoming infatuated doesn’t require any skills. However, staying in love throughout all the relationship stages requires good communication skills, emotional intelligence and trust.
Trust in relationships is the central, supporting pillar of creating
intimacy and maintaining a deep, fulfilling connection with your
partner.
Learn here how trust shapes your intimacy, the effects of unfair
fighting, unfinished issues from the past and infidelity, and real
solutions to restoring broken trust.
Trust in Relationships Fosters Intimacy
You’ve probably heard that intimacy is present only when there is trust.
It’s true.
As intimate couples,
both you and your partner must trust each other to be willing and able
to maintain a safe emotional space in which both of you can be honest
about and communicate effectively your opinions, feelings and needs
(taking full personal responsibility for these), without fear of being
rejected or shamed.
I hear you asking... what does it mean to communicate effectively?
Well, in any relationship there are three styles of communication: aggressive, passive, and assertive.
If you are like most people, you are either aggressive or passive in
expressing your needs, wants, feelings and perceptions. However, if you
are to build trust and maintain intimacy, you must learn to communicate
these assertively.
Assertive communication means expressing yourself honestly, clearly,
and calmly without attacking or verbally abusing your partner.
Can you do that?
Can you also be honest and not hiding anything, no matter how
painful the truth is? Because if you want to 'spare' the other person,
not say something because it might "rock the boat" or hurt their feelings, it means you are NOT honest.
So remember this. Not being honest - no matter the reasons - breaks the trust in a relationship.
Trust in Relationships and Fair Fighting
Yes, you’ve read this right. Believe it or not, fighting is part of
any relationship - especially during the power struggle, or the
unavoidable common relationship problems stage.
Don’t make the mistake of living with the naive belief that couples
never fight! It’s not the fighting, but the way you fight. Fight
unfairly and you destroy the trust; fight fairly and you build the
trust.
Here are the basic rules of fair fighting:
- No name calling or putdowns
- No generalizations like, "you always" or, "you never"
- No fighting in public, late at night, when tired, driving, or
anytime when either of you might not have full control over how you
respond
- Use "I-statements" rather than "YOU-statements", which might feel like attacks
- Stay with the issue at hand and leave old, unresolved issues for another (agreed-on) time
- Stay with the person you fight - never bring their family or friends into the issue to make a point or attack them
Make sure you agree beforehand on a method of taking time out if one
of you feels that the fight is getting out of control and your relationship communication is compromised.
Trust in Relationships is Affected by...
..."unfinished business" from the past. If you don't solve and get
closure for any past issues in your relationship, you will continue to
hurt each other through being resentful or 'getting even'. Being resentful leads to wanting to get even, which may lead to infidelity.
Old wounds that are not fully healed become 'infected' and break the trust in relationships. Intimacy disappears. Love begins to fade and if you don’t attend to the troubled relationship warning signs, love dies a slow and sure death.
So make sure you don't allow issues to go unresolved. Make sure
you’ve resolved any old hurts and made amends where necessary. Why?
Because saying "I am sorry" is never enough. Amends are necessary not to compensate your partner, but to rebuild the broken trust and restore 'fairness' in your relationship.
Infidelity and the Trust in a Relationship
Infidelity is the biggest offense in a relationship. If you or your
partner has been cheating, it can take a long time, patience,
commitment and specific steps to reconcile and rebuild trust in your
relationship.
For the offended victim, surviving infidelity means learning to overcome jealousy and regaining trust in the offending party.
No matter what you may read elsewhere, restoring trust after an
affair is difficult. If you experience something like this in your
relationship, don’t wait up! Time NEVER solves this kind of wound. The
two of you are too overwhelmed emotionally to be able to solve this by
yourself - you must get professional help, as soon as possible.
Trust in relationships takes a long time to build and a very short
time to destroy. Rebuilding trust is not as simple as building trust in
the first place. Once you’ve built trust, you should do everything in
your power to keep it if you want to build a happy, lasting relationship.
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