Why Are Core Values so Important to Your Relationship?

Why Are Core Values so Important to Your Relationship?

We hold that for two people to be in harmony, they have to have matching core values. They have to have the same approach to people and the world.

We introduced this idea in a workshop we did recently by giving out a list of suggested core values, asking people to identify theirs and then talk about them with someone else. The list was just a jumping-off point (find that list at the bottom of this blog) and we suggested that people add their own whenever they came up with different ones.

We were surprised at how animated the discussion was. This was obviously an exercise that challenged people to look deeply, as many of the attendees had not really thought about what their core values were.

One woman shared that if she and her second husband had discussed their values, they never would have gotten married or had children! One of the men shared that just before he and his ex-wife got married they had a discussion of what they wanted from their life together. She said she wanted the white picket fence, a certain amount of children, a certain degree of affluence; in essence a completely NORMAL life, as she put it. He, on the other hand, wanted nothing to do with NORMAL, the farthest from it in fact. They got married anyway and that went in a predictable manner, the way that marriages without matching values go!

Since having matching core values is a critical foundation in creating a relationship that is both conflict-free and peaceful, we feel it would be useful to review what core values are in more depth.

The thing with core values, as with emotions in general, is that they are felt, not thought. They only become clear through feeling what is right and then labeling them. Until they are named, they are forces outside our control that move us in mysterious ways. Once we can articulate our values and our feelings, we can make decisions that integrate the emotional and the rational.

In order to honestly view whether your values match with a partner, you need to first examine alone and for yourself, what the values are at the root of how you live your life, of who you are and how you interact with the world.

For two people to be in harmony, they have to have matching core values #relationships #quote Click To TweetIt can be very revealing to search inside yourself for these values and to observe how they express themselves in your life. These principles underlie most of the important decisions that you make. The more you get to know yourself, the more this will be true. We all have a wide panoply of values, yet some of these are so intrinsic to who we are and how we want to be in the world that they become core to all else that we do and decide. They go to our very hearts.

When reflecting on what they are for you, you will find that these are not transient or dependent on a particular situation. Rather they are more of a determining factor in what you do and how you do it on an ongoing basis. Do look at what seems to travel with you on your life’s journey, perhaps reappearing in different dresses, but always echoing those same values. They may find different forms of expression, but they do not really alter much when circumstances change.

Certainly, there are transformations that sometimes bring forth an actual change in these values, but more often they just deepen and get expanded or clarified. This process of consciously connecting with your core values is something that it is good to keep as a recurring activity in your inner life.

When you want to begin a new relationship or revivify a long term one, this is the first place to go. Look at and reflect upon each other’s core values. In order to express total acceptance and to live and love in true support of your partner, you must have matching core values. If you hold one value and your partner doesn’t, is it a deal-breaker or just a difference that adds variety to your life?

To answer that, you need to know your own values and what your partner’s are, too. You can’t judge the latter by what they say, only by how they behave, and that takes observation over a period of time. Does the other person actually live by the values being espoused? Take the time to find that out.

When you are able to match and harmonize these principles of living together, you will be able to find mutual solutions that work for both of you, and you will be well on your path to finding a transcendent experience of shared peace and conflict-free relating.

Here’s the list of core values we offered:

Caring
Commitment
Communicative
Compassion
Courage
Creativity
Education
Environmentalism
Fairness
Financially responsible
Fitness
Generosity
Honesty
Humor
Intelligence
Kindness
Loyalty
Open-mindedness
Optimism
Passion
Patriotism
Peaceful
Perseverance
Political position
Reliability
Respect
Service to others
Spirit of adventure
Spiritual/Religious practice
Trustworthiness

Photo from Suzanne Dechert’s postcard collection

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4 Comments on “Why Are Core Values so Important to Your Relationship?

  1. Hi Phil and Maude, I hope you two are enjoying this fabulous weather (raiiin) as much as we are! My sense of things is that matching or similar core values are an absolute sine qua non for any long-term collaboration. When I got to that point —which you both know about — when I Had to move into my next/last phase, which I knew perfectly well could destroy the life I’ve enjoyed for So long…Klaus literally stuns me on a regular basis with his ability to move through change, to evolve with me as he simultaneously pursues his Own “soul desires” life (for lack of a more grounded-sounding term). It’s just crazy how we move apart fully together… I’m far more distrustful and suspicious than he regarding positive outcomes, hahaha, so it seems that in certain ways, exactly opposite core values are equally important — or simply the same dynamic seen from the opposite direction (?). Anddd…one more idea: is it possibly the case that having the ground of shared core values is a catalyst to what we call “grace”? Sure feels like it.

    I hope to hear that you are both well and healthy!

    lp

    • Hi Lynelle,
      Yes, we are both doing well – a few of life’s happenings busying us, and yet we are so blessed in the overall situation and in the specific as well.
      thank you for sharing and for your caring!
      with best regards always
      Maude

    • Hi Marjorie
      thank you for your response. Was there anything in particular that spoke to you in this blog?
      with best regards
      Maude

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