Retiree Relationships:
Author Allie Ochs, relationship expert,
offers this great advice on relationships applicable to retirees and
couples of all ages. "...After 20 years of marriage with children gone,
women seek more emotional connection and romance with their husbands. "...
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Stretch Your
Soul This Year!
Christmas
has touched our heart as it does every year. It is the season when people
show the best of humanity. During this season we step up to the plate. At no
other time are we so compelled to make donations, adopt a pet, tip the waiter
and let others change lanes. We are ready to connect and share our love.
Christmas is
the season of relationships and a time when we take stock. For singles,
having no “significant other” with whom to share Christmas can be a paramount
concern. This year again, many couples that have lived in emotional distance
were trying to bridge the gap. However, their efforts to re-connect competed
with the material and social distractions of the holidays. Before they knew it,
they “toasted-in” the New Year and got back to their old ways.
Let’s make
Christmas count and carry our love and compassion forward. Let’s give of
ourselves, instead of giving things. Let’s care about others, instead of
ourselves. Let’s give our hearts to those we love. Love is always right in front
of us and it is up to us to embrace it. How do we prevent ourselves from getting
back to our old ways? How do we stop resentment and anger from sneaking into our
relationships again? Many couples need to overcome the vicious cycle of
unresolved conflict and rekindle the flame. Regardless of who we are, most of us
are yearning for more respect, compassion, closeness, intimacy and sex.
Many are
familiar with this scenario: after two years of dating Andy and Silvia moved
in together. The initial excitement soon became overshadowed by arguments and
resentment. It also became unusually quiet in the bedroom. What extinguished
their flame? Surprisingly, they each have a different perspective of what went
wrong:
Andy:
When I come home I want to relax. It irritates me when Silvia chats on the phone
with her friends. I can’t cook and take-out is fine. Silvia is into health food,
exercise and conscious living. She wants to discuss politics, social issues and
our relationship. Nothing is good enough for her anymore including me. We used
to have fun, but now everything is an effort.
Silvia:
I want to do things and experience life. I want to grow with my partner. Andy
wants to hang out and unless Andy opens his mind, our life will consist of work,
TV, take-out and silence. No wonder I talk to my friends or go to the gym by
myself. I feel distant from Andy and have lost the connection.
Andy and
Silvia seem to have different expectations, values and goals. This is common
after the initial excitement has worn off. Andy is tired of talking and Silvia
is exhausted from trying. Blame has taken the place of communication. They need
to talk about to what extent they are both willing to change. What are they
willing to do for their relationship? Along the same line is a phenomenon
involving baby boomer couples. After 20 years of marriage with children gone,
women seek more emotional connection and romance with their husbands. The debate
goes something like this:
Barbara:
I work part time. Our son studies in Australia and most of my family live in
Holland. My husband Mark works long hours and most weekends. He comes home
exhausted and wants to be left alone. I wonder why I am married?
Mark:
Why is she complaining? Can’t she appreciate that I am doing the best I can?
I am not sure what all this relationship talk will do, except make me angry and
frustrated.
In our
examples, both women are missing a vital part in their relationships and
both men feel criticized. Both couples are frustrated and unable to foster
positive change. It is all about change! We need to change and become better
people for each other. Relationships change and we need to change because of
them! In the movie, Notebook, Noah said: “If it is love,
it weakens your soul and you grow stronger in love.” A great line for a
movie, but in real life, it scares us! In our relationships we need to be
vulnerable and emotionally available to each other. In our restless and
distracting lives, we view our relationships as a static fixture. It should just
be there! In truth, we cannot be in a relationship and simply ask: Take me as I
am!
Relationships require us to change. Here are
some fundamentals about change:
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The world changes and you must change with it!
·
Your life changes, you must change because of it!
·
Your relationship changes and you must change for it!
If we are
unwilling to change, we will be left out of the world, life, relationships
or all three together. Every time things change, our soul is weakened, allowing
us to adjust. We need to be consciously aware of these changes. Unfortunately
most of us ignore changes hoping that they go away. This is particularly
dangerous in relationships. We take positive changes for granted and hope that
negative changes will disappear. When they don’t, resentment and anger grow.
For Andy and
Silvia dating was a lot more fun. When their lives changed they didn’t
adjust. Instead of dealing with these changes, they both blame each other. For
Barbara and Mark life has changed and so have they. Their relationship needs to
be tuned-up to reflect these changes. We maintain our cars, appliances and
computers, because they have to function. Yet, we expect our relationships to
function without maintenance. The reasons are simple: relationship maintenance
requires vulnerability and the willingness to change. When we expect our
relationship to function, like a computer, we missing the point. In
relationships we do one of two things: we either grow closer together or further
apart. But never do we stay the same. Ideally, we grow closer, but the opposite
happens. We get busy, distracted, stressed and are no longer in tune with each
other. The emotional bond is replaced with emptiness. Resentment and anger grow
and we feel lonely. This is the prefect breeding ground for affairs, divorces
and loss of respect.
The secret
lies in the emotional connection. Emotionally connected partners solve
problems, have better sex more often, argue fairly and respect and trust each
other. Yes, we need to change for our relationships and be emotionally
vulnerable. We need to let the other in all the way, not just to the front door.
If we don’t, we will never know the power of emotional closeness. This year lets
be emotionally close, really close, sharing our fears, dreams and hopes. Lets
show our real self, the only person our partner can ever truly love. We will be
richly rewarded, but we must take the first step, even if we can’t see the whole
stairway.
© 2005 Allie
Ochs, Relationship Expert, Coach, Speaker and the Author of “Are You Fit To
Love?” ISBN 0-9720227-9-1. Her articles are published in numerous magazines and
newsletters. She has appeared on radio and TV. To order her book or to take the
Fit 2 Love! Test visit her website at
www.fit2love.com. For FREE relationship/dating advice e-mail:
askallie@fit2love.com |
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