Relationship Advice: How to Build Trust

There is plenty of relationship advice being put out there regarding building trust in relationships. Most of it is true and helpful, but some of it won’t do you any good.

So what’s one relationship advice you should trust?

A lot of people in relationships or marriages say that they want to be surprised, they want spontaneity, they don’t want to be stuck in a rut or a routine where everything happens the same way at the same time. And although this is true enough, they also don’t want to be surprised by a sudden change in your behavior, especially when they don’t expect it from you at all.

Here is one piece of relationship advice that will be beneficial: Be consistent.

Your partner wants to think that he or she knows you and knows what you will do. Your partner wants you to be consistent in your actions, your feelings, your behavior, your treatment of him or her, and everything else. Your partner wants to be able to trust you to react or behave in a certain way even when he or she is not around.

Sudden changes in these things, even tiny things like losing weight, dressing differently, acting differently, having new friends who he or she has never met, showing interest in things that you never cared for before – these little things tend to cause suspicions and doubts that lead to your partner suspecting you of things that may or may not be happening.

You may think that being consistent is bad relationship advice because it means being predictable and boring, which is something that everyone does not want to be, especially in a relationship. But consistency doesn’t always have to mean being predictable, and being predictable doesn’t always mean boring. Be spontaneous, be surprising, be impulsive. Avoid making routines when it comes to your relationship. Keep up the spark, try out new things, go to new places. But remember to do all of that consistently.

Video: Can a Marriage Survive Infidelity?

Video: Can A Marriage Survive Infidelity?

Overcoming infidelity takes a lot of work.

According to the video, there are five questions you should ask yourself to find out if your marriage can survive:

1. Do you have children?
2. Have the good times outweighed the bad
3. Do you have common interests besides sex?
4. Can you both truly forgive?
5. Can trust be restored?

What would Dr. Huizenga disagree with in this video? Please leave your comments below.

Infidelity and Toleration Awareness

I asked my Newsletter readers to list the top 5 things they tolerate or put up with as they face infidelity.

Writing down, putting a name on your turmoil and fears often is a beginning step in creating emotional distance from the pain and then initiating the process of eliminating those tolerations and beginning the infidelity healing journey.

Here are some responses to the question:

>>>>>secret ‘business’ relationship which is not only business; betrayal; insensitivity

>>>>>hiding the mobile phone late home seeing the guilt on his face when he comes home and has spoken to her making excuses to see her

>>>>>her leaving the house whenever she wants Locked cell phone Unwilling to talk Denial No sex

>>>>>1. I am tolerating him continuing to talk to his women he’s had past affairs with. One he emails and the second he continues to work with at his place of employement. 2. Dishonesty. 3. His lack of being able to be sincere or showing his ability to come across as remorseful. 4. Conversations that hurt my self-esteem that are mean or hurtful. 5. Staying in a relationship based on what has or I feel has become stagnant or detached and I simply live day to day in a life that seemingly has little if no meaning.

>>>>>lying, sex with others, cell phone, living in two separate states