These cracks will bring down your relationships...fast
Below are some issues that if not surely fixed in time, will kill your relationship.
Most marriages that end up being dysfunctional
and dead usually are victims of small issues that were ignored and not
resolved on time. As the adage goes, "when you don't fix a crack, you
will build a wall. The issues become like little cracks that slowly and
surely, bring the relationship down.
These cracks mature into
chasms that might never be bridged leading to the demise of many a
marriages. Usually the couple know when it began raining on their
marriage. When they look at the ruins of their once beautiful
relationship, they know what they could have done but didn't. Below are some issues that if not surely fixed in time, will kill your relationship:
Unmet expectations.
Getting married is not a guarantee that your top expectations will be
met. When people don't get what they thought marriage and their spouse
would get them, they get frustrated and if their disillusion is not
addressed, this becomes the start of a crack.
Familiarity and taking each other for granted. When
people are new in a relationship, they try all they can to make each
other happy. After a while, familiarity creeps in and the spouse is no
longer special worth sacrificing for or doing nice things to. This
becomes another crack in the relationship.
Pride. When
one spouse begins thinking they are too good for their spouse who no
longer deserves them, a crack emerges. Some people think that it is such
a privilege for their spouse to have married them. They also imagine
that they are doing too much and the other should fall prostrate and
hail them to thank them for “saving” them.
Selfishness.
Selfishness is a huge killer of marriages. A spouse who continues to
behave like a single person and makes decisions and choices without
involving the other is busy creating cracks.
Lust. Seeking
satisfaction outside marriage. When cracks are left to grow, people
start seeking for satisfaction outside the home. They start lusting
after others who they perceive could make better companions and satisfy
their needs-sexual, emotional, material or otherwise.
Rigidity. When one or both spouses arestuck
in their ways refusing to learn from the other, this weakens a union.
To some, all they bring into marriage is some opinions which they
consider as the absolute truth. They are not open to learning but wish
to change their spouse to fit their worldview. They are rigid in their
ways and never see as the cracks develop.
Poor communication. In
some homes, poor communication is the most obvious crack that has to be
dealt with. It is like couples find it hard to be truthful and
authentic. Lies, rudeness, and nil-by-mouth become the order of the day.
Complacency.
Great marriages are a work in progress and are a result of great
efforts. To some once married, there is no need to grow the marriage.
Romance slowly dies and affection is replaced with the mundane.
Dishonour. This
crack quickly degenerates into a chasm faster than others. All human
beings crave for honour and respect and if this lacks at home, they end
up looking for it somewhere else.
Immaturity.
Getting married isn’t necessarily a proof of maturity. Attaining years
compared to becoming mature can be as different as day and night.
Marriage is for the mature because the responsibilities therein require a
mature approach.
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