1. Honesty
Love is honest, brutally honest. A relationship built on the foundation of honesty has an indestructible framework of trust.
Honesty and trust breed respect. Respecting your partner is critical.
Without respect, love can't last. Be honest, no matter what. If you are
honest and the relationship ends, it is meant to end. If a relationship
is meant, nothing you say (if you are speaking truthfully) will cause
it to cease. Have faith in the truth.
2. Compromise
A relationship is only as happy as the least happiest person in it, and
the relationship is happiest in the middle of the two people in it.
Mature participants of a relationship know sometimes one person has to
travel a little farther to the center than the other. They are willing
to make the trek, because they trust that the other will do the same
when it is their turn.
When compromise is necessary ask yourself, "What matters more to me,
my want to get my way or my need for peace? What do I need to do to
create harmony right now?"
When you think and act in favor of the well being of your
relationship, you will always air in favor of compromise; even if that
means you travel a little farther than your partner because you know, if
your partner is miserable, you will be, too, and so will your
relationship.
3. Patience
No one belongs to you. You can't control anyone either. Despite how hard
you try to persuade or manipulate another to respond and react in the
way you want, they won't and they don't. Everyone thinks, feels and acts
in their own way, on their own time.
If you try to rush someone's process or push them to do something
they don't want to do, they will feel pressured. When a person feels
pressured, they feel unsafe, unloved and unable to give love. They will
no longer be themselves, and when someone is not themselves, they are
not honest. Without honesty, love dies, as will the relationship.
The most important thing you can do for the person you love is give
them space. When a person has space, they feel free -- free to feel and
think, do what they love and be who they are in their own way, on their
own time and they will want to share themselves with you. Remember, love
is not in a rush, it has all the time in the world.
4. Sex
I use the word "sex" to describe the seventh ingredient, but it's more
than just intercourse. It's affection, touch, attention, warmth and
kindness. The ingredient of sex is comprised of reciprocity (an equality
of service to one another) and the desire to show your partner he or
she is special and wanted by you. When a person feels wanted, they feel
safe, loved and free (there's that freedom part again).
Sex and all its components disappear because the individuals in the
relationship stop feeling special, wanted and acknowledged by the other.
The feelings of love develop effortlessly, but if you want to keep love
alive, you have to maintain it -- you must work at it. Relationships
demand effort by both people, equally at the same time.
Daily effort applied to a relationship by its partners will lead to a
lifetime of love. It can be a simple effort -- a gentle touch, a sweet
kiss, an arm wrapped around her belly as she washes dishes, or sitting
by his side as he reads a book or watches his favorite show. All of
these actions are a reminder to your partner -- I see you, I acknowledge
you, I choose you, I'm trying because I love you and I want to keep
loving you.
I've been alive for 34.5 years, and I have concluded that love is
undefinable. Although I do know one thing I am absolutely sure of, and
that is love is a choice.
Loving another person is a moment-by-moment choice. "I choose to love
this person with everything I have right now." If you are in a
relationship, I hope you commit to loving your partner with an honest
heart, a fully present mind, transparency in feeling and thought, a
willingness to compromise (because you understand who they are and what
they need to feel loved).
I hope you choose to be patient with their process and you always
find the time to express your love with a hug and a kiss, as if this
moment is the last time you will ever hold them in your arms. Oh, one
last thing, never forget to say I love you -- we can never say it too
much.