Making Things Work With Professional Relationship Advice

By Christine Sanders


Human beings are social animals. They live in communities, they form platonic attachments to each other. Sometimes, they even form romantic attachments to one another. People fall in love out of time. But love has its highs and lows. When its high, it is a drug like no other. When its low, there is professional relationship advice to help with the problem.

There a number of reasons people enter into romantic relationships. For some, it is a game. For others, it is a way to get the intimacy they may have been denied earlier in life. Of course the natural reason that people fall in love is because of a chemical reaction on the brain driving people to want to form social bonds but also to procreate, to create smaller, dumber versions of themselves in order to insure the continued survival of the human species.

Of course, sometimes people succeed in their quest to procreate. It is a beautiful thing, to watch life come into the world. Unfortunately, what happens afterwards is a total mess, a veritable war on the sanity. Children have needs but do not always posses the means to communicate those needs effectively, which means a lot of screaming and crying. Children also have to be fed, clothed, and sheltered, which means that one partner has to go back to work in order to make enough money to care for the newborn. Now, caring for kids is all well and good, but some couples put so much of their focus on keeping the little gremlins alive that they forget about each other in the process.

But there is more the fracturing of a relationship than simply losing sight of each other. When two people fall for each other, they become one couple. But they also remain separate people, with their own experiences and ideas and opinions. Now, sometimes those opinions can differ. Differing opinions may or may not lead to arguments. Now, if a couple argues and does not resolve it, the issue can bring about resentment, which can lead to a relationship fracturing.

But it is not just resentment and children that pull a romance apart. The seven year itch is a psychological phenomenon that states that satisfaction in a relationship dips after about seven years of being together. In fact, research shows that divorce generally happens after seven years of marriage, lending some truth of the concept of a seven year itch.

But sometimes, a couple just stops clicking with each other. Through no fault of anyone in the relationship or outside interference, partners just fall out of step with one another emotionally. Human beings change and grow constantly, and sometimes that change and growth is incompatible with the changer and growth of another person.

But a lot of couples, particularly married ones with kids, try and stick it out, try to make things work. As such, many of them try to get counseling. Sometimes, if religious, they go to a priest or a pastor. But, mostly, people go to a therapist to seek some kind of help.

No one chooses to fall in love. Truth, no one chooses to fall in love at all. The choice lies in the relationship, in wanting to make something work.

Life is a difficult thing to go through. But the right partner can make it easier. But staying for the partner might take a little effort.




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