The first attraction
Having things in common is often a major
part of the initial attraction to our partners.
Some anthropologists will tell you that at an
unconscious level we even go so far as to choose
partners who look like us.
As a relationship develops, each shared experience
gives us the chance to check out if we're compatible.
Do we share the same taste in music? Do we laugh
at the same jokes? Do we like the same people?
If we seem to have plenty in common, we'll
begin to explore each other's aspirations to
see if we have a shared future together.
What our ambitions say about
us
When we begin to talk about our dreams
and ambitions, we're sharing the things that
are closest to our hearts. We're saying something
about our personal values and about our priorities.
For example:
- If you won £1million, what would you do
with it? Or, to put it another way, what are
the things that make you happy?
- If you could have only three things with
you on a desert island, what would they be?
Or, what are the most important things in
your life?
Each to their own
The person who says "f I won a million,
I'd buy us a new home" is saying something quite
different from the person who says "I'd buy
myself a sports car".
The person who forgets to mention their partner
as one of the things they'd have on a desert
island with them had better be ready to defend
themselves.
When dreams change
Your partner always insisted they hated
travel, but has now announced a desire to emigrate
to Peru. How can that happen?
As we get older, most of us become wiser and
more self-confident. Our tastes change and so
do our priorities. It's this capacity to change
that makes it possible to be happy with the
same person for 70 years. And when both partners
change and grow together, it can be a life-enriching
experience.
But change can also a little scary. We may
fear that our partner is growing away from us.
For a time it may seem we have less in common,
that we don't know them as well as we thought.
But even if your dreams are off course for a
while, it doesn't mean they won't come together
again in the future.
Talking together
The most important thing is to share the
same personal values and priorities in life
with your partner. And when couples talk about
their underlying motivations and needs, they
often discover that they do.
For example: If you want to abseil down Mount
Kilimanjaro and your partner wants to write
science fiction, you both want to satisfy a
personal need to accomplish something that takes
stamina, perseverance and skill.
Or if your partner wants to work as much overtime
as possible while you want to have more time
at home, underneath you may both believe that
the children come first and want to do what
you can to provide for them.
Practical exercise
If your goals in life seem to be worlds
apart, don't give up yet. Sit down together
and identify what need within you that goal
is going to satisfy. You may well find that
your goals are the same as your partner's -
it's just the paths that are different. Have
a look at Your
hopes and dreams to find out more.

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