"Building
Trust and Your Rules"
By Susie and Otto Collins
The two
of us have been looking at how to create more trust in our
lives and in the lives of others for many years but in the
last few weeks, we've gotten some true "ah has"
that we want to share with you about what trust really is
and how to create more of it in your relationships.
Some of
these ideas and insights may be pretty far out but stay with
us because we think it will all make perfect sense to you.
One of
the things we've discovered about
relationships is that...
You, we
and EVERYONE we've ever known has "rules" for how
we want to be in our relationships and live our lives.
In fact,
we all have "rules" for everything.
We have
"rules" for what's acceptable to us, what we want,
what we don't want, how the people in our lives should (and
shouldn't) act, how much security we need to feel safe in
the world, how often we want to make love, how much money
we want or need and everything else in our lives.
Your rules
are not necessarily right or wrong. They are the rules you've
chosen to act from (usually unconsciously.)
You can
learn to consciously choose which rules you want to follow
in your life but most of us don't.
With that
being said, here are a few of our "ah has" about
the part our rules play in building or tearing down trust...
*When
a person "trusts" another, he or she has the belief
that the other person will act in such a way that is in alignment
with his or her "rules" for living.
As long
as this other person doesn't violate your "rules"
for how you want your relationship or life to be, you say
that you "trust" him or her.
*When
trust has been broken, what actually has happened is that
there has been a rules violation between the two people.
In other
words, something either happened or didn't happen that violated
one or both peoples' rules for what they want in their relationship
and they're upset about it.
"Trust"
violations can be small things or they can be much bigger
issues that can really damage or destroy a relationship.
For example...
failing to pick up the kids early from the baby sitter because
of road construction is no where near as big of an issue for
most people as it would be if one person was having an extra-marital
affair. Infidelity is usually a huge trust and rules violation.
*You can
trust in one area but not all areas of your relationship with
that person because of something he or she has done or because
of your past experiences.
*Creating trust is finding and living in harmony with people
who want at least something of what you want, want to live
how you want to live and have similar values and "rules"
and are willing to live in these ways.
In other
words, there is enough of an overlap
of the other person's rules that fits with the life you want
to create for yourself to create trust between the two of
you.
Okay--those
are a few of our insights on trust
and here are some examples...
**Claire
feels strongly about recycling in her home. Her husband and
two kids don't feel as strongly about recycling as Claire
does (it's not a "rule" for them) but they agree
because they see value in doing it--and also Claire has such
conviction about it that they want to support her.
Claire
trusts that they will recycle but when they slip up every
now and then and forget, she doesn't make a big deal of it
because she knows it's not their passion but hers--and she
sees that they are making a constant, good effort at doing
it.
Here's a different example...
When there
is conflict between Patty and Bill,
they each have different "rules" for how they
deal with it. Patty withdraws into silence to let Bill know
how much he has hurt her. Bill gets angry and pushes Patty
to talk with him.
In this
case, Patty is trusting that her silence
will communicate her upset to Bill and Bill is trusting that
if he just keeps pushing, Patty will open up and talk with
him.
They keep doing this over and over again,
nothing ever gets resolved and they don't trust each other.
So if
creating more trust between two people
is finding the overlap in their "rules" for living
or changing the rules (only if the changes fit what is wanted
for his or her life)...
How do
you do that?
Here are
a few ideas when there's a trust
issue...
1. Take a conscious look at your rules that
seem to be in conflict with the other person's
rules.
What is
the rules violation between the two of you?
In our
Bill/Patty example--Bill's rule is that
you talk out conflicts until they are resolved
and if you don't get cooperation, you push to get it. Patty's
silence and withdrawal violates his rule for resolving conflict.
Patty's rule is that Bill should know what he
had done and she shows him her upset with
her silence and by ignoring him. Bill's pushing her to talk
to him violates her rule that he should know what's wrong
without her telling him.
2. Find
an overlap in your rules, even a small one and build on it.
In our
recycling example, there was enough of an overlap in the way
the family wanted to live that they could come to an agreement
of their rules for living on this topic.
For Patty
and Bill, however, they were so
stuck that they couldn't see any possible
overlap.
3. If
there's little or no overlap, take a good
hard look at your rules to see if they are
serving you--getting you what you want.
Change them if those changes are in
alignment with how you want to live your
life.
Neither
Patty nor Bill are getting what they
want from their current rules so they each
chose to step back and see if maybe another way might work
better.
Bill agreed
to pull back his energy and not
push when there was conflict. Patty recognized that maybe
Bill wasn't a mind
reader (and didn't need to be one). She agreed that she'd
practice opening up and saying what she needed to say to him.
They could
adopt and practice different rules for their lives.
4. If
neither person is willing to look at making changes in their
rules--or they simply don't want to, both people have to evaluate
whether they want to continue the relationship the way it
is or not.
So this
week we suggest that you look at where you have conflict or
trust issues (we all have them) and see where there might
be a rules violation.
Our loving
advice is to be as conscious as
possible about your rules for living and watch how your life
and relationships improve.
********************** 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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