Ghandi
One of the biggest obstacles to transforming relationships is an individual’s endless investment in changing the other person. Regardless of whether the individual is male or female, most people are ultra-focused on changing their partner. Many people will say that they do what they do because their partner does what s/he does. Do any of these sound familiar:
• “If he would be more responsible, I wouldn’t be so controlling.”
• “If she weren’t such a nag, I’d be home more.”
• “If he weren’t so cold and absent, I wouldn’t have to plead with him to speak to me.”
• “If she weren’t so critical, then I would help more around the house.”
• “If she weren’t so unaffectionate, then I wouldn’t have had an affair.”
I hear these comments and more like them almost every day. Believing, however, that you’re the way you are because of someone else, is not serving you. When you excuse your behavior because of the behavior of your partner, you give your partner WAY too much power. Since when are you not capable of controlling your own actions?
If you truly want to transform your relationships, then start by transforming yourself. Begin by looking at yourself rather than your partner. Pay attention to your relational mistakes and change them. If you’re too controlling—back off. If you’re too weak—get stronger. If you’re too strong—soften. If you’re defensive and dismissive—listen with humility.
Stop putting the onus of control for your behavior on your partner. Your behavior is 100% your responsibility. Always. No one makes you be critical, passive-aggressive, controlling or intimidating. You do that ALL by yourself. Stop defending your position and start changing your actions.
Know that we all have our fault lines or, as I like to say, our edges. Our edges are those behaviors that aren’t serving us. They’re typically the behaviors that those closest to us complain about. When we can own these edges with humility and have compassion and love for ourselves despite them, it is an incredibly freeing life shift. Stop dismissing, justifying, rationalizing or blaming your edges on others and instead address them head on. Change your side of the equation and it will force a change in the entire system: Changing Me, Changes We.
Stop blocking your ability to transform your relationships and get started on changing yourself.
CHALLENGE: What edge have you refused to look at? What complaints about your behavior have you heard consistently over the years? Dare to look at this behavior, own it with humility and love and get to work on changing it. We all have our edges, which doesn’t make us bad, it just makes us human. Work it and stop defending it.