Your ability to relate measures your capacity to establish connection
and rapport with the people in your life. My work as a professional
coach has helped me identify specific strategies that can help you
develop high quality relationships. These strategies make up the Seven Principles of Relating.
Be Willing to Risk
Nothing great is ever accomplished without some element of risk. If you
want the experience of being fully loved, you must be willing to
experience full vulnerability. When you take this approach in
relationships, allowing yourself to be open and expressing your true
feelings, you create a space for your connection to deepen.
Think about the key relationships in your life. Get clear about what
you want, communicate what that is, and invest in developing the
relationship rather than in protecting yourself.
Be Available
True
intimacy develops over time. Relationships grow as individuals learn
about one another, share secrets and dreams, and develop comfortable
patterns of interaction. This evolution requires your active
participation.
To develop a bond, you must
consistently spend time with the person you're committing to, whether
in friendship or love, and you must be mentally and emotionally present
when you're together. Once you've decided youÌre committed to a
relationship, make it a priority, and demonstrate how much the person
matters to you by showing up fully and consistently.
Be Interested, Not Just Interesting
Our
society is filled with people posturing for approval, working to prove
their worth, and vying for acceptance. At times, even the most
outwardly successful and confident among us spend more time talking
about how interesting they are than finding out about the person
theyÌre talking with. This habit is nothing but a call for acceptance,
approval, and belonging.
As you grow personally,
you will become more confident in your own value, and will feel less of
a need to prove your importance. As this shift takes place, begin to
focus on how interesting others are. Make the effort to learn about the
people in your life. You will become interesting as a result of being
interested in who others are.
Be Who You Are
Don't
ever pretend to be someone you aren't. Relationships require a great
investment of time, intellect, and emotional currency. If you're
developing a relationship based on a false self, you're doing yourself
and the other person a grave disservice.
Have
confidence in the magnificence of who you are, and believe in the fact
that the people you want to connect with will be attracted to the real
you. Be honest about what you think, believe, and feel. The people in
your life who deserve your commitment will love, support, and embrace
all you. Those who won't can move on - to make room in your life for
those who will.
Don't Make Assumptions
When
you assume, you make something true without any proof to support your
expectation. In relationship, our assumptions are usually based on our
fears. We assume the worst because we fear the worst. This puts us into
survival mode, which causes us to react. This cycle is at the root of
many a disagreement.
When in doubt, ask.
Relationship is based on communication. Your ability to clearly share,
request, and exchange information will be one of the most pivotal and
profound skills you'll bring to your connection.
It's okay to have doubts. It's normal to experience varying levels of
fear as you move into deeper levels of intimacy with another human
being. Honestly share that process with the person you're bonding with,
and you will watch your relationship flourish. Making assumptions
contaminates relationships. Don't do it.
Accept Without Condition
There
is no such thing as a perfect human being. Every one of us has bad
habits, flawed character traits, and wounds we need to heal. Don't
enter into relationships with people who have flaws you cannot embrace.
When you do enter a relationship, accept the other person completely.
When you fully accept others, you validate the fullness of who they
are. This is incredibly empowering. When you let others know that you
like, accept, and embrace them exactly as they are, you give them a
true gift. This type of intimacy withstands not just the tremors of
life but the earthquakes of life. Accept without condition, and you
will experience real love.
Give What You Want to Receive
The
law of reciprocity states that we will get what we put out into the
world. People respond to our expectations of them. If you're constantly
focused on what you're not getting in a relationship, it's likely
you're going to get even less of that. Instead, begin to focus on what
you want, and make the first move to add that quality or emotion to the
relationship.
If you feel a shortage of
kindness, be kind. If you want to be understood, seek to understand. If
you want to feel appreciated, find something to express appreciation
for. If you want to be thanked, find something to thank your friend or
partner for. Be willing to give what you want to receive. You'll still
get what you wanted, and you'll get it a thousand times over.
Interested in reading more, or in finding out about our programs and
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This material is excerpted from "Life Fitness", written by Kimberly Fulcher. Copyright 2004. All rights reserved. Reprints require permission. Edits not authorized.
About the author: Kimberly Fulcher is a professional
coach, author and speaker, with twelve years of experience in human
development. Her professional experience includes the co-founding and
$ 38 million dollar sale of SkillsVillage.com, and her leadership of a
leading Silicon Valley consulting firm, where she grew revenues from
$3M to $25M in four short years. Kimberly sits on the board of
directors for The Silicon Valley Coach Federation, and actively
supports non-profit organizations that benefit underprivileged women
and primary education initiatives. Kimberly offers group and
individual coaching programs, speaks throughout The United States, and
will publish her first book in 2004. Kimberly can be reached via her
website at www.compasslifedesigns.com or by email at
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