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Evaluating
Relationship Readiness in Yourself and in a Potential Partner.
by
Philip Belove, Ed.D.
Being
single at midlife is a form of midlife crisis.
“Oh,
no, not me,” you say. “I’m the good one. The crisis is what the
other person is having.” But the truth is, when a couple breaks up,
they are both in a crisis.
A
crisis is a situation in which, no matter what you do, something new is
going to happen.
There
are doors in life that only go one way. Once you’ve walked through them,
you can’t walk back. Being suddenly single at midlife is one of those
doors. And someone who’s walked through it is in a crisis.
Is
a person in midlife crisis really ready for a long term relationship?
Usually
not. But there are lots of people out there like that, not yet ready for
re-marriage or its equivalent and none the less acting like they are.
There are others who don't know what they are looking for. As you no doubt
know, not everyone out there is honest, even with themselves.
What
determines the kind of a relationship a person in a midlife crisis is
ready for?
Relationship
readiness. There are four stages to a midlife crisis. In each stage there
is a change in both the kind of relationship a person wants and what the
person is capable of. Each stage has a different kind of relationship
readiness.
Here
is why you want to be able to read Relationship Readiness
1.
You can avoid relationships where you want more than they are capable of
giving. When you want more than your partner can give, you end up
being resentful. Instead of questioning yourself, "Am I too needy,
too demanding?" and instead of psychologizing your partner,
“They have commitment phobia”, do something simpler and less
blaming. Recognize that there is not a high enough level of relationship
readiness and back off without blame.
2.
You can decline relationships where someone wants more of you than you are
currently capable of giving. Instead of complaining about the other
person's control issues, instead of feeling guilty, instead of feeling
psychologically sick, just say "No, thanks, I'm not ready for
this".
3.
You can slow down the pace of the relationships to allow one person to
catch up with the other. Instead of ruining a
perfectly promising relationship by putting a lot of pressure on yourself,
your possible partner and whatever relationship you do have, simply
exercise patience and allow things to develop.
4.
You can preserve friendships by parting as friends instead of making each
other nuts. You could
simply accept reality, spare yourself and your friend some unnecessary
pain, and enjoy what is possible.
How
to Read Relationship Readiness.
People
work themselves through their midlife crisis in four stages. Different
people have their crises with different issues. Some have their crisis
around money management, others around health, other around career issues,
and others around their relationship issues. The process is the same. The
applications are different.
Here
is a short description of the stages of a midlife crisis, followed by
specific ways a crisis appears for people where the issue in crisis is
"intimate relationships."
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First
stage, Obliviousness.
People in this stage have to wake up to the fact that they are in
crisis. They still believe the wrong approaches they've been using
will work, if only they try harder. People in this stage develop an
awareness of their inflexibility.
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Second
stage, Waking up.
This stage starts when they stop doing whatever ineffective thing
they were doing and calm down. They finally realize that there is
something important they don’t know. People in this stage develop
humility.
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Third
Stage. Looking around.
In this stage people are finally able to see the new possibilities
the crisis presents. They are again able to learn new things. People
in this stage develop the character trait of forgiveness.
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Fourth
Stage. Starting Anew.
Finally, they start again, with a new frame of mind, new confidence
and a solidity they’ve never known. People in this stage develop
confidence.
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Here
is how the midlife crisis works for midlife singles:
First
stage: Obliviousness.
People
in this stage are in shock, They are simultaneously afraid of being alone
and also afraid of being in a relationship.
They repeated try new relationships using old methods that don’t
work and you can’t tell them anything. They are sort of nuts.
First
Stage Advice: Stop doing what doesn’t work:
For obvious reasons, this
is the most difficult advice for people to hear: Calm
down, take a break, stop and think. Ask yourself if you are getting
anywhere. Ask yourself if
desperation is driving this relationship and if the answer is yes, then do
yourself and your friend a favor and stop the relationship.
Second
Stage: Waking Up.
People
who are waking up move slowly. They sit and stare thoughtfully. People in
this stage of their crisis take time to be alone and reflect. They don’t
mind staying home on Saturday night. They develop chaste friendships
instead of seductive ones. They are learning, finally, to say, “No” to
what doesn’t work. They haven’t yet figured out what does work,
though.
Second
Stage Advice: Take care of yourself: Congratulate yourself. Don’t
think of this as the end of dating. Think of it as half time. Create
a coaching support system. Think about your part in creating that mess.
Fill in the time you used to spend dating with something that satisfies
you. Develop your same sex friendships.
Third
Stage: Looking Around.
People
at this stage start dating again, but it’s different. They are in less
of a hurry, more relaxed, more decisive and more open. They are slower to
have sex with a new person and less driven. They demand and practice more
honesty of themselves. They are exploring intimacy, sometimes for the
first time. They are able to say, “NO,” to any relationship, but they
aren’t yet able to say “Yes.” They are experimenting with
“Maybe.” They are discovering what it is they really want.
Third
Stage Advice: Learn
to become forgiving: Cut yourself some slack. Correct yourself
gently. Be open to learning things you never knew. Create a
support system and use it.
Fourth
Stage: Starting Anew.
These
are people very ready to settle into stable relationships. They have given
a lot of thought to what is important to them in a relationship and what
is not so important. They have a sense of how they co-create any
relationship they are in and they take full responsibility for their own
participation. They are ready
to say “yes.”
Fourth
Stage Advice: Ask
for 100% of what you want. Speak up and listen deeply. You are
creating a conversation and the conversation you create is what governs
your relationship.
For
all stages: A relationship won’t even take root unless the partners are
in the same or adjacent stage.
People connect with those who are, at most, in the same or adjacent
stage. Someone in stage four,
ready to commit, simply wouldn’t take someone seriously who was in stage
one, oblivious, lost and searching. Someone
in stage two, just waking up wouldn’t would be ready to really commit as
a stage four person would be. Sometimes
someone in three, just looking around would be pretty tentative with stage
four people and would also find stage one people too crazy to deal with.
So, remember, if you are in a stable relationship with some who is, say,
still oblivious (stage one) and you think that you are at stage four,
ready to make a long term commitment, you are kidding yourself.
Finally, you have to have faith in yourself. If you
are in a crisis, then it is a great opportunity for you to create the life
you really want. There is always a lot of truth spilling out in a midlife
crisis and so it really is all for the best, and everyone who's made it
through says so.
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