CAN LONG-DISTANCE RELATIONSHIPS WORK?
One girl met a wonderful man
at a friend’s wedding, and they have been having a relationship ever since. The
problem is that they live in two different parts of the country, two thousand
miles away from each other. Does their relationship have a chance? How can they
keep it working when they are so far apart?
Of course their relationship has a chance, but since it is a long-distance romance, they have to be aware of the possible problems and do what they can to avoid them. The very same factors that make a long-distance relationship so exciting also make it hazardous.
It’s easy for you to think the
relationship is much better than it is because you don’t spend consistent
quality time together. Your goal becomes trying to see one another
again, rather than really taking a close look at the relationship.
There are three major problems in
long-distance relationships:
1) You don’t get to see what
your partner is really like.
You know that if you have three
days to spend with your lover, you are going to be on your best behavior and so
is he. It’s easy to hide the difficult parts of your personality for seventy-two
hours, and leave feeling wonderful. But you never really get to know one
another, because you don’t see your mate under pressure, in a crisis, when he
is ill, when he is frightened. All of these situations reveal a lot about
someone’s character, an essential part of determining compatibility. You need
consistent time to discover these dimensions of a person.
2) You avoid dealing with
problem areas.
Let’s imagine that you haven’t seen
your long-distance lover in two months, and he’s flown in to spend the weekend
with you. Over dinner that night, he says something that annoys you. Now you
have to make a decision: Do you confront him on what is upsetting you, and risk
ruining your weekend, or do you forget about it? Most people choose to avoid
the confrontation, fearful that by the time they get through the argument and
hurt feelings, half of the weekend will already be over. The problem with
this habit is that you and your partner never learn to problem solve together,
or advance the relationship to deeper levels of communication and harmony. The
unresolved issues and the unexpressed resentments just sit there like Emotional
Time Bombs, waiting to explode. It may look like you have a great relationship
on the surface, but you haven’t allowed it to move through the transition stage
every healthy love affair must experience.
3) You have an unrealistic view
of your compatibility.
Long-distance lovers often don’t
even know how little they have in common because they are too busy entertaining
themselves. If you only have three days with your partner, you will treat it
like a mini-vacation—you’ll spend all your time together; you’ll go out to
restaurants, movies, shows, etc. and avoiding friends and family. This gives
you a very unrealistic picture of your relationship. You may actually enjoy the
excitement of the fun weekend more than you enjoy your partner and not even
know it. Many couples find themselves extremely disappointed when they finally
move to the same city or decide to live together. “It doesn’t feel like it used
to,” they often complain. Of course it doesn’t. It’s not a twenty-four-hour-a-day
party anymore. It’s a real full-time relationship, and if you and your partner
aren’t truly compatible, you’ll find out real fast.
For a long-distance romance to evolve into a healthy, lasting relationship, both partners will eventually have to live in the same place. That’s the only way you can truly know if you are compatible, and develop the level of intimacy you need to sustain your love. But while you’re still apart, the most successful long-distance affairs are those in which the couple treats the relationship like it is a full-time romance.
So:
(1) Don’t try to make every moment
together special, but do normal things together
(2) Don’t try to hide difficult
parts of your personalities, but be yourselves
(3) Don’t edit how you feel, but
allow yourselves to communicate honestly and deal with conflicts as they come up.








