0

How To Remove Fairytale Logic From Your Sound Relationship House

Fairytale stories give us faulty logic about relationships. It's not about finding purpose in someone else. It's about loving yourself.

Let’s talk about self-judgment in the realm of relationships and examine its connections to vulnerability and trust.

Fairytale logic

Those who seek happy, healthy romantic relationships must first love themselves. It causes them to take a look at their dreams. Here’s why:

Fairytale stories often have an unintended side-effect. Storybooks shape expectations of reality and warp our personal narratives.

An inability to see yourself or your partner clearly poses a very real threat to your personal lives.

Fairytale logic leaves you suspended in a state of anticipation. There, your only job is to construct elaborate fantasies of romantic resolution, redemption, and bliss. This bliss arrives as soon as you finally come into contact with another who judges you worthy.

As long as you see yourself in this way—in need of universal and unconditional approval by others, in need of perfection, in need of “another half”—your relationship with yourself and anyone else will suffer.

Luckily, awareness of this phenomenon gives you the power to avoid it!

Belong to yourself first

Understanding that neither happiness nor strong relationships are built through seeking others’ approval, you can make a different choice.

You can make a commitment to belong to yourself first. Take back agency and follow your own dreams. Commit to treating yourself with compassion and acceptance despite human imperfections. After all, we are consistency-loving creatures, and the way we see ourselves roughly translates into the way we perceive others and their judgments. You can even get to know yourself and answer the questions in the Love Maps exercise!

Having done this, you can trust yourself to do the same for others. You can commit to treating your partner with compassion, learning about their vulnerabilities, their values, and their dreams, building strong Relationship Houses, and enjoying the consequences of acting with purpose and integrity.

Vulnerability and trust

By making these choices, confronting misconceptions, and getting to know each other more deeply, you are better equipped to build strong, healthy bonds. As Dr. John Gottman explains, the presence or absence of trust in your relationships may have a greater literal impact on your life than you ever imagined:

For everybody, a stable, trusting relationship is linked to relatively high survival rates from cardiovascular disease, cancer, surgery, and other illnesses. Love increases the odds of living a long life and having good health… [High trust] partners benefit each other by ‘co-regulating’ their physiologies. Put simply, they calm each other when they are unable to calm themselves.

Their willingness to share vulnerabilities with each other strengthens the couple’s bond and enhances their physical health. Pretty ideal, huh? And it’s better than any fairytale.

Share this post:

By: Ellie Lisitsa

Ellie Lisitsa is a staff writer at The Gottman Institute and a regular contributor to The Gottman Relationship Blog. Ellie is pursuing her B.A. in Psychology with an emphasis on Cognitive Dissonance at Reed College in Portland, Oregon.

Recommended products

$30.00

Improve your relationship in 30 days! Backed by over 50 years of research, the 30 Days to a Better Relationship challenge will help you reconnect with your partner and bring more positivity into your relationship. The tools and exercises, delivered once a day for 30 days by email, build on one another and take five minutes or less to complete.

 

Related posts

A young couple is having a serious conversation as they plan their future together.

5 Premarital Conversations to Help You Sustain Love

Katie Golem

Engagement is such an exciting time, but you should have these five premarital conversations before you tie the knot. ...

Read More

Couple arguing with one partner rolling eyes- a sign of contempt according to Dr. John Gottman.

The Four Horsemen: Contempt

Ellie Lisitsa

Contempt is the worst of the four horsemen. It is the number one predictor of divorce, but it can be defeated. ...

Read More

A woman in therapy getting help without feeling ashamed.

Therapy Isn’t Something to Be Ashamed Of

Jessica Grace

Admitting you need help is not always easy, but everyone needs help sometimes, and reaching out for help is a courageous ...

Read More

Couple having a conversation to increase connection.

How To Improve Your Relationship in 24 Hours

Kimberly Panganiban

Here are 10 research-based tips to improve your relationship in 24 hours. ...

Read More

Couple working together in the kitchen

What Do Trust and Commitment Look Like in a Relationship?

Mary Beth George

Trust and commitment are built every time we choose our partner. ...

Read More

Couple happily connecting over coffee.

4 Tips to Build Everyday Trust in Relationships

Brittini Carter

Be a partner who is reliable and accountable ...

Read More

Sign up for the email newsletter you are most interested in and start your Gottman journey today!