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8 Tips So You Don’t Lose Yourself In Your Next Relationship

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“Never lose yourself in a relationship. Love your partner fiercely, but always follow your unique dreams and desires. Be true to yourself.” ~Unknown

All my previous relationships drained me.

Not only because I was with the wrong men and kept trying to make things work where there was no way, but also because I was a queen of justifying, accommodating, and compromising.

I accommodated men because I wanted to be liked and avoid rejection.

I justified their lousy behavior because I wanted to be in a relationship and not be alone.

I compromised on my values and romantic ideals just to have someone in my life.

On the surface, I was an independent woman, strong, fierce, and full of energy and opinions.

When it came to relationships, I’d lose my power and myself completely in them.

I would become a meek mouse with no voice or opinions. I would put my boyfriend’s needs first and ignore mine. I would keep quiet about how I felt. I wouldn’t question things.

It took me a few love attempts and ten years of random dating to recognize my unhealthy patterns.

Firstly, I was subconsciously copying the behavior of my mum, who needed to survive with my despotic dad in a very turbulent relationship. I didn’t know any better until I learned the hard way.

Secondly, I didn’t feel worthy of love. I didn’t feel like I was good enough for anyone. I was afraid to be myself, as I didn’t feel like I had much to offer.

Thirdly, I wasn’t happy with myself and my life and I believed a relationship would change that, so my desire to be in one was pretty strong.

These patterns made me feel and act like I was desperate for love. So, once I landed myself a boyfriend, I’d do anything to please him and keep him in my life.

I would be a cheerful giver. I would take all the responsibility for the relationship on my own shoulders. I would make my men’s life easier by doing things for them and sometimes against myself. I would accommodate their busy schedules, moods, and issues. I would help them improve their self-esteem and lifestyle so they’d feel happier within. I would completely disappear in my relationships.

Everything in my relationships was about the men. They became my main focus and the most important thing in my life.

I would abandon myself. I would give up my friends, my passions, and my dreams. I would lose my own identity in the name of love. My main priority was to keep them happy so I could keep the relationships.

But even all the crazy giving and accommodating wouldn’t keep dysfunctional relationships going. So, when it came to an end, I would have nothing left to give.

Every split left me feeling empty. It almost felt like a little part of me died after every relationship.

I didn’t know who I was anymore because I was focusing so heavily on the relationship that I’d completely neglect myself.

It didn’t feel healthy at all.

When I started to become more aware of my patterns and how harmful they were to me and my love life, I made some promises to myself.

1. The relationship with myself comes first

2. A man will never be more important to me than I am to myself

3. I will always love myself more than any man in my life

Although they might sound a bit harsh, these rules have served me and my relationship amazingly well so far.

The truth is, your relationship with yourself is the most important one in your life. Also, it is the foundation of any other relationship, so it makes sense to prioritize and nurture it.

If you love someone else more than yourself, you will always compromise too much, ignore the red flags, get hurt, and lose yourself in your relationships.

You can’t love in a healthy way unless you love yourself first. Also, the love for yourself will help you set stronger boundaries in relationships, protect yourself, and find the courage to walk away from any relationship that doesn’t serve you.

Along with these promises, I also made a decision that I wanted to create something different in my love life. I wanted to create a healthy and happy relationship, unlike the one my parents had and the ones I’d had in the past.

To do that, I needed to become someone different. Not really a different person, but become braver and more authentic in my relationships. Otherwise, what is the point?

I needed to start speaking my mind, expressing my feelings, and asking for what I wanted. I simply needed to become more vulnerable in my relationships.

Firstly, I took a break from dating and focused on becoming happier and stronger.

Secondly, when I found the right person, I had some new rules in place to support myself in staying strong in my relationship. I didn’t want to lose myself in a relationship again. Because, to be honest, losing yourself is far more painful than losing a relationship. And it will take you forever to find your strength, dignity, and truth again.

Here are some things I did differently, before and after getting into a new relationship, that you can do too to make sure you don’t lose yourself.

Establish a strong foundation while you are single.

We lose ourselves in relationships because we don’t feel worthy of love and our boundaries are weak. When you love yourself, you know how you want to feel and be in your next relationship. You also set healthy boundaries, which prevents you from losing your identity in a relationship.

How do you start loving yourself? Here are three tips you can implement straightaway.

1. Start every day by asking yourself: What do I need today? How can I be loving with myself today? Follow the answers, as they will help you be more loving and respectful of yourself.

2. Operate from a loving, compassionate place within yourself. Choose people, situations, and things in your life that serve you and don’t harm you. Honor your own needs and feelings. Be kind to yourself. Stop judging yourself. Set some powerful boundaries to protect your time and energy. Become your own cheerleader. Listen to your own intuition.

3. Change your priorities. You come first, everything else comes after. Choose yourself. Make your own wellbeing a priority. Put yourself first when you can. Make yourself important in your own life. Stop people pleasing. You matter!

When you start following the path of self-love you will start showing up differently in your life and your relationships.

Know who you are.

Know your needs. Know your desires. Know your dreams. Know your values. Know your priorities. Know yourself basically. This knowledge will prevent you from compromising too much in a relationship. Your strong sense of self will help you stick to what is truly important to you. This will give you a sense of security, which comes from within and not from your relationship.

I have two little exercises that will help you get to know and understand yourself and your needs better.

1. Create a list of your current needs. Grab a piece of paper and create four columns. Title each column: emotional, mental, physical, and spiritual. Take your time and explore what you need in these four categories to feel fulfilled.

2. Write down your top five to ten priorities. These are the things that are important to you that you’d like to focus on right now. List them in order of importance.

These exercises will give you a stronger direction in life and help you explore what is truly important to you. It makes sense to revisit them occasionally, since things will likely change over time. Your needs will be different a few months down the line. Your priorities will be different, as we are always growing and evolving. The goal isn’t to define yourself in rigid terms, but to understand what you need and want at this point in your life.

Have strong boundaries.

Know your non-negotiables in relationships. Things you won’t tolerate. Things you don’t want to compromise on. Things you don’t want in your relationship. And communicate them so your partner knows and respects your limits.

Healthy boundaries will make you feel stronger and more empowered in your next relationship. If you don’t honor your boundaries, you will feel exhausted, overwhelmed, and drained. Healthy boundaries prevent you from losing yourself in love.

Have your own friends.

It’s very easy to get infatuated in a new relationship, get all loved up and forget about the whole world outside. As much as it’s a natural part of every new relationship, don’t forget about your friends. Schedule regular time with them. They’ve been your rock and a sounding board many times, and can be now as well. Don’t limit your life just to your new partner. You need some other perspective.

Have your own life.

Just because you are in a relationship that doesn’t mean you need to give up the things you love doing—even if you feel tempted, especially at the beginning when things are exciting, and you want to spend as much time with the person as possible. It’s important to maintain your normal routine as you can.

Make time for the things you love doing. Make them your priority because they contribute to your happiness, so they are just as important as your relationship. Keep some hobbies you only do on your own or with people other than your partner. Plan some time every week when you do things separately. Schedule solo dates. Cultivate a spiritual practice. Stick to your exercise routine.

Doing things on your own will help you stay connected to yourself and cultivate a sense of self. It will also keep your relationship fresh. No relationship can fulfill all your needs and desires. That is why you need different things in your life, apart from your relationship, to keep you growing and expanding in new directions. Also, the time you spend on your own will help you nurture the relationship with yourself and keep your independence.

Stay true to yourself.

Don’t suddenly change who you are for someone else. For example, don’t suddenly pretend you’re a football lover just because your boyfriend likes football or don’t force yourself to do shopping with your girlfriend just to please her. Be honest with yourself and communicate what you like and what you don’t with your partner.

Also, make some independent decisions. You don’t need to consult your partner about every single decision. Express your opinions. Share your thoughts. Speak your mind. Tell them how you feel. All of these will help your partner to understand you better.

Communicate openly.

Talk about how you feel. Talk about what isn’t working for you. Talk about what you like and dislike. Even tell your new partner that you are afraid of losing yourself in the relationship again. I did and my partner supported me in trying to maintain my own identity. Honest and open communication will only bring your closer. You can only improve a relationship when you know what is not working. So, talk openly!

Stop the over giving and accommodating.

Over giving usually comes from not seeing your own value and seeking approval. We believe the more we give, the more love we will get back from our partner. Unfortunately, it doesn’t work like that. In the long run, it is a sure way to increase resentment and feel taken for granted. And resentment is one of the factors that determines the happiness and longevity of the relationship. So, when you over give, you don’t only risk losing yourself in the relationship but also losing the relationship.

Reflect back on your relationships. How you felt, how you compromised, how you betrayed yourself. Our previous relationships can give us a huge amount of knowledge about ourselves. So, look at the mistakes you have made in the past and learn from them.

Decide what you don’t want to repeat and what you want to do differently in your next relationship. Commit to staying strong and true to yourself. Set the rules which you are going to follow once you meet someone—you can use the ones I created for myself or create your own!

Healthy relationships are created by two strong and complete individuals who can exist without each other.

Healthy relationships are free of co-dependency.

Healthy relationships start from a healthy relationship with yourself. The stronger your relationship with yourself, the lesser the possibility that you will lose the sense of self in your next relationship.

You can build strong foundations now by getting to know yourself, exploring life on your own, and establishing habits which make you happy.

When you feel strong within and when you meet the right person, you will stay grounded throughout the first phase of dating and have a better judgment.

You will keep a strong identity, make better romantic choices, and avoid heartache.

About Aska Kolton

Aska Kolton is the creator of the Dating Detox Revolution. She empowers single women who are exhausted with dating or drained from unfulfilling relationships to take time out to rebuild their self-love and confidence, so they thrive in life and feel happy, whole, and worthy within before they look for love again. You can join her Facebook Group here. Get her "Happy, Whole and Worthy" Audio Guide HERE.

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Jen
Jen

wow I cried as I read this, I felt as if I was re-reading my life a few years ago after a 5yr relationship I lost myself and it took me 3 yrs to figure out what i wanted, who I was again and had to totally kill myself and be reborn. I am 28 now and I feel and think and live my life differently and I am happy with who I am becoming. This is a great article.

Jenny
Jenny

Just wow, I didn’t realise I was ‘that’ kind of woman as much as I do now after reading that. On first reading the header, I laughed ironically then burst into tears at simultaneously realising what it meant for me and at a time when I really needed to hear it. Thank you xx

Katie Schultz
Katie Schultz

This is freakin awesome!! Rang true on so many levels. I’m going to keep this as a reference to keep coming back to. I especially loved “I will love myself more than any man in my life”…seems so basic and simple but it’s pretty profound. Thank you for sharing this <3

Jeremy B
Jeremy B

Girls aren’t the only one who struggle with this. As a guy, I can do the same thing. So much of this has resonated with me and touched upon very deep parts of my lives. Some of these quotes could be taken from my own life. So there are definitely things I need to work on in my life to love myself better and be a healthier version of me. I will definitely use this post as an opportunity to journal and reflect on my own life. This one spoke powerfully to me.

Disha Kohli
Disha Kohli

Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! Just what I needed to read right now. I have done exactly the same things in all my relationships so far, and always ended up hurt and heartbroken. Definitely need to work on myself and learn to love myself better. I am going to save this article and keep coming back to it whenever I find myself drifting away. Thank you! <3

Kathy
Kathy

This spoke to me and is exactly what I’m learning. Such a great article, Aska. You have so much wisdom.

Aska Kolton
Aska Kolton
Reply to  Disha Kohli

Hey Disha, you are not the only one. We need to make mistakes to progress in life and learn. Now you know what doesn’t work and you can change it:-). Join my FB community for extra support;-)

Aska Kolton
Aska Kolton
Reply to  Katie Schultz

you are welcome Katie:) Im glad it resonated with you.

Aska Kolton
Aska Kolton
Reply to  Jeremy B

Thank you Jeremy for letting me know that there are some men out there who need this work too;-) great stuff!

Aska Kolton
Aska Kolton
Reply to  Jenny

sounds like you experienced an awareness shift. It will create shifts in your reality too;-)

Kathy
Kathy

Yes, thank you! 🙂

Aska Kolton
Aska Kolton
Reply to  Kathy

oh, thank you Kathy:-) the wisdom comes from experience and I’ve put myself through a lot in love. I hope you are well?

BJH
BJH

I recently was told goodbye via text message and I have beat myself up constantly for ignoring red flags. I was blown off on Valentine’s day and ghosted for eight days. She called, Apologized and said it was her and not me. I gave her the benefit of the doubt. It happened again and I stayed. Then i noticed she was drinking more and making excuses about not seeing me. She was abused physically and mentally in her previous relationship and I thought I could fix her. I treated her with love, respect and dignity, but it wasn’t enough. I am left brokenhearted and angry at myself for not getting out when I saw her negative behaviors. I also sit here and wonder how can she sleep at night after treating me so badly and not wanting to be with a healthy man. I know that I will never hear from her again, but I pray for her and her son at night. I miss them both eventhough she was dysfunctional. Thanks for a great article.

Jasper B
Jasper B

Thank you for this Aska, I am very lucky to be dating a person who is forgiving and kind. We’re one year in and I’ve totally lost my sense of self. It’s been crushing and has brought so much old pain and doubt to the surface. I’m getting up now to make an inventory using your article. It is either that or say goodbye and I simply can’t sacrifice such a good relationship to my own feelin.

I guess it will be hard to regain my sense of self from within the relationship. If you have any advice on doing that rather than during being single I’d love to hear it.

Best wishes

JB

Aska Kolton
Aska Kolton
Reply to  Jasper B

you can apply many things from this article JB. start spending some time in your own company, explain how you feel to your partner and why you need it. reconnect with some old friends. find some hobbies you can only do on your own. set 15-30 mins every day to reconnect with yourself. meditate. journal. talk to your partner about it. That should keep you busy;-)

Aska Kolton
Aska Kolton
Reply to  BJH

so sorry to hear it BJH. These lessons are hard but they are priceless. You cant save people who dont want to be saved. Next time you will have stronger boundaries and you wont ignore the red flags. Believe me. Ive been there myself.

Jasper B
Jasper B
Reply to  Aska Kolton

Thank you. You are greatly appreciated x

Cole Thow
Cole Thow

Thanks alot for this fantastic article. I had a horrible break up few years ago and it was a very toxic relationship. I feel every single words in this particular article. I still remember the last time I saw him in my life, I was shedding my tears and said: ‘ You have no idea how much I love you, but at the end of the day I love myself the most and I can’t let you keep hurting me this way. I’m slowly getting better and hope I will be myself again one day which I am very sure that will happen soon. God bless.

Susan Nicole Gosper
Susan Nicole Gosper

Thankyou for this article. Unfortunately I was from a domestic violence family so my two biggest relationship role models were a narcissistic emotionally and physically abusive father and a passive, passive aggressive , but unconditonally loving mother. I never learnt the healthy person to be inbetween and i never wanted to “love” like my father. I chose to give and be selfless, to take the fall for my partners, bear their burdens and carry the weight of the relationship for both of us, always accepting their faults and flaws knowing they probably couldnt be any other way and that i had to love them for what they were. These traits learned from not just my mum and dads relationship but growing up having to learn to love them (as an adult).
Ive gone from unloving, uninterested, mostly emotionally unavaliable men …to trying to working towards dating more wholesome people and learning what it is to love without attachment. But even with good people those traits are so i grained and still feel trapped and unsure of why i am so at mercy to my relationships. It has taken me a long time to learn my partners happiness is not my responsibilty. And its not my job to drown myself in their “shit” to the point where i now had “shit” and was behind repair as was the relationship. I never realised my happiness could exists without the codependence i had learnt from my parents. With the help of friends, family and articles like yours im getting the idea of what it means to lose yourself. For a long time i didnt think it applied to me because i had such a busy exciting full life. But what i missed was that i stretch myself in every way. Not just for relationships. I am a slave to my own life at times and as you say i rarely give myself the time to focus on me (not my hobbies or my work. Not relationships) but to feel in the moment, give myself space from everything, give myself importance over the things ” i do” that i think define me and relise i exist outside of allllll of that. Its so much more complicated with you break it down but your article explained it perfectly. Hopefully in time ill have learned to keep myself and take care of myself as no 1 so as i can invite others into my life safely and with joy. Thank you so much.

Paz
Paz

Thank you for your article. I am 38 and have been doing this ‘losing myself’ all my life. I beat myself up as I am such a strong woman in other ways but when it comes to a man I feel that their needs are more important and I excuse unkind behavior. Perhaps mostly in recent years it’s much more difficult to meet a good man so I guess I try to hold on to any form of love I can find. I often feel angry at how easy it seems to be for men to be in a relationship, it’s like they decided they want one and they have one.
I’m going to try my best to follow these suggested steps and break this cycle of loving others first. Thanks again for the article.

Anna Tate
Anna Tate

I feel as if this article is written about me! Everything you wrote was so refreshing and so relatable in all of your experiences, beginning to end. I’ve come to a point where I needed some direction. This article couldn’t come to me at a better time. Thank you!

DAPHNE
DAPHNE

Omg this is literally the best article I’ve read all week. And it came timely too… Just when I needed it. Thank you so much! This is so unbelievably helpful!

PiyUsh SrivAstaVA
PiyUsh SrivAstaVA

It is like you speaking the inner world of me ! What I truly believe in have been broken hearted past 8 years and I am helping stage ! Please write more on how to create a boundary ! Very nice !

Mzlynduh loves herself
Mzlynduh loves herself

Wow this totally make alot of sense. I was taught to do everything for your partner. But lately I been feeling lost. I’m very powerful and fierce but in a relationship I’m the little mouse that never makes a sound, but not anymore!!!!

Loolaa
Loolaa

Aska, This is such amazing and well thought about process.
I know exactly how you feel, because I’ve been in the same boat for 10 years now with 3 children form different fathers.
I’ve noticed I would get into a new relationship with someone because I didn’t want to focus on myself and I realised that the saying is true, you can’t love anyone else, untill you love yourself.
My Mum used to always say this to me, and I just thought it was rubbish, I now know what she truly meant by this.
I am now single and focusing on my 3 beautiful children at this time.
I know one day when the time is right, the man of my dreams will walk in and sweep me away hopefully.
Thank you for giving me some kind of understanding of what I was actually doing wrong.
I do feel more at peice with my decision I’ve read this article.
Thank you so much, you sound like such a beautiful and loving soul.
God bless ❤

Vanilliae
Vanilliae

Thanks for this article, I recognize myself a lot in what you describe. I’m really independent, but damn when I’m in a relationship I feel so vulnerable. I always feel like I’m not enough. My last relationship was the healthiest I’ve had, but I still disappeared and put his need above eveything else. The more I gave, the less he made efforts. Unfortunately, I waited until I was completely drained to start truly establishing boundaries (we were together six years), and ultimately I walked away.

I’m upset and heartbroken, but I remind myself that we both made choices in the relationship, and that in the end, I did what was right… You’re right when you say that the relationship with myself is the more important. In the end, love relationship pass and I’m still myself. I love my projects, my needs are legitimate and I will value them more.

Mara Soul
Mara Soul

Hey Aska. You’re words and solutions are so meaningful. I’ve been going through an identity crisis my whole life. I kept asking myself who am I? Why do I have no sense of self. Last year it all came together. After bringing healthy people into my life and weeks of research, I found out that my mother has overt narcissist personality disorder. A few of my family members also have narcissistic tendencies but they are considered covert narcissists. This disorder is extremely emotionally and psychologically damaging. Like you mentioned, boundaries…. they are non existent with narcissists. Narcissists make you feel like you are worthless and they instill helplessness in their victims. Your article has brought more positive solutions to my problems in discovering who I am. The biggest thing, HOW to fix my identity issues. Thank you. I really appreciate you for your work.

Lauren
Lauren

l knew someone that is currently lost in a relationship he was my friend but not now he is in a serious relationship with this girl it’s not healthy he gave up all his friends for her spends all his free time with her he doesn’t make time for his friends so that’s a problem a big red flag maybe two red flags on one problem let’s just say I have not spoken to this guy in two years about which I’m pretty proud of myself for doing because he has not changed at all he was good at texting but not making time to hang out so that was a red flag too a big one I think it’s a foul on the play

Jsp
Jsp

Hi Aska kolton
I’ve experienced similar situation right from my childhood till the relationship that ended drastically after 7 years.this article removed the feeling of loneliness, as I am going through this moment. I believe this could help the one, who are experiencing relationship troubles and connect each other at the door of mindfulness meditation
BUDDHA🧘‍♀️

Joy Izi
Joy Izi

Reading this piece through and through, it felt like I was reading my own writeup. This is all me. And it breaks my heart just reading ​it. God help me 😭😭

April Grace Sacay
April Grace Sacay

This article helps me to remember that I should love myself more. To prioritize myself in everything. Thank you for reminding me 🫶🏻

Lischen McSpoony
Lischen McSpoony

My ex after was doing this and it completely destroyed our relationship. I encouraged and asked him so many times if the things we are doing are the things he wants, he always agreed and I was so happy, thinking I finally found a person I have so much incommon with. I was truly under the impression that we are two grown ups. Until one day he builded up so much resentment, began an affair and never gave me the chance by talking to me, instead he repeatedly said he has nothing left to give and ghosted me, unable to take any responsibility for his actions. I aussmed he does the things he does for me because he wants to, as an 30 year old women i didnt expect to mind read and i entered the relationship with the expectations, that he will tell me his needs and wants, just as i do it. Often he felt attacked whenever I expressed feedback towards him. Its just not fair to portrait the partner in this article as some sort of demanding, controlling monster, please readjust it. It feels horrible to be on the receiving end. Its not that I asked him to loose himself, I wanted an honest, authentic partner and he presented me a mask of a person that he isn’t and at the end made me responsible for the things i never asked him for.’ Im glad you write articles on how to improve these things

Lori Konosuna >.<

This is very helpful, thank you