Are You Settling?

Involved in an unfulfilling, fair-weather relationship or dating situation, but are afraid to face the unknown to set foot into potentially greener pastures? Find out what you may be missing.

Are You Settling?
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If you find yourself focusing on what’s missing in your relationship, struggle constantly with wishing your partner were different, and feel pressured to change who you are because it makes things run more smoothly, you could be settling for a partner who is, simply put, not a great match for you. In healthy, happy and lasting relationships there are seven significant similarities that both partners share, and without aligning relatively well in these areas, most relationships are headed for undue hardship and unhappiness.

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The key to dating well is to know yourself and your partner deeply enough to be able to accurately observe the ways that you interact from the beginning stages of the relationship’s development. The feeling of new love is like nothing else, but if you are completely swept away in emotion to the point that you are ignoring obvious incompatibilities, you might find that months and maybe even years down the road that you feel "cheated" in your relationship. By ignoring the following seven similarities you could be missing out on a much more satisfying and happy relationship.

1. Spiritual Harmony
Although not always referring to religious affiliation, spiritual harmony refers to a shared perception of God or a higher power as well as how much weight spiritual belief weighs in on your life. It is about the relationship of spirituality in your life. If you are religious or very spiritual and your partner has a very low level, there may be problems, especially if marriage and children follow.

2. Desire for Verbal Intimacy and Ability to be Intimate
Intimacy is what romantic relationships are all about—emotional intimacy, mental intimacy, physical intimacy, and for many spiritual intimacy. A committed, monogamous relationship is a special union in which you can share the most intimate sides of yourself and so can your partner with you. As part of sharing this intimacy, there are three key factors: the ability to connect with another through caring, interest and compassion, the ability to express, and the ability to listen well. Beyond those skills, both partners must have mutual desire to get to know the other on all of these levels. Love is a total package, and one that must be wanted equally by both parties.

3. Energy Level
The energy level of a person may sound like something simple, but it can affect many things about a person, including other key similarities partners should share such as ambition level, interests and personal habits. If the disposition of your partner is more low-key and your disposition is all about high energy wave-making, you can be sure that there will be future problems to contend with—you’ll want to go, go, go, and your partner will feel pressured and may even pressure you to slow down, down, down.

4. Ambition Level
Differences in ambition levels can wreak havoc in relationships because work and achievement is such a large part of our culture, and work in most cases is necessary for survival. Those who are highly goal-driven will have a hard time understanding why their partner seems to be "aimless" or is not interested in accomplishing anything, when to their partner, they may seem like they never take time to stop and simply enjoy life for what it is. And yet, life for what it is to the ambitious is work and achievement. Therefore, ambition level is best when relatively similar.

5. Role Expectations
Not just about traditional roles of who stays home and who works, role expectations can involve everything from who does particular household tasks such as shopping and taking out the trash to who pays on a date to how a person should dress. Role expectations should be similar and compatible. It is not so important what the roles chosen are, but that both partners enjoy and are happy with mutual expectations that partners have for each other.

6. Interests
Relationships are built on love, attraction, compatibility and a history of shared experiences. Interests help to create those shared experiences that become memories of happy moments spent together. Looking back, participating in particular interests becomes evidence of the good times and love that you have shared. While all interests do not have to be the same, and partners can introduce really enjoyable independent interests, the major ones should be relatively similar. If your idea of a Saturday involves a beach chair and a great new bestselling book, but your partner is more into hiking, biking and rock climbing on his days off, or if your partner’s idea of riveting entertainment is rental movies and take out on a Saturday night but you’re already dressed and ready to go out to paint the town red, you may want to reconsider whether your interest aligns enough for a long-term relationship.

7. Personal Habits
Personal habits are often overlooked during the "honeymoon stage" of any relationship. In fact, even some of the most off-putting habits later declared as near-deal-breakers are even regarded as "cute" or endearing. Whether or not your partner is on time or runs chronically late, is clean or messy, is responsible financially or plays things more "loose"—all of these personal habits come into play. Additionally, habits like weight management or fitness activity level are equally important. There may be other personal habits that particularly resonate with you as being unacceptable—make sure you watch out for them and agree to come to terms with them; most times habits are hard to break and even harder when they’re not likely to change.

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220 comments on “Are You Settling?


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WendyG wrote:
Just want to let you all know that it is so important to hold out for the right person. After I left my last posting, a little over a month ago, I met a man through eHarmony that is a wonderful match for me. I flew across the country last week to meet his family, friends, and minister (yes, this is serious), and he's coming to the East Coast next week to meet my loved ones. We're being careful to make sure we're out of the infatuation stage, and seeing each other realistically, before we make the plunge, but things are moving forward very quickly. We have had so many things happen that can not be explained other than God's leading us together. When it's right, it's right, and you'll know it.
Lucky you Wendy!!! I am also waiting for that moment when I meet someone and I feel he is the right one. I do believe my instincts and they always guide me to the right path. good luck!!
- February 11, 2009 10:39 AM

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4092Charlene wrote:
Sometimes it is hard to tell if you are settling. There are always going to be things that a person is not happy with in a relationship. One of the problems is communication. Sometimes we can talk and think things will change. Then we give it more time, before we know it, it has been several years. Oh no, we have been together soooo long; I think I will stick around a bit longer to see what happens. Thus, the cycle keeps going. Your settling and don't realize it. It is hard to get out of a relationship you feel comfortable in. I hope I am not settling, but sometimes I believe I am.
You are absolutely right. I actually know people who are doing that at the moment. They are in a relationship because they are so comfortable and have a great life but not necessarily feel that their partner is the one they want to spend their life with. I constantly question them as they try to findthe excitement and buzz elsewhere so obviously they will end up cheating on their partners. This isa typical human behaviour when someone is not happy with what they have.
- February 11, 2009 10:36 AM

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[i]i use to think that if someone wasnt married by 30 that there must be something wrong with them..now i think there should be a law stating that u cant marry until u are at least30 *smiles*..i just turned 20 ten..and for the first time im ok with not pretending to know i have all the answers..im so much more chillaxed now then ever when it comes to relationships..im more interested in finding myself then finding mr.right..i got married at 19 because i wanted to have kids i could grow up with..at that age u think u know what love is and though i wasnt 100% i thought if we work hard we'ld always be together..while i agree with the main factors in a relationship, sometimes the other person says they want the same thing but its bullshite..while i worked on our marriage he was working on being like every other guy in his 20's..i left my ex hubby when i was 23 and found who i thought at the time was "my first true love"..we lasted longer together then my ex husband and i did..we agreed on all the main factors and now i think we stayed together longer then we shouldve because we were looking at "the big picture"..ultimately it was the small intricacies in a relationship that divided us..or it could be because "my first true love" doesnt know how important the big things that are metioned are..he is after all still in his 20's *laughs*..[/i]
- February 11, 2009 05:33 AM

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