5 Steps To Finally Break The Cycle For Good

Healthy Relationship – How to Know If You’re Having one!

Robyn Firtel

Healthy Relationship

Have you ever wondered what it means to have a healthy relationship? Being in a healthy relationship means you have good and stable adult relationships that work.


But what does a healthy relationship actually look like?


Before we can see what a healthy relationship looks like, it’s important to see what unhealthy, or bad relationship looks like.

In an unhealthy relationship, you often think you already know the other person really fast.

For example, I’ve had clients who have gone on two, three, four dates and they can say characteristics about the person they’re dating just based on what he or she is saying. Or based on what they’re assuming… without really, really getting to know that person—not only by what they’re saying but also by how their actions back up what they’re saying. You cannot know somebody and be in a mature relationship until after you’ve gone out more than a few times.


This also happens when you’re talking about relationships that are not romantic relationships. For example, I’ve had clients that barely knew anything about a job. They went in for an interview and they were so desperate to get the job that all they did was try to impress the person. However, they weren’t really gathering enough information about the company to make an informed choice regarding whether or not they would be a fit for the company. This is another example of going way too fast.


Approval

A second characteristic of an unhealthy relationship is when you are constantly trying to get approval from the other person without realizing that you already have inherent self-worth and that you are equal to another person. When this happens, you could say the person has a love addiction—a profound need to receive love, acceptance and approval from others.


A good example of this would be whether you’re in a marriage, a long-term partnership, or even dating somebody. If you feel like the other person has certain characteristics, strengths, that are better than weaknesses, so you feel like you are less than them. When that happens, you’re going to constantly be seeking approval from the other person. Which in the end puts a lot of pressure on the other person.


Whether it’s a date, or your husband or wife, or a long-term partner, boyfriend-girlfriend… even if it’s with your children or somebody at work, if you’re feeling less than them, you’re putting a tremendous amount of pressure on yourself to prove who you are to them. Not only that, but you’re also putting pressure on the other person to give you the approval that you need.


Now that we’ve talked about what an unhealthy relationship looks like, let’s talk about what a healthy adult relationship looks like.

A healthy relationship is based on maturity. When you’re in a healthy relationship, both people are able to take care of themselves in the relationship. So they’re both coming from an equal level of self-worth. They’re able to listen and talk. They’re able to not go into assumptions of what the other person is feeling or thinking. Also they’re able to be interdependent, which means that if somebody needs a hug in that relationship, if somebody needs some time alone, they’re able to ask for that, but they’re also able to be somewhat dependent, and ask for help when they need it. So a healthy relationship is the in-between of being too dependent and being anti-dependent.


Another characteristic of a healthy adult relationship is that both people are able to be themselves. They’re able to co-exist together and be some kind of a partnership or team. And they’re able to fulfill their life’s purpose within that partnership.


Adult Relationship

In a healthy adult relationship, people are not having that relationship based on their inner child. This means that there’s no immaturity in the relationship. The wounded child who feels unloved isn’t there. The teenage age regression isn’t there, where you find two emotionally immature people who are not able to take responsibility for their part and assign blame to the other person. Adults in healthy relationships, when they do make mistakes—because we all do—are able to apologize and take responsibility for their behavior.


It’s easier to have a healthy relationship when both people share similar values. For example, if one person wants a child and the other doesn’t. Or, one person is a big spender but the other one is a saver. Or, one person values family and the other one doesn’t. Maybe you have one person who wants to live in the mountains. And the other person wants to live by the beach. So you have different value systems and when that happens, even if you have two emotionally healthy, mature people, that relationship is doomed if you have different core values.


Get to know someone

So it’s incredibly important that you really take the time to get to know someone to see if you have similar values. Rather than just looking at the relationship superficially and thinking, “Okay, they’re good looking and fun, so I think it’s going to work.”


This applies to any relationship: whether it’s business, a friendship, whether it is a romantic relationship… When two people have to have similar values, if they’re able to compromise, that’s great. You’ll most likely be able to have a healthy relationship. But if there’s no compromise, it doesn’t make sense to stay in that relationship or to proceed with it.


In summary, healthy adult relationships are based on two people who are emotionally mature and have a strong sense of their own self-worth. Who take full responsibility for their part without assigning the blame. Healthy relationships involve two people who are able to talk to one another, maturely, and clearly state who they are. They’re also able to listen to what the other person is saying. And even if their perception is different, they’re able to coexist. When two perceptions are able to coexist, that relationship is a healthy relationship.

By Robyn Firtel June 8, 2022
The Love Addict enters into the relationship feeling an unbearable sense of inadequacy. Her relationship with the Love Avoidant is as doomed as it is inevitable. Having been neglected and abandoned by her own parents, she has learned that all attempts at intimacy will be painfully unsuccessful. When she seeks a love mate she will, therefore, find someone familiarly not intimate, but someone who will be good at mimicking intimacy. She deludes herself into believing that the mimicry is the real thing by creating her lover in accordance to a fantasy of her own making. The Love Avoidant becomes her knight in shining armor- “armor” being the operative psychological irony- shiny, but impervious to intimate contact. The Love Avoidant, on the other hand, enters the relationship not because he is seeking confirmation of his own worth but out of a sense of duty. In his childhood, his parents taught him that it is his job to care for people who cannot care for themselves. As an adult, the Love Avoidant, while feeling superior or pity for the neediness of his Love Addicted partner, thrives on the power it gives him over her. Eventually, he grows resentful of all the work it takes to be a caretaker. He begins to feel suffocated and lifeless. The suffocating Love Avoidant begins to distance himself from the Love Addict, who after several bouts of hysterically trying to get him back, eventually becomes exhausted with the pursuit of the Love Avoidant and turns to someone else with whom to be helplessly Love Addicted or to some other addiction to cover her pain of inadequacy. The substitute addiction could be food, alcohol, sex, work, spending or exercise- any addictive activity. At this point in the Co-Addicted Tango, the Love Avoidant, who is no longer the object of the Love Addict’s desire, feels the pain of no longer being needed. Without someone whose weakness cries out for his strength, his sense of superiority wavers. What value does he have if he cannot care for the needy? This triggers deep, underlying abandonment fears- sardonically the same kind of abandonment fears that lie at the heart of the Love Addict’s emotional dysfunction. Love Addicts, never having been unconditionally loved by their neglectful and/or abandoning parents, look for a knight in shining armor to provide them with the self-esteem with which they never had mirrored for them by their own parents. Love Avoidants, on the other hand, almost never got a chance to feel their inherent worth, because in childhood they were empowered to care for their own parents. While not having received love from the parents, their caretaking gives them a sense of grandiosity, while masking the haunting truth that they have never been intimately loved. This false empowerment very effectively hides the crucial truth that they, like the Love Addict, were starved of intimacy. The contempt they feel for the neediness of the Love Addict, is the masked contempt they feel for themselves at not having been worthy of their parents’ love. Contempt is shame turned outward on anyone whose weaknesses reminds us of the intolerable shame of our inadequacy. Deprived of the caretaking role by the withdrawal of the Love Addict, the Love Avoidant finally feels the jolt of the carried shame of abandonment; and the Love Avoidant, who once feared being smothered by the Love Addict, now turns around to get close to the Love Addict again, using all of his powers of seduction to get back into control of the relationship. One is running and the other is chasing all the time. When the one who is chasing finally gets close to the one running away, they both erupt into intensity, either a romantic interlude or a terrific fight. As the lyrics to the classic song say, “You Always Hurt the One You Love.” This behavior is what most people call “normal”; and if it isn’t “normal,” it certainly is “familiar”. This cycle will repeat itself over and over again. Robyn treats both love addiction and love avoidance.
By Robyn Firtel December 3, 2021
Trauma Bonds Traumatic bonding and trauma bonds occurs as the result of ongoing cycles of abuse in which the intermittent reinforcement of reward and punishment creates powerful emotional bonds that are resistant to change. Trauma bonding is essentially a loyalty between two or more people which is often formed due to a specific set of, often negative circumstance, which binds them together due to a shared experience. While the idea of bonding tends to bring up ideas of something good and beneficial, trauma bonds are often unhealthy. Signs that you may be experiencing a trauma bond in a relationship: There is a continuous pattern of things in a relationship not working, yet you continue to believe promises to the contrary. Both or one person wants to leave the relationship but every time they try, there is a feeling or sense of extreme anxiety and unimaginable fear. You have a belief that somehow you can change the other person or make them different. You keep having the same fight over and over with no solution. You are either overreacting or under reacting and extremely triggered by this person. The situation necessary to create a trauma bond involves inconsistencies, false promises, high intensity, and are very complex. Betrayal bonds or trauma bonds: Betrayal bonds or trauma bonds are deeply rooted in a person’s childhood trauma. Bowlby’s Evolutionary Theory of Attachment suggest that children come into the world biologically pre-programmed to form attachments with others because this will help them survive. On of the main points of his theory was that a child has an innate need to attach to at least one caregiver. This child should receive the continuous care of the single most important attachment figure for approximately the first two years of life. The long-term consequences of parental deprivation might include the following: delinquency reduced intelligence increased aggression depression avoidant attachment Bowlby and his partner believed and proved that long term even, and sometimes short-term separation from an attached figure leads to distress. After much research they looked at four different types of attachments with the baby’s mother. Four styles of attachment: These styles produced four styles of attachment which have been identified in adults. One was a secure attachment, another was the mother was there but preoccupied. Another style was avoidant, and lastly was a mother who was anxious and avoidant. These roughly correspond to infant classifications, secure, insecure ambivalent, insecure avoidant, and disorganized avoidant. The babies who had strong attachments with their mother’s overtime had healthy bonds with partners. The anxious ambivalent mothers had babies who turned into adults that had more dependent or needy relationships like Love Addiction. The avoidant attachment mothers had babies who typically developed love avoidant issues in their adult relationships. When the love addict adult and the love avoidant adult get together they don’t have secure attachment from early on so together they form a trauma bond. Very complex issues: Betrayal bonds, and trauma bonds are very complex issues because they root deeply in childhood attachment. There are specific therapies such as Post Induction Therapy, Eye Movement Rapid Desensitization, Bio Feedback, and Somatic Experiencing. The most effective is Post Induction Therapy which can reprogram the unconscious brain in both individuals, helping them to start form healthy attachments. Even with therapists who master the skills associated with Post Induction Therapy, it is still a very complicated treatment that takes a great degree of ongoing experience and expertise. This work is essential before moving on to any other relationship or the same cycle can continue. Difficult to treat and difficult to identify: Again, trauma bonding can be difficult to treat in traditional therapy because it is often difficult to identify, and the roots of the trauma can go very deep. I found the client becomes obsessive with the relationship. Often, a bond can form with another person that is outside of the relationship. This bond form tends to be more about survival and often contains a betrayal component that a person has difficulty controlling. The focus is all about the other person. This can often lead to affairs and infidelity. The most difficult part about trauma bonding is that to some people it feels like love. Because in childhood there was no nurturing, love, and affirmation to form healthy bonds, this often seeps into adulthood. Shared trauma: Formed between two people who have experienced a traumatic experience a trauma bond can be present within a relationship. An example would be two siblings that have been brought up in an alcoholic family. One may feel obligated to take care of the other like a parent would take care of a child. They will feel too much responsibility not only for their sibling, but they project that onto other people. Extreme examples of trauma bonding would be in fraternity hazing, military training, kidnapping, child physical abuse, child sexual abuse, domestic violence, political torture, cults, prisoners of war, criminal hostage situations, terrorism, and concentration camps. More commonly they exist in every day relationships. Even though the trauma bond may have formed from far less dramatic events, the effect it can have on a relationship can be just as severe.  Recognizing that you are in a trauma bond is the first step.
By Robyn Firtel November 10, 2021
Healthy relationships and boundaries. Nowadays there is frequent talk about boundaries in our culture and oftentimes people misunderstand the word, thinking a boundary is something you’re going to do or say and that you’re going to draw a line in the sand. But today I want to talk to you about something that is more common with boundaries that people or you might not know about...
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