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Build More Relationship Trust

Build More Relationship Trust


“In the long run, we shape our lives and shape ourselves. The process never ends until we die, and the choices that we make are ultimately our responsibility.” – Eleanor Roosevelt





We’ve been especially interested in how much the idea of “trust” plays into who gets elected and what this has to teach us about our own relationships.

Regardless of your politics, the person who wins any election is the one who voters think is most aligned with their “rules” for living.

A vote for a candidate, says “I trust you.” This is no different than your desire for trust in your relationships.

As we are choosing whether to be in a relationship with someone or not we are looking for how we are aligned with him or her. Whether we realize it or not we are looking for someone with similar rules for living. We are looking for someone in alignment with whatever rules we’ve made up about what a relationship looks like to us.

When we commit to being in a relationship, for most people, it’s a “vote” that says “I trust you.”

What usually happens when you make that commitment is that the relationship goes along just fine until (and we use the word until on purpose) one or both of you does something to break the trust – in small or not so small ways.

One or both of you might have made a half-hearted trust vote because of past painful experiences which make trusting in this relationship pretty difficult.

You may have withheld trust because your rules say that you’ll be hurt if you do. Now of course, most of us withhold our trust and ourselves from others from time to time and in some cases, maybe for good reason.

But if you want a close, connected, loving relationship with better communication and passion, you’ll want to look at where you might be withholding your true self. You might want to look at the rules that are holding you back from trusting and whether you want to change those rules. The good part of this is that we all can change the rules we’ve made up that are no longer working for us.

If we do, we can create more of what we want – simple?

Our rules can be flexible if we allow them to be, and we can be open to allowing them to morph and flow with another person’s rules. This way we can deepen our trust in one another.

Here’s a really simple example:

This past weekend we were at a seminar that was held in a city that was 7 hours from our home, so we decided to drive.

When we’ve done this in the past, we’ve left the seminar a little early on the last day so we could drive the 7 hours home that evening.

Typically, we’d get home about 2 am and would actually not accomplish a lot the next day because we were too tired from the trip.

Now, although we would both agree to this rule, (leaving the seminar early and driving home immediately) it was mainly Susie’s desire to get home so we could be productive the next day.

After doing this several times and NOT being productive the next day, it dawned on Susie that maybe her rule might not be the only way to look at this situation.

This time we decided to stay over night and leave the next day after the seminar ended. We had a great trip and actually got a lot of planning work done in the car.

By being flexible, looking at the situation a little differently and changing some rules, we had an experience that seemed to flow.

It deepened our trust for one another as we realized that we were both open and willing to look at a situation differently to get a better result.

Here are some ideas on how to change some of the rules that may be keeping you from loving deeper and trusting the people in your life more:

  1. Look at what seems difficult to lacks ease in your life. What are the rules underneath your dis-ease?

Maybe you are expecting someone to act in a certain way and he or she isn’t playing along with your rule.

  1. Talk with your partner about your rules and be open to hearing your partner’s rules without judging them. Realize that you each have choices and these rules aren’t created in stone.
  2. Decide if you are willing to change or be a little more flexible with those rules. If your rule is one that is in total alignment with your values and what you stand for, you may not want to change it.
  3. Look for evidence of more trust and ease between the two of you.

One woman was very upset that her husband hadn’t been wearing his wedding ring and made up a lot of negative stories about why he had stopped. Her rule said that if her husband wore his wedding ring, it was an outward sign of his love and commitment.

Instead of focusing on his not wearing his wedding ring, she began focusing on the experience that she wanted with him. As she shifted her rule and her focus, more trust and love actually showed up in the relationship for both of them.

  1. Look for opportunities to create ease in your relationship while still being true to who you are.
  2. Look for opportunities to shift your focus to what you want.

© Susie & Otto Collins. All Rights Reserved.


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