Relationships

Relationships

Maintaining stable and healthy relationships

Relationships

Relationships are a necessary part of healthy living, but there is no such thing as a perfect relationship.  Relationships, from acquaintances to romances, have the potential to enrich our lives and add to our enjoyment of life.  However, these same relationships can cause discomfort, and sometimes even cause harm (see statistics from the American Bar Association).  Take a few minutes to learn more about how to protect yourself from developing unhealthy relationships.

What makes a healthy relationship?

A healthy relationship is when two people develop a connection based on:

·         Mutual respect

·         Trust

·         Honesty

·         Support

·         Fairness/equality

·         Separate identities

·         Good communication

·         A sense of playfulness/fondness

All of these things take work. Each relationship is most likely a combination of both healthy and unhealthy characteristics. Relationships need to be maintained and healthy relationships take work. This applies to all relationships; work relationships, friendships, family, and romantic relationships.

 

What are signs of a healthy relationship?

A healthy relationship should bring more happiness than stress in your life. Every relationship will have stress at times, but you want to prevent prolonged mental stress on either member of the relationship.

Below are some characteristic that maybe present in your healthy relationships.

While in a healthy relationship you:

·         Take care of yourself and have good self-esteem independent of your relationship

·         Maintain and respect each other’s individuality

·         Maintain relationships with friends and family

·         Have activities apart from one another

·         Are able to express yourselves to one another without fear of consequences

·         Are able to feel secure and comfortable

·         Allow and encourage other relationships

·         Take interest in one another’s activities

·         Do not worry about violence in the relationship

·         Trust each other and be honest with each other

·         Have the option of privacy

·         Have respect for sexual boundaries

·         Are honest about sexual activity if it is a sexual relationship

·         Accept influence. Relationships are give and take; allowing your partner to influence you is important; this can be especially difficult for some men.

·         Resolve conflict fairly: Fighting is part of even healthy relationships, the difference is how the conflict is handled. Fighting fairly is an important skill you help you have healthier relationships.

What are the signs of an unhealthy relationship?

At times all relationships will have some of the characteristics listed below. However, unhealthy relationships will exhibit these characteristics more frequently and cause you stress and pressure that is hard to avoid. This tension is unhealthy for both members of the relationship and may lead to problems in other areas of your life.

While in an unhealthy relationship you:

·         Put one person before the other by neglecting yourself or your partner

·         Feel pressure to change who you are for the other person

·         Feel worried when you disagree with the other person

·         Feel pressure to quit activities you usually/used to enjoy

·         Pressure the other person into agreeing with you or changing to suit you better

·         Notice one of you has to justify your actions (e.g., where you go, who you see)

·         Notice one partner feels obligated to have sex or has been forced

·         Have a lack of privacy, and may be forced to share everything with the other person

·         You or your partner refuse to use safer sex methods

·         Notice arguments are not settled fairly

·         Experience yelling or physical violence during an argument

·         Attempt to control or manipulate each other

·         Notice your partner attempts to controls how you dress and criticizes your behaviors

·         Do not make time to spend with one another

·         Have no common friends, or have a lack of respect for each others’ friends and family

·         Notice an unequal control of resources (e.g., food, money, home, car, etc.)

·         Experience a lack of fairness and equality

If some of your relationships have some of these characteristics it does not necessarily mean the end of that relationship. By recognizing how these characteristics affect you, you can begin to work on improving the negative aspect of your relationships to benefit both of you.

 

When should I seek professional help for my relationship?

If a partner ever tries to harm you physically or force you to do something sexually that should be a clear sign for you that it is an unhealthy relationship. In that situation, you should consider getting help, or ending the relationship. Even if you believe the person loves you, it does not make up for the harm they are doing to you.

 

Other circumstances include:

·         When you are unhappy in a relationship, but cannot decide if you should accept your unhappiness, try to improve the relationship, or end the relationship.

·         When you have decided to leave a relationship, but find yourself still in the relationship.

·         When you think you are staying in the relationship for the wrong reasons, such as fear of being alone or guilt.

·         If you have a history of staying in unhealthy relationships.

Having a counselor or mental health provider to talk to can help you work out challenges in your relationships and find a solution that is healthy for both partners.   If you need help urgently about your relationship, contact the Sexual Assault and Relationship Violence Information Service (SARIS).

 

Additional information

24-hour National Domestic Violence Hotlines (7 days a week)
National Bilingual Hotline: (800) 799-SAFE (-7233)

 

Quiz: How Healthy is Your Relationship? (www.loveisrespect.org)

Ten Tips for Healthy Relationships (Kansas State University Counseling Center)

 

Credits: http://depts.washington.edu/hhpccweb/health-resource/healthy-vs-unhealthy-relationships/

Authored by: Hall Health Center Health Promotion staff

 

Friendships

Healthy friendships  are based on mutual respect. In unhealthy friendships, people ridicule one another, gossip or spread rumors, or act mean to one another. Healthy friendships allow each other to grow and change. Unhealthy friendships are threatened when one person grows or changes.

Healthy vs. Unhealthy Friendships

Learning to tell the difference

Think about someone in your life who leaves an open space for you to be yourself. No one is more valuable. I would rather have a pillar of trust in my life than a pillar of strength.
—Deepak Chopra

Do you have friends who leave you feeling happy and uplifted? Or do you feel drained, agitated, angry, or resentful when you’ve spent time with certain people? Use the following list to compare and evaluates the friendships you have in your life:

Healthy friendships are not one-sided. Both people benefit from knowing each other. In unhealthy friendships, one person always seems to give a lot more than the other.

Healthy friendships are based on mutual respect. In unhealthy friendships, people ridicule one another, gossip or spread rumors, or act mean to one another.

Healthy friendships allow each other to grow and change. Unhealthy friendships are threatened when one person grows or changes.

Healthy friendships are not possessive. Unhealthy friendships are threatened by other people.

Healthy friendships nourish you and add to your life. Unhealthy friendships leave you feeling empty and drained.

Healthy friendships accept you for who you are. Unhealthy friendships require you to act the way someone else wants you to be in order to be accepted.

Healthy friendships allow you to have your feelings. Unhealthy friendships only accept certain feelings.

Healthy friendships respect differences. Unhealthy friendships demand conformity.

Healthy friendships are safe and secure. In unhealthy friendships, trusts are broken, secrets are shared, and confidentialities are betrayed.

In healthy friendships, both people are committed to the friendship. In unhealthy friendships, only one is.

Healthy friendships are not about power or status. Unhealthy friendships look to take advantage of another person’s social standing in order to improve their own.

Think of your friends and the people you know. Then go through the list above. Count the number of times you would put “Healthy” next to their names.

Take a look at your role as a friend. In what ways are you a healthy friend? In what ways are you an unhealthy friend?

If you are in a crisis, call 911 or contact your local crisis center. This web site does not take the place of professional help. Always
speak with your doctor or a licensed professional for treatment.