As a therapist who specializes in relationships, I can’t help but
notice several skills and personality features that can make or break a
relationship. No, this is not going to be an article about making sure
to find a rich guy who likes to spoon or a hot girl who likes to watch
football. These 10 skills are what make couples feel satisfied,
connected, and happy with each other regardless of their superficial
characteristics. If you have a partner who can do all 10 of these, (and
you are able to do them as well), your will have a very satisfying
relationship:
1. Date someone who can delay gratification.
In other words, the ability to do an unpleasant thing instead of
an enjoyable thing in order to achieve a more-important benefit. Being
in a healthy partnership means being able to suck it up and deal with
all kinds of unpleasant things (embarrassment, vulnerability, taking out
the trash, resisting acting on angry impulses, actively listening
instead of playing video games, running a boring errand, etc.) for the
sake of the other person and for the sake of the relationship.
2. Date someone who can be present.
Relationships suffer when one or both partners is not able to engage
in the moment with the other person. Of course we are all busy and
can’t exactly sit around staring at our partners quietly all day long,
but the ability to genuinely listen to and focus on the other person at
least a few times a week is important. If your significant other is
unable to unplug, disconnect from distraction, and engage in interacting
with you, this could lead to loneliness down the road. Also, people
who are able to be present and attentive to one thing are excellent
listeners, since they are simply in the moment focused on what the other
person is saying.
3. Date someone who makes you feel emotionally safe.
Being “emotionally safe” with your significant other means that you
are comfortable being vulnerable, making direct requests, and being
yourself in his/her presence. If you have a partner who criticizes, is
defensive, talks you out of your feelings (is invalidating), or is often
annoyed or condescending toward you, you will eventually grow to feel
“emotionally unsafe” in that relationship. Partners who feel emotionally
unsafe feel disconnected and powerless at best, and depressed and
miserable at worst. If your partner is open to hear what you have to
say (even when s/he does not like it), does not act defensive or
critical of you, feels that your emotions are understandable, and
considers your requests and desires, s/he has the ability to make you
feel emotionally safe.
4. Date someone who can tolerate not being in control.
A healthy, happy relationship consists of two people who can tolerate
the feeling of not being in control once in a while. This skill is
required in many situations, from letting someone else choose the paint
color for the bathroom, to letting someone else openly share feelings
that can’t exactly be “fixed.”
5. Date someone who can take control when necessary.
There are some people who struggle with being responsible for
decisions and actions. Whether it is calling the plumber when the sink
is leaking, or resisting buying a new sofa because it isn’t in the
budget, the ability to be “in charge” and “proactive” is a positive
quality in a partner.
6. Date someone who knows and appropriately communicate his/her feelings.
Emotionally-aware partners are able to pinpoint that they are feeling
disrespected, ignored, or lonely instead of simply flying off in
a reactive, non-constructive rage. If your partner is emotionally aware
enough to understand his/her feelings, this is a good sign for your
relationship.
7. Date someone who knows and appropriately communicates his/her needs.
If your partner is able to directly request his/her needs without
criticism, yelling, passivity, aggression, or passive-aggression, this
is a great sign. If your partner calmly makes specific requests for you
to change a behavior without making you feel inadequate or inferior, you
probably have a keeper on your hands.
8. Date someone who can be humble.
Humility is required during the process of forgiving someone else for
their mistakes and during the process of asking for forgivness from
someone else. In a happy, healthy relationship, both people are able to
abandon ego and pride when necessary.
9. Date someone who can tolerate emotional intimacy and togetherness.
In a happy, healthy partnership, both people are comfortable sharing
emotions, thoughts, and needs. If a problem arises, they are
comfortable discussing it instead of avoiding it and pretending it
doesn’t exist. They share vulnerabilities, fears, successes, and life
goals comfortably.
10. Date someone who can tolerate separateness.
The ability to tolerate separateness means that he/she is comfortable
doing things on his/her own. And when you are doing things on your
own, he/she is not texting or calling you constantly. Being able to be
on your own once in a while without experiencing anxiety is a sign of
security and trust.
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