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ADDICTED
TO
LOVE
"Might as well face it,
you're addicted to love..." -
Robert Palmer
Can you be addicted to love?
Anything in bloated portions can be dangerous, even something as wonderful as a
good relationship. Some people have stayed in a relationship until it literally
killed them, just for love. Take the short quiz below, as it illustrates many of
the signs and symptoms of love gone bad.
If seven or more of the
following describe you, the danger of love addiction is very real.
You:
-
come
from a family in which emotional needs were not met;
-
assumed
a caretaker/pleaser role to gain approval;
-
are
attracted to people who don't treat you well;
-
find
loving, kind, stable people boring;
-
put
forth over 50% of the effort, or take over 50% of the responsibility;
-
are
very tolerant of others and spend a long time hoping for something
different;
-
make
excuses for his/her behavior, holding out for the way it used to be, or
could be;
-
have
a low self-image: you believe you have to earn happiness;
-
are
terrified of abandonment and being alone;
-
control
or manage your partner's life in an effort to help him/her;
-
focus
on others, thereby avoiding personal responsibility;
-
have
other addictive tendencies: overeating, too much TV, working too much, etc.;
-
fear
disapproval so much you rarely say 'no', or express your true opinion for
fear of displeasing or losing your partner.
Sternberg
(1988) identified ten indicators of healthy love.
As you read over the following list, keep your marriage and other
personal relationships in mind, but also asses your professional liaisons as
well.
Successful
partners:
-
do
not take their relationship for granted;
-
make
their relationship an important priority;
-
actively
seek to meet each other's needs;
-
know
when and when not to change in response to the other;
-
value
themselves;
-
love
each other, not their idealization of each other;
-
tolerate
what they cannot change;
-
are
open with each other;
-
make
good times together and grow through the bad ones;
-
do
unto each other as they would have the other do unto them.
As you have been reading this column, rivers and streams are slowly
eroding mountains of solid rock. But you would have great difficulty detecting
the process because of its gradual, quiet destruction. Similarly, relationship
addiction slowly erodes intimacy by imposing unhealthy demands, crossing various
boundaries, and ignoring vital information.
Contact Johntz Presentations today
and
put PsychTools to work for your organization's
success.
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