Why is Balance Important for Peaceful Relationships?
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PHIL: Is your relationship a town with safe streets, no-go areas and places you might stumble and get hurt? We don’t live there. We simply don’t clash on things.
It is totally improbable that we make the same choices time and time again. Some areas obviously match – our politics, our Netflix choices, our commitment to this blog – but there are places where we are different that never cause problems. (Some areas are still unclear, like end-of-life issues around health and money, but we have no doubt that we will be able to reach agreement.) So what are we doing to create such harmony?
There’s no insistence that we do the same thing. I need a walk and Maude wants to read? No problem. In our opinion, spending time apart is very healthy for our relationship.
Sometimes it’s something that affects both of us. Should the kitchen be renovated? How much? What style? There must be 20 consequential decisions for a project like that. Here is where our process of exploring what we want and why we want it works well, going deeper and deeper until we find a point of agreement.
It’s the decisions between these two levels of seriousness that appear to be magical to us. There is no sense of compromise, though maybe that’s achieved by non-attachment. There is no ledger – it’s your turn to wash up; I took the trash out, so you should make the bed. An equilibrium like that does occur, but it is based on doing out of love, not being owed out of obligation.
The upshot of all this is that our relationship is a place of peace and calm. That may sound like improbable good luck, but it’s not. It is because each of us brings to the relationship a sense of balance, and I think this can be learned. Remember learning to ride a bicycle? You fell off and you fell off and you fell of until one day you made it five yards down the driveway, and the following day to the end of the street, and after that, you never fell off again. Balance in a relationship is a sense of fairness and empathy that, once learned, becomes second nature.
Balance in a relationship comes from a sense of fairness and empathy #quote #relationships #peace Share on XMAUDE: We often talk about successful relationships in terms of the peace they bring. We have been discussing this extraordinary experience of peace within our relationship and wondering what goes into making it so. We are not the same and act very differently in many areas. Yet, in terms of our choices, decisions and solutions, both on a superficial as well as a more meaningful level, they match so frequently as to cause us to ask, what are we doing, what is going on?
In examining this mutual resonance, I realized that there is a deep similarity in what we are both attracted to, what we value. We both naturally seek balance. This is not done consciously, but rather in response to an inner pull. This is not keeping score or counting up who does what and trying to keep it all even.
Rather, there is a sense of balance in how we each act and feel and relate. There is an equilibrium from which our choices emerge, and so, the unlikely becomes reality, and we frequently find ourselves easily on the same page.
We do, of course, have areas where we start out at two different places. When this occurs, we can apply Our Process to find solutions, points of agreement and mutual satisfaction. More often than not though, the attraction toward balance pulls us toward peace in our exchanges without the need to search for agreement. We find ourselves choosing very similar solutions often because they are the ones that come from this place within each of us.
There is a sense of fairness, of justice, of equality, of rightness in balance. It is a place of respect, of gentleness, of kindness.
Is this of any use to you? Can you apply this to create an experience of peace for yourselves in your relationships? Can you cultivate this within yourself? I hope so. I wish it for all of us.
Photo credit: Phil Mayes; dolls by Nicole Turofsky
Cutest photo ever!
These wonderful dolls were made by one of my former clients, Nicole Turofsky.
Sent via PhilandMaude email:
Thank you for your blogs. I met you some years ago in Santa Barbara at a writer’s workshop….meeting of INDY Authors. You were both so gracious that I signed up for your blog. My dear husband John Young was advertising his first autobiographical novel. WHO WAS THAT MASKED KID? by a pseudonym Dan Neiser. Since then he has gone on to publish two more books in the series; Return of the Masked Kid, and The Masked Kid Goes West, published by XLibris. He is editing his 4th book in the series for publication. I am so proud of him! Enduring two heart surgeries and other physical handicaps, he’s still my hero!
On September 5th, by God’s grace we will celebrate our 50th anniversary! I just want to tell you that your relationship advice is right on from our experience. Respect, gentleness, kindness and lots of listening without judgment are truly key in a healthy relationship, plus leaning hard on our Lord Jesus Christ, Who has never failed us.
Thank you again for you blogs and photos!
May God bless you,
Fay Young