Jean Fitzpatrick, L.P., New York Individual and Couples Therapy

What makes a good relationship?
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The ingredients that really matter.

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Every month at the newsstand I see a magazine cover inviting readers to take a handy quiz that will reveal the truth about an intimate relationship. "Is he the right one for you?" "How healthy is your marriage?" "What's your romance quotient?" Answering the questions can be fun -- except when it leads to an argument, of course! Of course, most of us walk around with our own personal criteria for what makes a good relationship. These usually include things like shared goals, common values, romance and sexual satisfaction, communication, and so on.

Back when I was a teenager an important requirement was that Mr. Right look more like Paul than Ringo. And at any age, we tend to be a little unrealistic about our criteria. One of the most common expectations, for example is, "My partner should know just what I need without my having to ask." That one's a real set-up for disappointment!

So, should we give up on setting criteria for a good relationship? I don't think so. Actually, knowing what we really want, what we yearn for, is the first step toward creating a relationship we find satisfying. One set of criteria I have found to be intriguing and helpful comes from The Healing Connection: How Women Form Relationships in Therapy and in Life, by Jean Baker Miller and Irene Pierce Stiver. These researchers and clinicians at Wellesley College's Stone Center* state simply that a healthy relationship is one that leads to mutual growth. They list "five good things" that are present in a mutually empowering relationship: zest, action, knowledge, worth, and a desire for more connection.  See what you think. You might not bother with any more magazine quizzes...

In a relationship that leads to mutual growth and empowerment, the participants experience:

  • Zest -- This is "the feeling that comes when we feel a real sense of connection, of being together with and joined by another person. It feels like an increase -- as opposed to a decrease -- in vitality, aliveness, energy. The feeling is there when people make emotional connections and it is notably absent when they do not. We can all probably remember its opposite, the 'down' kind of feeling that we experience when we are not making an authentic connection with another person."
  • Action -- In a mutually empowering relationship, "each [person] acts and has an important impact on the other -- each creates change...it is only by interacting that we each affect each other."
  • Knowledge -- As we share our stories and struggles we move toward "an enlarged and more accurate picture" of ourselves and of each other. We come to know ourselves and others and something about the world, too.
  • A Sense of Worth -- As we listen to one another and respond with respect and care, we nurture one another's sense of worth. "We cannot develop a sense of worth unless the people important to us convey that they recognize and acknowledge our experience," say Miller and Stiver. Self-esteem isn't something poured into us (or not) in childhood; it develops through our relationships all through life.
  • A Greater Sense of Connection and Desire for More Connections -- "This feeling is different from being the recipient of another's concern, or being loved, and very different from feeling 'approved of.' It is much more valuable. It is the active, outgoing feeling of caring about another person because that person means so much to us or is so valued in our eyes. It leads to both the desire for fuller connection with that person and a concern for that person's well-being. We cannot will this feeling into existence. It comes along as a concomitant of connection." A growth-enhancing relationship, Baker and Stiver note, does not only lead us to want more connection with the other person, but to a desire for connection in general -- to less isolation.

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Twitter link @therapistnyc35

N.Y. Licensed Psychoanalyst
Member, American Association of Pastoral Counselors
Individual and Couple/Marriage Counseling
midtown Manhattan and Westchester County
Call, Text or Email
646.801.8550
914.941.6478 

The Tree of Life image at the top left corner of your screen is an original work
by the Canadian artist Cari Buziak and is used with her permission..

Serving the online community as well as Westchester Putnam Dutchess and Fairfield counties, including Ossining Briarcliff Manor Croton-on-Hudson Yorktown Heights Sleepy Hollow Tarrytown Pleasantville Pocantico Hills Chappaqua Millwood Mount Kisco Somers Katonah Mahopac Irvington Hastings-on-Hudson Yonkers Hawthorne Thornwood Peekskill Bedford Hills Bedford and Valhalla.  Midtown Manhattan, Grand Central, Park Avenue, Murray Hill, East Side, Flatiron, Upper West Side, Upper East Side, East Village, Gramercy, theater district, midtown south, midtown east, north of Madison Square Park, NoMad.  Experienced, active help to build a fulfilling life and relationships.  Individual therapy,  couples counseling,  parent coaching, premarital counseling, marriage counselor, marriage counselor NY, therapist, therapist NY, support through divorce and transitions, prebaby counseling, postpartum counseling, marriage counselor 10016, marriage counselor 10017, marriage counselor 10022, marriage counselor 10010, marriage counselor 10007.

 
 

Jean Fitzpatrick's website does not provide medical, psychological, or psychiatric advice, diagnosis, or treatment. The contents of this website, such as text, graphics, images, and other material contained on the website are for informational purposes only. This website's content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical, psychological, or psychiatric advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician, therapist, or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical, psychological, or psychiatric condition. Never disregard professional medical, psychological, or psychiatric advice, or delay in seeking it, because of something you have read on this website. If you think you may have a medical or psychiatric emergency, call your doctor or 911 immediately.

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