
โYou’ll never find the right person if you never let go of the wrong one.” ~Unknown
I recently left a relationship that I was not happy in. Although my ex was definitely an unconditional lover, it painfully bothered me that the man I loved was not taking care of his responsibilities.
Since Iโve entered my twenties, Iโve been looking for more than just a good time; I need a stable partner who will be able to meet our shared expenses and obligations in the future. So, I was faced with the crucial, inevitable decision of calling it quits.
I cried the first few nights, but every night after was a learning experience. I realized that no matter how much he loved me, I needed more from the relationship than he could give.
While I was still in it, he kept telling me that I made the entire relationship about me, saying, โYou are only worried about your happiness. What about mine?”
Although he was right about his happiness being important, I realized something: my happiness is just as important, and I cannotโand should not have toโsacrifice mine for his.
Half of a couple canโt be happy while the other half is miserable. If neither is happy, then the relationship is already over.
A few weeks after the big break, I began asking myself what I wanted out of a relationship. Who am I? What do I need?
I wrote down a list of my nice-to-haves and my non-negotiables. This allowed me to see my past relationship for what it was: not what I really wanted. And thus, I experienced little pain and was able to move on gracefully.
Donโt get me wrong, I felt incredibly terrible for breaking his heart. I have always been the one to break things off, but I wasnโt so sure if I ever broke a guyโs heart until the day I broke his.
But I had to learn to forgive myself because I knew the relationship wouldnโt last. And it was better to break his heart now than to stay in it for far too long and inescapably break it later.
He eventually told me I was his only source of happiness, but just as you shouldnโt sacrifice your own happiness, you shouldnโt be responsible for anotherโs happiness either.
Happiness should come from within. If you have it before you enter the relationship, once ties are severed and the mourning phase is over, you will surely have it again.
The greatest lesson I learned is that you have to know what you want before the relationship starts.
When people say, โI donโt know what I want, but when I see it, Iโll know,โ they are usually the ones who stick around in a relationship longer than necessary because they werenโt sure of what they wanted from the beginning. This causes unnecessary trial and error and a lot more pain.
It doesnโt take long to ask yourself what it is you desire and write it down. You may not know for certain right away, but you should at least have a rough idea. Getting to know yourself better can help with this.
Dating can also help refine your list, but making a serious commitment before really understanding your requirements in a relationship can be detrimental.
Typically when we go into a relationship without truly understanding our requirements, we end up trying to change our partner, which never ends well.
A loving relationship is meant to be the reward of knowing what you wanted and receiving it. Getting into a relationship in order to figure out what you want is backwards.
Ask yourself what it is you appreciate in a partner. What will cause you to write off a potential partner (perhaps not having the same goals and dreams)? This is important because if we donโt determine what we will and will not accept, we end up accepting anything.
But even more importantly, donโt forget about yourself. Get to know your own personal likes and dislikes. This is the one time where everything can be about what you want.
When we’re in a relationship, weโre always so busy trying to learn about another personโs wants, needs, goals, and aspirations that we oftentimes forget about our own.
During this time you donโt have to ask anyone for affirmation. All of your decisions are your own. No one can tell you who to be.
And while in a relationship, you still have to remember that you complete yourself. The man or woman youโre with does not define who you are, and you do not need him or her to be complete. Your self-esteem should not begin or end with how that person feels about you.
Be willing to give the person you love the shirt off your back, but your self-worth? Never give them that.
You have to honestly know that you will be happy with or without them. This little piece of knowledge makes it easier for you to leave a relationship that causes you anguish, and find one that better serves you.
Thatโs not to say that relationships are perfect and no one will ever hurt you; thatโs certainly not the case. Every person will come with his or her own flaws, and every relationship will require a little work. You just have to know what youโre willing to work through and what youโre not.
Some words of advice my wise mother once gave me: you are the prize. How big of a prize is defined by how much you love and respect yourself. You determine how much you are worth. Nobody else.
Sometimes love can turn into a battle that we want to win but canโt. Many relationships arenโt meant to be. That doesnโt make it your fault, and it doesnโt make it the other personโs fault; it just makes it life.
Whatever the case, you should never sacrifice your dignity at the expense of a futile relationship.
As for me, I couldnโt wait for him to be who I needed him to be. And I couldnโt change him either. I had to do what was best for me and for him as well.
If it were meant to be, it wouldโve been right from the beginning.
I just have to go out into the world and find someone who better suits me. In the meantime, I am discovering a lot about myself, things I wouldโve probably never known otherwise.
You must never get so caught up in your other half’s happiness that you forget about your own, and what matters most to you.
By the time I get into my next relationship, I will have better clarity of what I want and what I need.
But for right now, I am the love of my life. I am hoping that eventually I can share my love and happiness with another being, and he can share his with me.
Romance does not only consist of loving another, but also finding it easy to love oneself in the process. And I have to remind myself to never lose sight of that self-love.

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