How to Find True Love
While “How to Get Over a Breakup” was the number one requested article topic I’ve written on, it’s not surprising that a close second is the topic of How to Find True Love. Here’s an email from one reader:
“I’ve realized that one of my main goals is to find a worthwhile and long term relationship. I noticed you have entries on how to keep a relationship and on how to end a relationship so would you consider writing an entry on what you perceive to be the best way to find a worthwhile relationship. How to avoid making the same mistakes, overcoming fears, keeping up motivation after failure etc.”
– Gary (Dublin, Ireland)
Regardless of our culture, our level of education or economic status, at the depth of all of us are the same desires- to love, to be loved, and to be happy.
Of course we could add other desires to this list, like money and wealth and fancy things, but when you drill into these things, the reason for wanting them is so that we can appear more desirable, and will hopefully be loved and accepted.
If love is something so fundamentally important to us, then why is it that we have so many issues and misunderstandings in the area of finding it? I think the answer is simple, that most of us have never been educated in this fundamental area of our development. Chances are, you didn’t grow up with parents who were relationship experts, and we certainly didn’t study relationships in our high school curriculums. For most of us, it’s been an adventure in trial and error and learning through pain and heart-break. But is there an easier way?
In light of Valentine’s Day approaching this week, I am going to touch on one of my favorite topics of all time: finding love.
Personal Story
I spent most of my time in my late teens and early twenties on finding love, or so I thought at the time. In actuality I was seeking self-acceptance, approval and identity. I was deeply insecure and had a great fear of being alone. I jumped from relationship to relationship, all the while searching for myself. But the act of seeking self-worth through my external relationships took me further from that which I longed.
I’ve always been an ambitious person and in addition to my job, I’ve often worked on side projects and other interests. But whenever I found myself in a relationship, I would drop everything that was important to me and would focus exclusively on the person I was dating. You see, I didn’t respect myself, and I thought that finding someone to love me was more important than anything else. During these time-consuming romantic courtships, I was distancing myself further from my passions, my purpose and my true self.
Looking back, I had entered many of these relationships out of infatuation or loneliness. It was the fear of abandonment or the guilt of obligation that kept me in these relationships. I often got into and remained involved in relationships for the wrong reasons. I would convince myself that no one else out there would love me, and so I settled. Despite my surface appearance, I was deeply unhappy.
My freedom day came roughly two years ago. In a state of deep depression over unsatisfied relationships and through a growing despise of my gross dependencies on them, a miraculous understanding came to me and I experienced a moment of clarity. At that moment I made a vow to end the pain. (Read my detailed journal entry from that day here.)
I started to devour as much material and wisdom as I could find on the topic of relationships, and studied (and continue to study) with relationship expert Alison Armstrong. I have come a long way from being that insecure little girl, and have learned much about myself in the process. Most importantly I discovered that once I started to truly love myself, and to focus on my own inner peace and wellness, true love came looking for me.
Problematic Relationship Patterns
Let’s first look at some common relationship problems and why many romantic partnerships do not work out.
1. Ego, Fear, & Emotional Insecurities
As with material possessions or professional achievements, relationships give our ego a method by which to identify who we are to the outside world. The problem is that we attach so much of our identity to the external appearance of our relationships that we lose touch with the parts of ourselves that are wise and conscious. The attachment to this false identity leads to a feeling of desperation rather than fulfillment. After all, without the relationship, or the job, or whichever other false identity we have chosen, who would we be?
Besides the ego identification, it’s easy to develop a dependency on companionship. That independent person that we once were starts to evaporate. Our mind becomes fogged and as our self-identification begins to attach itself to the other person, unconsciously or consciously, we become afraid to lose that person. We become dependent on that person and fearful of loneliness.
Out of our emotional insecurities, we start to become needy and to seek out validation from our partner. So, instead of focusing on the celebration of love and partnership, it becomes a game of how to protect ourselves from loss.
2. Communication of Needs
Out of a desire to avoid appearing needy and out of a fear of losing our partner, we start to filter what we say. In doing so, we do not communicate our needs clearly, openly or bravely. We somehow become convinced that our partner will magically know what to do to fulfill our needs. When our needs are not met, we secretly blame the other person and begin to resent them. When we are unhappy, our partner will pick up on the cues, and in turn, secretly resent us, thus starting a vicious cycle in the silent destruction of a romantic partnership.
So much of what needed to be said was not said, and bad feelings are bottled up and start to accumulate for both parties. Have you ever had a friend come to you and complain about all of the things they are unhappy about with their partner? Those are the kinds of things they should be telling their partner, if they actually want a change.
Worse yet is when one partner openly communicates their needs only to find that the other party is simply not listening, or does not fully acknowledge what was said, or makes them feel guilty for having those needs.
3. Bad Fit and Settling by Default
Deep down, we are all really good people. But this doesn’t mean that any combination of two good people will make a good partnership. There is such thing as a bad fit, and it is okay to admit it.
The best fits are ones where the most important values for both people are met. They must have life goals that align with one another and have a mutual attraction, understanding, and level of respect for each other. Both people must be committed to making the partnership their top priority.
Sometimes, even when we realize that our relationship isn’t a good fit, we justify staying in it with what seem like logical reasons. We may feel that we won’t find another person who accepts and loves us as much as the current partner. Or we may be afraid to be alone, so we simply settle by default. Each time we are reminded of the bad fit, we brush it under the rug and distract ourselves with some other thought.
We may feel that we are doing a service to the other person by staying in the relationship, but in reality, we are hurting them by not being honest with them and ourselves. And we are accumulating bad feelings and bad energy in our inner space.
Who Is Your Ideal Mate?
We all have a rough idea of what our perfect partner is like: beautiful, or smart, or rich, or educated, or tall, or petite, or pale, or dark, or handsome, or fit, with this car, or with that house or whatever else that strikes our fancy.
Photo: Emily Helen, The Best Kauai Wedding Photographer
The problem comes when we find ourselves in a relationship and we are constantly comparing our partners with this conjured-up ‘perfect’ person. When that happens, we stop appreciating our partner for all the beautiful qualities they do possess.
The truth is this perfect person does not exist. More importantly, we may not actually need all of these qualities in a partner to be extraordinarily happy.
What we need is to identify the most important qualities that we must have in order to feel satisfied and fulfilled (more on creating a must-have list below). By not having identified the must-have qualities in our chosen life partner, we end up settling, and since the person cannot give us the things we truly need, we start to resent them. This will snowball into larger issues.
For example, if height is something that is really important to you, and your partner does not meet that height requirement, regardless of how much they try, they will never grow taller or shrink shorter, and this will bug you and affect your union.
In life, we will get random results if we have not specified what we want. Identifying and understanding what it is that we need in a relationship, allows us to set clear intentions, and in doing so, moves us closer to realizing our intended desires.
Identifying Must-Haves
Here’s a very affective exercise that I picked up from Alison Armstrong that will help you discover and identify the must-have qualities in your partner. I highly recommend taking at least 10 minutes to go through this, even if you are presently in a relationship.
Grab a pen and some paper. Find a place where you won’t be interrupted. Turn off the phone, the TV, the computer.
Ready? Here we go:
Step 1. The Perfect Image
On a blank piece of paper, list out all the qualities that your ideal partner will have. What kind of characteristics and qualities do you truly desire? Be creative and open. Use a bullet pointed list, not sentences. List out as many as possible, and use as many pieces of paper as needed.
Be as specific as you can. Get into details like physical attributes, values, lifestyle, views on money, spiritual beliefs, personality traits, hobbies, abilities, age, habits, profession, tastes, etc.
For physical attributes, include things like height, weight, body type, hair color, ethnicity, or anything that you would want if you had your choice in creating your ideal partner.
Step 2. Minimum Requirements (MR)
Minimum requirements are qualities you need from your partner, and without them, you will feel unwell or unsatisfied.
Go through each quality from step 1 and test it with this question:
“Would I rather be alone than be with a person who wasn’t [insert quality]?”
If the answer is yes, mark MR next to the quality, otherwise, leave it blank.
Don’t worry if your list sounds superficial or ridiculous. One MR item on my list is “Great dancer with rhythm and groove”, which may seem like a trivial or petty quality for some people, but is a deal breaker for me.
Step 3. Screening MRs
Now, filter through the MR list, for each item with the MR label, ask the following question:
“If a person had all the other qualities on my MR list, am I willing to let this quality go?”
If the answer is yes, cross out that MR.
The Selection Process
I believe it is crucial to identify and clearly communicate our relationship expectations and personal timelines early on in the dating phase. So often, we get into relationships with silent expectations of a future event that is important to us, thinking that our partner will come around to it when the time is right, only to find out several years later that things will never work out the way we expected. Some common unspoken issues of this nature revolve around marriage, children, financial goals, and even which city you settle down in.
First, be clear with yourself on these types of issues. Understand what kind of commitment you are looking for in a relationship, how you feel about children and where you plan to live. There are no wrong answers, but be honest and specific about what you are looking for in the current stage of your life.
Next, tell yourself that on all of your first dates, you will be clear with people about your relationship expectations and timeline, if any. It can be a scary and awkward experience at first, but it will become less of a nerve racking experience over time. And just think of all the time and emotional energy you are saving by being open from the get-go, instead of setting silent expectations that can lead to disappointment.
Photo by Mike BG
On my first dates with any guy, I found that telling them my expectations was pretty nerve-racking, especially for men I was really attracted to, since they could potentially run the other way. I would begin to tell myself that this would be too much of a shocking conversation for most people to handle on a first date. Why not just wait until date 5 or 6, when I know that he really likes me? The answer is that by then I would have emotionally attached myself to this person and would then be in a situation where I would either have to settle for less than what I wanted, or break it off. It would have been much better to have learned on the first date whether or not we were a good fit.
Personally, I was looking for a husband and to start a family. I would tell them that I wanted to get married before I turned 30 and to start making babies within two years of getting married. Oh, and I would also like to have two children. “Are you okay with that timeline?” I would ask them. The men who were okay with my timeline stayed and the ones who weren’t went away. No hurt feelings and everyone wins.
Many of us have latched onto this concept of finding “the one” person out there for us, and so we linger in every relationship that pops up, fearing that we might miss out on “the one”. Think about the fact that there are 6.8 billion people on the planet. Doesn’t it make more sense that “the one” is more likely to be “the one-hundred-thousand”? I genuinely believe that there are a countless number of people out there who will be great fits for us, and it’s just a matter of filtering through potential partners until we find one of them.
As such, communicating your desires, needs and expectations, ahead of time, becomes crucial. For example, if having children is of utmost importance to you and your partner is set against having kids, then likely the relationship will not last and both parties are wasting time in the process.
Dating shouldn’t be about settling out of a fear that a better fit might not come along. I believe that dating is about identifying the qualities you need in a person and in a relationship, and then “filtering” through as many people as it takes until you find someone who possesses all the important qualities that you need.
Have you ever had the experience of shopping for a car, and found that once you targeted in on the exact make, model, and color you wanted, you began to see that car everywhere? From my personal experience, I found that once I became clear with what I needed and expected in a partner and in a relationship, more eligible bachelors who had those qualities started showing up in my life.
Love Yourself First
As I mentioned in the article How to Overcome Breakups, the art of loving yourself is not only important in the healing process from love lost, but also in finding love. I believe that we cannot truly allow others to love us, until we first love ourselves.
Another way of looking at this is to imagine each person in a relationship as a wooden stick. If one person is independent and the other is dependent, it’s like one stick is standing perfectly vertical and the second stick is leaning against the vertical stick. If the vertical stick moves horizontally, the leaning stick will fall. When two people are both independent and joined together through love, it’s like two sticks standing vertically. When they join together, they become a larger and stronger stick and they become interdependent and stronger. If one stick moves horizontally, the other stick will move with it.
Practice loving yourself: take yourself on a date, do things that please and relax you, spend quality time with yourself, write love letters to yourself, practice saying and feeling “I love you” in the mirror.
Photo: Nathiya Prathnadi
Additionally, the practice of loving yourself makes you a more attractive person to the outside world.
When you truly love yourself, you will exude and spread a magnetic energy to those around you. Before you know it, you will be surrounded by those attracted to you for who you really are.
Forgiving Our Ex’s
When we hold onto unresolved issues from previous relationships, they become emotional baggage in our future relationships. I’ve found forgiving your ex’s to be a liberating exercise that contributes to the wellbeing of yourself and your future relationships.
A few years ago I sat down with, or phoned, several of my ex-boyfriends, and apologized for hurt feelings I may have caused, and expressed and forgave them for my own hurt feelings from the relationship. This experience brought closure to those relationships, removed the baggage, and allowed new friendships to develop.
A Few Words On Sex
For those of us who are sexually active, I would like to point out one thing. When you have an orgasm, there is a chemical change that takes place in your body. In particular, your body releases a hormone called oxytocin that binds you emotionally to the other person. For a man, the effects of this hormone last for 48 hours. For a woman, the effects last for 14 days.
This explains why, after having sex with someone who is clearly a bad fit for us, we can end up in a relationship with them, even if it’s for a short amount of time. Far too often, these relationships can turn into long term relationships that ultimately end badly.
It is recommended by relationship experts to not have sex during your dating and selection process unless you are okay with being emotionally bound to that person or having that person be emotionally bound to you for 14 days. Alison recommends not having sex with someone unless they fit all the qualities on your MR list.
For more information on this topic, read chapter four of “The Female Brain“, by Dr. Louann Brizendine.
Parting Words
People often ask, “Where should I go to find this person?” The logical answer provided by most is to go to places where such a person would hang out, but this practice can often lead to disappointment. My suggestion is to go through the exercises above to gain clarity on what you need and the types of relationships you want. Then spend time practicing the art of self-loving, while being open to the idea of your ideal mate entering your life. I would not actively seek it. Instead spend your efforts on self development.
As with all things of the heart, there is an ingredient of magic in finding love. There are no coincidences. Everything happens for a reason. Love is beautiful and unpredictable. The best thing we can do is to start to become the most outstanding person possible. The universe will know when we are ready, and when we are, true love will happen, unexpectedly.
* Got a love story you want to share? Share your thoughts and stories with us in the comment section. See you there!
okay…now I have been hearing this nonsense for years and you know what? Now I need to speak up because people need to know the truth!
I am so tired of these “articles” I don’t know what to do (sigh).
The truth is not that if you love yourself someone will come into your life. Life doesn’t work that way nor should it. If that was the case, a heck of a lot more people would be alone.
The truth is…get ready for it…is that if you have access to a wide range of people and they have access to you, you increase your odds of finding someone, loving yourself or not.
The chief ingredient is being social. You can be a complete sarcastic sourpuss and if you are in a group you are much more likely to find someone to be in a relationship with. And even be happy with!
Every pot, as my mother says, has a lid; some pots remain without lids for years but eventually they get covered with something. Yes, even if you’re a miserable, sarcastic, ironic, depressing sack of ^&%$#@, you can find love. I have seen this with my own eyes and sometimes I can’t even believe it. But yet, there for the grace of God…
Life is too random and chaotic to fit these perfect “cliches” about how to find someone. If you all thought about it, you’d realize the way you “found” someone or were “found” wasn’t so perfect either. But we as humans tend to make neat patterns out of events that are not so neat. We should stop but we can’t help it. It is part of being human.
I hope that the person reading the previous posts and trying not to throw up now knows he/she has a post that supports their viewpoint.
You’re welcome.
And STOP buying self-help books, they only “help” the author and waste trees.
they say dont seek for love for it will find you,it doesnt work for me. in my 22 years of existence in this world i got tired of waiting.whenever im outside i always felt the emptiness inside of me, but after reading your article i am in a way enlightened. thank you….. and oh i can not help myself but wish that “someone out there will find me”. :)
Tina,
I’ve been reading your blog for over a year now, and I love all of your posts, but I have to be honest and say this one sucks.
Your list theory tries to turn finding love into science. The no sex until someone someone fits all your MR thing sounds like a recipe for a pretty boring sex life, and the statement of intention (“are you ok with that timeline”) on the first date just sounds creepy. Like really creepy.
To be totally honest, even if your ‘timeline’ fit my plans perfectly, I’d think you were off your head for coming out with that on the first date. You see – one of the things I look for in a girl is someone who is well balanced and socially well adjusted – and asking a question like that on the first date would certainly suggest to any potential suitor that you’re not!
Yes, love yourself. The rest of this is only great if you want to scare off any decent guys who might come into your life.
believe in ur self!!!!
As life is all about moving on and if hurdles dont come in the path of our life than how we will improve our capabilities and how we will learn to live throughtout!!!!!!
hi im 26 years old,i loved someone and we have relationship but when i said to him i take a pill for my stress he left me.he thoght that im mad.also with this pill i cant become pregnance.i am disappointed. i m alone.what should i do??
I agree with much of what you wrote initially, that you shouldn’t attach yourself to the external appearance of your relationship. It only leads to depression. (btw – I see we’ve read some of the same spiritual and motivational authors: Tolle, Robbins, Millman, Gladwell, The Secret)
But you then seem to contradict that with your listing specific details of what you want in your partner. Isn’t that determining a manifest form to which you want to attach yourself?
Have you read Florence Scovel Shinn’s “The Game of Life and How to Play it?” She wrote back in the 1920’s, and she reminds us to focus on the feelings we want to experience, and let the universe manifest forms for us. Those forms may not always be what we thought ahead of time.
For instance – why do you have a dealbreaker that your partner has to be able to dance well? What’s the corresponding feeling you hope to experience? What if you find this dancing partner, but then he loses his legs in a freak accident. Won’t that mess up your attachment? Won’t those feelings of well-being crash into depression?
I can see how your method of clearly identifying the forms you want will lead you to find those forms everywhere. But I think you are setting yourself up for new attachments in your life.
Hi Tina —
You say:
For a man, the effects of this hormone last for 48 hours. For a woman, the effects last for 14 days.
You should also note that different people have different oxytocin receptor subtypes, and different levels of hormone in the blood after sex. The hormone acts in various ways, including modulating activity in the prefrontal cortex, which in turn seems to decrease your ability to critically analyze / see faults in a lover. It’s not good nor bad, just a feature of our physiology.
Some men (myself included) don’t really get this strong oxytocin effect. I gather this from talking with my friends – some of them were commenting how intense the connection feels after sex, whereas I usually feel like … eating breakfast. That said, I don’t feel like I’m missing anything; I love women a lot! And ‘hormonal connection’ is not synonymous with ’emotional connection’ or ‘happiness’.
Thank you for the blog, have fun, and beautiful wedding pics you have here :-)
T
To me you hit the nail in the head in the beginning of your article; Your parents probably weren’t relationship experts, and you didn’t study relationships at school. That is a real problem. We DON’T KNOW what we want when we go out into the world to look for love. We have ideas about those grandiose love affairs of the movies, but what about real life? What happens after the boy gets the girl and all the drama is over? How do you actually BE happy after you find the one you’re looking for? To most of us, it is the thrill of the chase rather than actually wanting the relationship, and the biggest rush isn’t love, but the eternal question of will he confirm that I’m worth loving or will he not? When he does, it’s a big buzz for about a week, but by the following weekend we need a new fix… Thinking we want a relationship with this guy, but in reality we just want a validation of acceptance on his part.
This was an amazing article, and I stumbled upon it at the perfect time. Thank you so much!
i love her much more and the reason behind that is she is beautiful good behavour and lovely girls
Love it, good work Tina.
Thank you so much! I am having relationship problems at the moemnt and reading this helped a lot! thanx
Dear Tina,
Thanks for the article. I definitely am dependent on the significant other for self-worth. Which perhaps is funny to think that way because I have so much to offer (committed, compassionate, doctor, artist, rock climber, surfer, multi-cultural, etc.); however, I do put my life on the backseat for every girl of my interest. And worse of all, I seem to only find girls afar interesting while girls near me the opposite. After reading your article, I believe my image of the perfect match may be too unrealistic = me never happy with the girl nearby. I instead seek out a girl afar, which allows for me to fill in the mystery of her = make her into my perfect desire. And I know that even any girl near or far will not match what I had conjured up. And so you are correct in your article on this matter, but I fear my old habit will die hard. I feel like I am myself my own patient. I hope I can eventually break this habit. Either way, I will stop looking for the girl, near or far. My career and everything must come first. And I hope what people say is true. That love will appear when least expected.
hi tina can i have your email so i can ask you a few questions please ?
I want to thank you very much for this article site.Infact am back on my fit to love myself more than ever before looking back to love other people in my life.I truelly believe that there is time for evberything which i believe that one day by the HOOK am going to come across the right person who can easily understand and truelly love me for who i am.I find it hard to love again but with all due of respect i have for LOVE am going to give my heart again one day.Time is what we have to look forward to.Love is full of happiness and joy may everyone surely come across it one day through the hands of our endouring father lord.AMEN. By Baaba Jamal (Alias Armsstrong)
great !!!! thanks for giving me such agreat advice to become a extraorinary persone and now I will do same and i will get my true love !!!!! If there is some beautyful girl who know actualy that what is true love can contect me on my number !!!! from India you can call me at this number 00380936649231 !!!!!! remember one thing that I want to marry an angel !!!!!!!!
Love so much to the article!! amazing! Thank so much. I will 26 years soon. This article help me much to get my soulmate.
They say the key to the heart is good cooking. So I have come up with a game plan for the perfect romantic dinner for any occasion. Quick and easy and you can say you did it on your own. For the guys out there trying to land that special girl then follow this step by step. This should keep you in good favor with the particular female and if you’re in the dog house it sure as hell will get you out of it.
Beautiful insight. I was enraptured, almost having found a key to a door ive been knocking for quite a while.
How does one find love when she has never been asked out once in 37 years of existence on the planet? I’ve tried online dating and ended up with not one communication.
It hurts to think not one person of the opposite sex has ever found me desirable or wanted to be with me, though my heart is filled with love and I have so much to give.
The relationship experts never seem to answer that question.