When attempting to create a loving, healthy intimate relationship, it is
important to have an accurate roadmap for the journey.
Most of our culture's roadmaps have emphasized fantasy, illusion and denial,
and those who follow those maps will tend to have
unhappy, conflict-ridden relationships. What follows is a reality-based
roadmap which comes from research into couples' actual
experiences of being in long-term relationships.
While theorists disagree on the exact name and number of the stages couples
progress through, there is a general consensus that
couples go through some version of the following stages. Not everyone goes
through all the stages and some couples may go
through them in a different sequence, but for most couples this is the
normative experience in a long-term committed relationship.
- ROMANTIC LOVE
This is the love that Hollywood loves to promote as the only kind of love.
Romantic love is wonderful, easy, and effortless. It
is very spontaneous and alive. The feelings and perceptions that go through
both people are that we are one; we are the same.
You are perfect. I can give and receive love with little or no effort required.
There is a tremendous emphasis on maximizing
similarities and minimizing differences. There is a belief and expectation that
you will provide most or all of my wants, needs,
desires. There is generally a high degree of passion and feelings and
expressions of romance come easily and often. The partners
think about each other constantly, and make much eye contact and are very
affectionate when they are together. Many people
experience this as living in a state of near-constant bliss and infatuation.
There is a belief that these feelings and experiences will
go on forever, that we will never disagree on anythingU, and that somehow fate
or forces larger than themselves have brought
them together.
This stage generally lasts from six months to two years, and is the SHORTEST
stage of any of the stages of long-term committed
relationships.
- ADJUSTING TO REALITY
Ah, reality. Inevitably, predictably, eventually, reality rears its (ugly?)
head and the bubble bursts on the Romantic stage.
Sometimes it is a slow leak, other times a sudden and complete blowout. But
either way, something happens which causes a
minor or major conflict in the new relationship. Sometimes the trigger is
living together and having to share household chores
and experiencing personal habits up close. Sometimes it is an act of deception
which is discovered. Sometimes it is planning a
wedding, buying a house, or sharing finances. Whatever the cause, after the
conflict occurs, it becomes impossible to continue
the fantasy that this person and this relationship are immune from struggle,
from effort, from reality. Differences which were
previously obscured suddenly become visible. Conflicts, anxieties,
disappointment and hurt replace the effortless flow of the
Romantic stage. There is a sense that this person is not living up your hopes
and dreams, and there is an accompanying loss of
closeness. Gradually each person is forced to relinquish some of their most
cherished romantic fantasies, or to cling to them
desperately in a state of denial.
In this stage, it is common to feel as if someone or something or even Life
itself has cheated you or robbed you of something
precious, almost like a stage of grieving the loss of something innocent and
wonderful. There is a desire to be close again but
confusion as how to create that. It is the first time that fears of intimacy
begin to arise. Suddenly the couple must learn how to
deal with very real differences, how to deal with conflict, and how to
integrate being an independent person as well as someone
in an intimate relationship.
In short, Adjusting to Reality is the stage where the Real Relationship begins.
- THE POWER STRUGGLE
As the disillusionment of the Adjusting to Reality stage deepens, the couple
tends to have more disagreements. Minor issues blow
up into larger arguments. Yelling appears for the first time, if it ever will.
Both partners dig in their heels and defend their
positions on issues fiercely. Each person digs in their heels and protects
their turf. This once-tender effortless loving
relationship has become a battleground and evolved into a daily Power Struggle.
This is a typical stage in the development of a
long-term committed relationship.
For the first time in the relationship, there are occasional or frequent
thoughts of leaving the relationship. This person who only
recently appeared to be the embodiment of pure love and joy in your eyes
suddenly seems self-centered and not to be trusted.
Doubts arise as to whether the other person really loves you. There are
consistent feelings of ambivalence and anger. Blaming
and accusing becomes the most common form of interaction. Each partner is
afraid of giving in, and wants the other to change.
This is where deep resentments begin to form, which if left unchecked, become
the cancer that eventually eats away at all the love
and tenderness that has come before. Sarcasm and hostility enter into daily
conversations.
This does not have to be the end of the relationship. The tasks for the couple
here are to develop problem-solving, conflict
resolution and negotiating skills. The conflicts will clearly not go away on
their own. Each person much learn to listen
respectfully to their partnerUs position, even if they donUt agree with it.
They must learn to support their partner's own growth,
even if they feel it compromises their own. They may see the origins of the
patterns of their conflicts (and their dysfunctional
ways of resolving them) in their family of origin.
- RE-EVALUATION
The Power Struggle is physically and emotionally draining, and if the couple
can survive, they move into the next stage, of a
conscious Re-Evaluation of the relationship. Whereas the original commitment
one makes is typically based on projections of
fantasy, this Re-Evaluation takes into account the reality and fears and
defenses of each person. Do I really want to stay with this
person? You know who this person is now, you know their limitations, and you
know the range of which they are capable of
improving or getting better. Knowing all that, do you still want to stay? That
is the question that gets answered during this stage.
Both people tend to turn outward to resolve their issues, instead of toward
each other. As a result, fears of abandonment come up
strongly here. Can I make by myself? Am I really okay the way I am? Will anyone
else find me attractive or appealing?
Both people emotionally (and sometimes physically) disengage and withdraw
during this stage, which makes it the stage in which
separation, divorce and/or an affair are most likely to occur. Feelings of
resentment are less intense in this stage, as the affect in
the relationship is likely to be very flat and empty. The sexual relationship
sporadic at best and more likely non-existent. Things
are ripe for an affair to burst on the scene, and often a person in this stage
will begin to confide in someone of the opposite sex.
This confidante will take on more and more importance in the personUs life, due
to their neediness and vulnerability, and they
will often get emotionally very involved without consciously realizing it. At
this point even the slightest affection is like
throwing a match in the forest on a hot summer day, and a passionate, intense
affair will begin.
The danger is that when an affair begins at this stage, it is almost impossible
for the relationship to recover. The primary
relationship has too little going for it in the way of gratification on either
side, and the inevitable comparisons between the affair
and the relationship seem like night and day.
A separation can be useful here to help each person gain perspective, due that
too can lead to the demise of the relationship if
outside gratifications seem to dwarf the emptiness of the relationship.
The task for each person here is to stay present and honor their commitment,
develop individually and be able to see their partner
as a separate person. This is the only way the relationship can survive and
move into the next stage.
- RECONCILIATION
In this stage, after the distance of the Re-evaluation, if the relationship has
survived, there is a re-awakening of interest in
getting closer and connecting again. Knowing all that they know, coming from
reality and not fantasy, there is a decision to have
the willingness to try once again. There is an open acceptance of the conflicts
and differences in the relationship, but they are
approached with a different attitude: they are used as opportunities for
learning about oneself and the other person. They are
catalysts for growth and change. There is a recognition that the differences
are real and wonUt go away, and that neither person
can really change the other. Thus begins a process of struggling to create an
honest, genuine intimate relationship. The people
connect again and the relationship again begins to produce ongoing satisfaction
for both partners.
In this stage there is also a deeper sense of taking responsibility for oneUs
part in conflict and in lack of satisfaction. Each person
may recognize the link between what they learned as children in their families
of origin and how they approach intimate
relationships. They own their distortions and projections onto their partners.
They begin to see their partner as they see
themselves, as a somewhat flawed yet decent person who is making a sincere
effort to love and be close and still take care of
their own needs.
There is a deeper acceptance in this stage that any relationship cannot and
will not save you in any sense. You still have your
own individual needs and issues and they does not go away just because you are
in a relationship. But the part of your life that
can be nurtured and shared in a loving, accepting relationship is also real and
in this stage each person looks to the other for that
connection. The war is over, the conflicts are accepted, and there is a sincere
desire to learn how to work through the issues to a
satisfying resolution.
- ACCEPTANCE
The final stage in a committed relationship, which researchers estimate less
than 5% of couples ever reach, is one of complete
Acceptance. There is an integration of the need of the self and the needs of
the relationship. Each person takes responsibility for
their own needs, for their own individual lives, and also for providing support
for their partner. A high level of warmth is
present. The couple is able to maintain a balance between autonomy and union.
Conflicts still arise on occasion, but as a result of
the struggles of the previous stage, the couple has figured out how to resolve
most conflicts relatively quickly. Resentments are
few. There are few surprises: these are people who know one another and know
what to expect. They accept what they are
getting, with no denial or fantasy involved. They work together as a team to
stay connected and also maintain their own
identities.
These are the six stages that most couples go through during a long-term
committed relationship. While not every couple goes
through every stage or in that exact sequence, nonetheless this roadmap, based
on the research on actual couples' experiences of
intimate relationship, still provides the best roadmap we have available for
charting the most likely path of an long-term
committed relationship. And if we have a roadmap, we can chart the healthiest
and least disruptive path to the goal of a fulfilling,
intimate relationship.
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