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Improving Your Relationships

This article provides some excellent tips, advice and rules for improving your relationships ...

Improving your relationships begins at the level of conversation. Every relationship you have is built and sustained through conversation. So if you want better relationships, you have to alter the way you approach conversations.

To begin, you need to understand that conversations are governed by "rules" in our society. These are all unwritten rules, but they are rules nonetheless. For instance, "Don't ask too many questions," "It is impolite to talk with your mouth full" "Don't make too much eye contact" and so on.

Learn to pinpoint these rules in yourself. Uncover them. Write them down. Observe when you buy into them, and when do you not, and you will begin improving your relationships. Which rules are serving you and which ones are not? For example, take the rule: "Don't share your inner most thoughts." This rule may have served you well back in high school, but will it serve you now in your relationship with your spouse?

There are many unwritten rules that prescribe when and where it is appropriate to have a particular conversation.  For example, most people would agree that the grocery store is a very appropriate place to have chit chat or average conversations. And most people would think it is a very inappropriate place to have a serious argument, for example. But what about really speaking from your heart? Is that ok in public? What rules are you following?

If you want to be improving your relationships, you must speak from your heart. Speaking from your heart means speaking what is really true for you.

It is my observation that most people believe it is not appropriate to speak from their heart most of the time. That is a rule. You can change it. It is time that we took a closer look at this social rule. Who determines when and where it is appropriate to have a particular conversation? Who made up these rules in the first place? Does society at large force them upon individuals or can individuals make up and follow their own rules?
 
To help you get started breaking old rules on improving your relationships and adopting new ones that will start improving your relationships, I have included five powerful questions to ask during conversations:

1. How about if we break the normal conversation rules and try something really new and different?

2. Even though what I'm about to say might be hard for you to hear, are you willing to hear it anyway?"

3. Are there any unwritten rules you are following right now?

4. Could I interrupt you and have you just listen for a while?

5. How about if we take turns talking and listening for a while?

Start asking these questions more often, and see what happens.

For more information about love and relationships, see the "resources" section of this website, or go to articles about love and relationships.