20 tips to special relationships

 I was sent this message in the wee hours of the morning from someone who is hurting due to a break-up. : 

" i wish to die as if nothing is left to me, till now i used to get mentally hurt only, but this time, it's my soul, my heart in pain, which is unbearable. God plzz listen to me and help me please, this pain of separation is killing me moment by moment.... please, help me..."

I sent this person a reply and hope, as well as pray, that it sinks in to her soul and helps her to know that someone cares. It got me to thinking of others who also have issues in their relationships, and so, this hopefully will address some of those issues:


Here are twenty tips to help you find and foster these special relationships.
  1. Free yourself from negative people. – Spend time with nice people who are smart, driven and likeminded.  Relationships should help you, not hurt you.  Surround yourself with people who reflect the person you want to be.  Choose friends who you are proud to know, people you admire, who love and respect you – people who make your day a little brighter simply by being in it.  Life is too short to spend time with people who suck the happiness out of you.  When you free yourself from negative people, you free yourself to be YOU – and being YOU is the only way to truly live.
  2. Let go of those who are already gone. – The sad truth is that there are some people who will only be there for you as long as you have something they need.  When you no longer serve a purpose to them, they will leave.  The good news is, if you tough it out, you’ll eventually weed these people out of your life and be left with some great people you can count on.  We rarely lose friends and lovers, we just gradually figure out who our real ones are.  So when people walk away from you, let them go.   Your destiny is never tied to anyone who leaves you.  It doesn’t mean they are bad people; it just means that their part in your story is over.
  3. Give people you don’t know a fair chance. – When you look at a person, any person, remember that everyone has a story.  Everyone has gone through something that has changed them, and forced them to grow.  Every passing face on the street represents a story every bit as compelling and complicated as yours.  We meet no ordinary people in our lives.  If you give them a chance, everyone has something amazing to offer.  So appreciate the possibility of new relationships as you naturally let go of old ones that no longer work.  Trust your judgment.  Embrace new relationships, knowing that you are entering into unfamiliar territory.  Be ready to learn, be ready for a challenge, and be ready to meet someone that might just change your life forever.
  4. Show everyone kindness and respect. – Treat everyone with kindness and respect, even those who are rude to you – not because they are nice, but because you are.  There are no boundaries or classes that define a group of people that deserve to be respected.  Treat everyone with the same level of respect you would give to your grandfather and the same level of patience you would have with your baby brother.  People will notice your kindness.
  5. Accept people just the way they are. – In most cases it’s impossible to change them anyway, and it’s rude to try.  So save yourself from needless stress.  Instead of trying to change others, give them your support and lead by example.
  6. Encourage others and cheer for them. – Having an appreciation for how amazing the people around you are leads to good places – productive, fulfilling, peaceful places.  So be happy for those who are making progress.  Cheer for their victories.  Be thankful for their blessings, openly.  What goes around comes around, and sooner or later the people you’re cheering for will start cheering for you.
  7. Be your imperfectly perfect self. – In this crazy world that’s trying to make you like everyone else, find the courage to keep being your awesome self.  And when they laugh at you for being different, laugh back at them for being the same.  Spend more time with those who make you smile and less time with those who you feel pressured to impress.  Be your imperfectly perfect self around them.  We are not perfect for everyone, we are only perfect for those select few people that really take the time to get to know us and love us for who we really are.  And to those select few, being our imperfectly perfect self is what they love about us.
  8. Forgive people and move forward. – Don’t live your life with hate in your heart. You will end up hurting yourself more than the people you hate.  Forgiveness is not saying, “What you did to me is okay.”  It is saying, “I’m not going to let what you did to me ruin my happiness forever.”  Forgiveness is the remedy.  It doesn’t mean you’re erasing the past, or forgetting what happened.  It means you’re letting go of the resentment and pain, and instead choosing to learn from the incident and move on with your life.  Remember, the less time you spend hating the people who hurt you, the more time you’ll have to love the people who love you.
  9. Do little things every day for others. – Sometimes those little things occupy the biggest part of their hearts.  You can’t be everything to everyone, but you can be everything to a few people.  Decide who these people are in your life and treat them like royalty.
  10. Pay attention to who your real friends are. – As we grow up, we realize it becomes less important to have more friends and more important to have real ones.  Remember, life is kind of like a party.  You invite a lot of people, some leave early, some stay all night, some laugh with you, some laugh at you, and some show up really late.  But in the end, after the fun, there are a few who stay to help you clean up the mess.  And most of the time, they aren’t even the ones who made the mess.  These people are your real friends in life.  They are the ones who matter most.
  11. Always be loyal. – True love and real friendship aren’t about being inseparable. These relationships are about two people being true to each other even when they are separated.  When it comes to relationships, remaining faithful is never an option, but a priority.  Loyalty is everything.
  12. Stay in better touch with people who matter to you. – In human relationships distance is not measured in miles, but in affection.  Two people can be right next to each other, yet miles apart.  So don’t ignore someone you care about, because lack of concern hurts more than angry words.  Stay in touch with those who matter to you.  Not because it’s convenient, but because they’re worth the extra effort.  Remember, you don’t need a certain number of friends, just a number of friends you can be certain of.  Paying attention to these people is a priority.
  13. Keep your promises and tell the truth. – If you say you’re going to do something, DO IT!  If you say you’re going to be somewhere, BE THERE!  If you say you feel something, MEAN IT!  If you can’t, won’t, and don’t, then DON’T LIE.  It’s always better to tell people the truth up front.  Don’t play games with people’s heads and hearts.  Don’t tell half-truths and expect people to trust you when the full truth comes out; half-truths are no better than lies.  Remember, love and friendship don’t hurt.  Lying, cheating and screwing with people’s feelings and emotions hurts.  Never mess with someone’s feelings just because you’re unsure of yours.  Always be open and honest.
  14. Give what you want to receive. – Don’t expect what you are not willing to give.  Start practicing the golden rule.  If you want love, give love.  If you want friends, be friendly.  If you want money, provide value.  It works.  It really is this simple.( Read The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People.)
  15. Say what you mean and mean what you say. – Give the people in your life the information they need, rather than expecting them to know the unknowable.  Information is the grease that keeps the engine of communication functioning.  Start communicating clearly.  Don’t try to read other people’s minds, and don’t make other people try to read yours.  Most problems, big and small, within a family, friendship, or business relationship, start with bad communication.
  16. Allow others to make their own decisions. – Do not judge others by your own past.  They are living a different life than you are.  What might be good for one person may not be good for another.  What might be bad for one person might change another person’s life for the better.  Allow people to make their own mistakes and their own decisions.
  17. Talk a little less, and listen more. – Less advice is often the best advice.  People don’t need lots of advice, they need a listening ear and some positive reinforcement.  What they want to know is often already somewhere inside of them.  They just need time to think, be and breathe, and continue to explore the undirected journeys that will eventually help them find their direction.
  18. Leave petty arguments alone. – Someone else doesn’t have to be wrong for you to be right.  There are many roads to what’s right.  And most of the time it just doesn’t matter that much.  (Read How To Win Friends and Influence People.)
  19. Ignore nonconstructive, hurtful commentary. – No one has the right to judge you.  They might have heard your stories, but they didn’t feel what you were going through.  No matter what you do, there will always be someone who thinks differently.  So concentrate on doing what you know in your heart is right.  What most people think and say about you isn’t all that important.  What is important is how you feel about yourself.
  20. Pay attention to your relationship with yourself. – One of the most painful things in life is losing yourself in the process of loving others too much, and forgetting that you are special too.  When was the last time someone told you that they loved you just the way you are, and that what you think and how you feel matters?  When was the last time someone told you that you did a good job, or took you someplace, simply because they know you feel happy when you’re there?  When was the last time that ‘someone’ was YOU?

and one last thing from me: if you have been in a relationship that ended horribly, it is NOT the end of the world! Believe me...I had a few and felt, after the last one, that my life and days of happiness would be over. Boy was I wrong! Happy...no, I wasn't deep down happy, the type of happy that comes with contentment. What I had was the kind of "happy" that comes with settling for second best, yet I was still sure deep down that there was someone else out there...Take my advice--don't settle...EVER! Settling just leaves your heart open for misery! You are worth more than just what you can settle for.
It was when I had basically resigned myself to being single the rest of my life that my knight in shining armor arrived. Taking my hand up in a kiss, he swept me off of my feet. Life does get better. Take each relationship for what it is: a steeping stone to finding the one who will hold your heart forever and never want to see you hurt again--ever.

Comments

  1. loved number 19....thank you for sharing. Your own stories are so inspiring to the rest of us who need that boost up. and you're right...no one can judge us until they have walked our path. give my best to rob.

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    1. What would our worlds be like if we were neighbors? OOF dAH!
      iS THIS WORLD REAL? oR ARE WE ALL DREAMING?
      Sorry, hit the cap locks there!

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  2. I am sure that you have applied most if not all in your life---thus finding "the one!" Why do we get married so young anymore? It takes so many years to understand people and what makes us tick. To have found your Mr Right, Rev Baum, you must be in your 40's...am I right? good luck with life and enjoy...and thank you from the rest of us!

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    1. Is it not strange how twenty year olds get hitched and think life is going to be grand, then 2 or 3 kids and years later, discover the 10,000 dollars their parents spent on the wedding doesn't make life so great?
      The Rev. and I took 45+ years and a few kids to figure this out! I'm not real sure what she does for y'all, but she has changed me for the better!
      Thanks for the appreciation of her!

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    2. are you kidding me? Rev is an angel who has saved me from myself! She knows how to walk in the shoes of another and has also been an inspiration to so many others. Rob...U R da man to have someone like her in your world!

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  3. OMG number 7...how many times do we feel rejected if we feel that not everyone likes us???? why do we need to be so popular? I know of people who have over 500 "friends" on Facebook, yet how many will be there when they are hurting? Probably a small handful if that. Be yourself...and others will gravitate to you. (ask yourself, too...why do you need so many Likes on FB anyway?)

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  4. #20 should have been #1...because if you love yourself and respect yourself first...everything else falls into place!

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  5. Rob I have been following your story on here for quite some time and I feel that you are good for each other. I am so inspired by your love story and have told several friends that they should follow this blog as well. Good luck to you!

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  6. hey rob...you hit the nail on the frickin head! I am so broke cuzz baby girl wanted a big wedding. Just HAD to impress her frickin Facebook cronies. Two years later, she says, "oh boo hoo, I am leaving him. He's an asshole!" Now I am still paying for this wedding, mind you and now she also needs money for the divorce. My advice..women, keep your legs together and guys, keep your zippers up...at least for another 30 years!

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