Relationships Are Hard Because We Are People

When we recite our relationship vows, perhaps we should say, “I take you as my pain in the rear, with all your history and baggage, and I take responsibility for all prior injustices you endured at the hands of those I never knew, because you now are in my care.
— Stan Tatkin, Wired for Love: How Understanding Your Partner's Brain and Attachment Style Can Help You Defuse Conflict and Build a Secure Relationship

Good Relationships Are Good For Us

Relationships are a key predictor health, quality of life, and longevity. Good relationships are good for us. They keep us happy and healthy. Where there’s people, there’s conflict. Humans can be kind, nurturing, and fun… but we can all be a pain to deal with sometimes.

If Relationships Are Good for Us, Why Are Relationships So Hard?

Dating comes with a cascade of neurotransmitters that makes us want more of each other. We want to see, smell, touch, and share everything with the other person. When we start getting serious, ‘official’, this might change.

Our brains want to be efficient and soon ‘automate’ the other person. That means, I create a representation of you in my mind. I will assume that I know you, you know me, and we understand each other well.

Eventually, this means we do not have to pay as much attention. Our energy resources are free to attend to other things. This is our first mistake, we start being driven by memory and loose the practice of paying full attention to the other.

Creating a Secure Functioning Relationship

Let’s get these three key aspects right from the beginning…

  1. You’ve picked each other.

  2. You’re interdependent and in each other’s care.

  3. You’re both equally responsible for your relationship.

Characteristics of a secure functioning relationship:

  • Two person psychological system.

  • Based on true mutuality, fairness, justice, and sensitivity.

  • Everything we do is good for me and good for you.

  • We protect each other in public and in private.

  • We know each other in such a way we’re experts on each other.

Feeling supported and secure builds trust, increasing the probability of positive motivation and behavior.

Secure functioning doesn’t refer to an attachment style. These are behaviors or principles based on true mutuality, fairness, justice, and sensitivity. This is something everyone can do.

Watch: A Couples’ Purpose with Dr. Stan Tatkin

To create secure functioning, you must create agreements and shared principles, vision, and purpose. You might ask yourselves:

  • Why are we together?

  • What are we creating together?

  • What things do we share?

  • How can we collaborate, even when we don’t feel like doing so?

  • What is our relationship’s ethics?

  • What things do we each need the other to agree to be reminded of to stop or do more of?

  • How do we respond to one another?

  • How do we talk to one another?

  • How do we fight or manage conflict?

  • How do we repair after a fight?

  • Do I have my partner’s best interest in mind?

  • Do I believe my partner has my best interest in mind?

  • How would it look like if we were to make this relationship a priority?

  • What are things we want to happen in our relationship? What are things we do not want?

  • How do we say goodbye? How do we reunite?

  • How and when do we spend time together?

What happens next?

1. Start thinking about your couple bubble.

The Couple Bubble is a boundary that signifies the primacy of the relationship. It is the environment we create together to ensure we both have a felt sense of security and safety.

We’re a survival unit. We survive and thrive together. We also recognize we are both difficult and there will be both inside and outside stressors. Partners need to create a structure, decide what you will and will not do. Make plans for the difficult times.

We maintain collaboration, even during stressful times. When we hurt one another, we apologize, make amends, and repair. For this to work, we need to build a container or structure before hand.

We must learn how to return our autonomic nervous system back to baseline and re-engage with the situation following our pre-established principles. This means both you and I agree to follow our behavior-based principles, not based on how we feel at a certain moment. We maintain the safety and security.

2. Get real about the difficult parts of yourselves.

As we all know, we are all difficult. How honest can you get with your self and your partner about your own contributions to your dynamics? Can you point out areas or quirks that make you difficult to deal with? Are those things you could use some support with?

Recognize that there are many difficulties that comes from our own genetic hardwiring. This is the ancient wisdom that has helped us survive for millennia but sometimes survival comes at a cost. It is better to confuse a stick for a snake; to shoot first and ask questions later.

Our system has automatic safety and threat detection systems that quickly react to its assessment. The problem is, they are so fast acting, they go by memory. We end up confusing our partner for a lion…

Being more aware of how our memories, in this relationship and in our pasts relationships, shape the ways we perceive the present moment. As Dr. Stan Tatkin says, our perception can be like funhouse mirrors. We will return to this later.

3. Learn how to create win-win situations

There is no perfect person. There is no perfect relationship. What makes a relationship work is that we are willing to go all in. We make agreements to maintain that sense of presence and safety, even when our present feelings do not align with them in the moment.

If I need some space, we both agree to allow that but we also agree to come back to it. Everything I do benefits the both of us. Everything you do benefits the both of us. We are in the same boat and have the same things to win and the same things to loose.

We are both fully invested in this partnership. A win is only a win because it is good for both of us. We operate based on secure-functioning principles.

4. Practice Taking Time In

  1. Practice taking time to reflect on your experiences. Take regular breaks throughout your day to breath deeply and check-in with yourself. See if you need something… A snack, stretch, bathroom break. If this is new to you, I suggest setting an alarm (and listening to it!) to remind you to take one or two minutes just to reconnect with your breath.

  2. Try to breath in and out slowly, through your nose. With each inhalation, feel your belly expand and come back to center. Maybe experiment with taking deeper breaths and make your exhalation longer than your inhalation.

  3. Take note of your body’s energy and the areas of tension (if any) in your body. If any sensation, thought, memory, or emotions come up, you may choose to explore them or to let them go. I like to think about them as a train: you may choose to hop in and let it take you somewhere else or you can notice it pass by but stay where you are.

5. Create Intentional Time Together

  1. Find a comfortable sitting position. Facing each other. You may choose to hold hands with your partner or place your hands on your knees.

  2. Take a look at your partner. Scan them from head to toe, from toe to head. Think of this as if you’re trying to paint a picture of them in your mind…

  3. Notice whatever comes up. Any thoughts, feelings, sensations, or memories that come up…

  4. You may choose to look into your partners eyes, find something else on their face, or find another place in their body where you can set your vision and relax the muscles around your eyes. You may also close your eyes if that’s comfortable for you.

  5. Come back to your breath. Make each breath deep but gentle. Track its sensation as air travels along your body.

  6. Do a body scan. Starting from the bottom up, pay attention to each part of your body.

  7. Agree on whether or not you’d like to explore touch during this exercise or if you’d like to pause here.

6. Touch Exploration

  1. After being in a comfortable position and going through a few deep breaths, choose who will be first to give touch. Readjust your position as needed.

  2. Try your best to stay present. The mind likes to wander, that’s what it does best! If you feel your mind wandering, keep brining it back to the ‘here and now’.

  3. Focus on the pressure, temperature, or sensations brough by the partner’s touch. You may agree on what parts are being touch, the person giving the touch may start touching (between those boundaries) following their own curiosity, or you may follow my suggestion: Gentle move your hand from the back of the ears, down through the neck, out through the collarbones, down the shoulder all the way to the hand. When you feel complete, exchange roles.

  4. Return back to a comfortable sited position or lay on your backs. You may choose to stay close together or give each other space. Just take some time to integrate the experience, letting it be as it is (try not to have a conversation with yourself or each other), and return back to taking deep breaths. Scan again your own body, from toes to head. Maybe allowing each exhale to bring some release to any muscle tension.

  5. Whenever you’re ready, turn towards one another, find something to appreciate about your partner, and thank each other for sharing this moment.

A Purpose Driven Love with Dr. Stan Tatkin

I am a PhD in Clinical Sexology and have a Master of Science in Educational Psychology. I work with individuals, couples, non-monogamous relationships, and groups in topics related to sexuality, emotional regulation, communication dynamics, and behavioral change.

Thaina Cordero

Hi, I’m Thaina, PhD in Clinical Sexology. I’m a Somatic Sex Counselor. My practice focuses on stress and emotional regulation, sexuality and relationships. I work with individuals, couples, and non-monogamous relationships.

Find ease and pleasure in your body and relationships. Schedule a session today.

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