Every Successful Relationship Is Successful for the Same 8 Exact Reasons
1. Be together for the right reasons
Don’t ever be with someone because someone else pressured you to or you were too lonely. The only reason you should ever be with the person you’re with is because you simply love being around them. It really is that simple.
2. Have realistic expectations about relationships and romance
Don’t lay expectations on your partner to “make you happy.” It is not their responsibility. Figure out as individuals what makes you happy as an individual, be happy yourself, then you each bring that to the relationship.
3. Honesty
If something is bothering you in a relationship, you need to be able to communicate it directly to your partner. This is how you build trust and intimacy.
3. Give each other space
The key point here is that each person in a relationship needs to have their own identity, their own interests and perspectives. Have the courage to be who you are, and most importantly, let your partner be who they are. Those are the two people who fell in love with each other in the first place.
4. Mutual Respect
You need to have the kind of respect where you hold each other in such high esteem and believe in each other. There will always be disagreements and fights, and unless both the partners respect each other, the relationship will never be able to overcome these fights, getting weaker with each one.
5. Get good at fighting
Every couple fights, but a healthy relationship is one where they can fight without inflicting permanent damage. These are the couples who fight or solving their differences and not to prove themselves right.
6. Forgiving
And they know how to move on from the fight. Once everything is over, it is done and dusted for good and nobody brings it up unnecessarily. Also, they know which fights are worth it and which ones are not.
7. Happy S3x Life
Couples who have a healthy s3x life are definitely happier because s3x is an essential part of our life and not just some initial craze.
8. Appreciation
Appreciating what your partner adds to your life was the second most significant predictor of a strong relationship.