"Relationship Advice
for Deeper Spark and Connection"
By Susie and Otto Collins
Here's
something else we've discovered about
creating a greater connection in your
relationship and life that we want to share
with you...
One of the ways to create
and keep spark is
allowing yourself--as well as the other person--
to be real, honest, and vulnerable.
This may
sound like a no-brainer but it seems
that for many of us, it's easier said than done.
The truth
is that having the courage to be
vulnerable and accepting your partner when he or she is vulnerable
can open you both to a closer relationship.
This past
weekend, we saw a great example of how vulnerability opened
the door to greater connection and aliveness.
What happened
was that we were attending a seminar and one of the presenters,
who wasn't used to giving presentations in front of three
or four hundred people, did something very brave.
While
demonstrating "radical honesty" which is based on
Brad Blanton's book "Radical Honesty," this speaker
tuned into herself and revealed that she was feeling fearful,
and even allowed herself to cry.
Did that
disconnect her from the audience?
Did the
people watching her presentation think badly of her?
No way.
What actually
happened was that by acknowledging she was feeling vulnerable,
she created a deeper connection with the audience than if
she had simply told us about the radical honesty theory.
Do we
recommend that you cry on stage or tell every hidden thought
of fear, sadness or whatever else you are feeling as you go
through your daily life?
Of course
not.
What we
are suggesting is that if you want greater spark in your life,
you begin to look at how you can share yourself more deeply
with your beloved, your family and the other people in your
life who are important to you.
Allow
your loved ones to peer into the window of who you really
are instead of
holding them at arm's length.
So what's
a real life example of this in action?
Mona liked
for everyone to feel like she "had
it all together" and nothing ever phased her.
She didn't
usually ask for help and didn't allow even her husband to
see when she felt afraid or upset.
Her husband
wasn't aware that she wanted
more of his attention and that she missed not having it the
way it used to be. She was scared they would lose their love
for each
other.
When she
finally told him how she really felt,
allowing herself to be vulnerable and to let her guard down,
he was surprised. As he
listened to her, he felt a deeper connection
with her than he had in a long time.
He had
actually been feeling that something
was missing in their relationship but didn't
know what it was until Mona opened up to
him.
While
vulnerability can certainly open two
people to a deeper connection, there can be some stumbling
blocks.
We sometimes
pay lip service to wanting our partner to show vulnerability.
In other words, we say that we want to be vulnerable and our
partner to also show his or her feelings but when it actually
happens, we do something to dismiss it or close down the connection.
The two
of us ran into this problem this past weekend.
We were
both tired from long days in the
seminar and one evening, we ran into common pattern for us
that certainly dampens our spark.
The pattern
is that we both act in ways that
neither of us feel understood by the other.
Can you
relate at all?
As we
thought about it later--when Otto shared what he was feeling
in a vulnerable
way, Susie reacted by dismissing his feelings
because she hadn't felt understood a little
while earlier. She unconsciously "punished"
him for not listening to her.
Now, this
isn't our normal way of reacting to
expression of one another's feelings but we
were tired and not at our best.
The point
is that we had to do what we know
to do to reconnect--which is to come toward
one another and admit what we had done to
disconnect from each other.
Because
our commitment to each other is
is to stay open and keep our connection
strong, alive and growing, we chose to open
our hearts to each other again--even though
it was difficult.
As you
think about the idea of putting more spark in your relationship,
marriage or life...
Our questions
to you are these...
1. Who
do you want to build spark and aliveness with?
2. What
ways are you willing to be vulnerable
with this person and to show who you truly are?
3. Do
you unconsciously "punish" someone else when he
or she is being vulnerable?
4. If
you do, what can you do to open your heart to that person
more of the time?
This week,
choose to be vulnerable and show
your loved one something that you may have
been holding back.
Look for
places in your relationship and live
where you can foster more aliveness and
spark.
For more
ideas about how to get the spark back, visit http://www.restartthespark.com.
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Relationship coaches Susie and Otto Collins,
authors of "Should You Stay or Should You Go?" and "No More
Jealousy" are experts at helping people get more of the love
they really want. Learn the 5 keys to a closer, more loving
relationship, click below for your free 5-part mini-course:
http://www.Relationshipgold.com
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