I love the TV show Scrubs. Have all seven seasons on DVD. And tonight, after a couple’s session, I found myself thinking of a scene where all the characters are doing one-on-one interviews about relationships with a shrink.
There’s one moment where Elliot says this:
“…but relationships? I always heard that relationships were easy. That even when they were hard, they were easy.”
I remember watching that for the first time, and thinking who the hell has SHE been talking to?!
Let’s get this clear, right off the bat here: relationships are hard.
Sometimes, when the clouds clear up and the planets are aligned, we have some smooth days together. Nobody gets triggered, everybody is peachy happy keen. And yeah, at the beginning of a relationship, all the stories are new, the chemistry is super fresh, and the things that will later feel irritating are easy to overlook.
But if it’s the not the very beginning of your relationship, and all the stars are doing their own thing, well, you’re going to have to work in your relationship.
Actually, I lie. What’s closer to the truth is that you’re going to have to work inside yourself for the sake of the relationship.
What feels hard about relationships is how they urge us to change ourselves. To compromise or sacrifice…or more often, fight AGAINST compromise and sacrifice.
Working on yourself–learning to pause when you start getting sad or angry or depressed, learning to listen more to your inner observer, learning to stop yourself from saying something defensive and to instead acknowledge you made a mistake–that’s the hard stuff.
But it’s also the great stuff. Most of the time, I think self-work just feels hard because we don’t know where to start and we don’t know what to do. Things always feel hard when we aren’t happy and don’t know what will fix it.
If you just take a step though…find a book to get some wisdom or ides, start a daily affirmation practice, journal about your conversations with your partner to try to find patterns…you’ll discover that the payoff is incalculable.
Hey, I’m addicted to self-work for a reason. And if you need help finding a place to start, I’m here.