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Advice What are some tips for a long lasting relationship?

M1sterEd

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Wife & I been married 45 years. What makes a long lasting relationship?
Patience
Listening
To them other person's point of view is as valid as your own
When significant other says fuck you..thats not an invitation
Don't interrupt
Let him/her have their space
Encouragement
Work as a team
Share responsibility
Give each other a break
Say the L word (love)
Don't try to be leader in everything.

Got something to share?
 
Generally may be just my experience, and this is only a year into the only healthy relationship I’ve been in..

But touch seems to be extremely important. It’s something I really really struggle with, I could throw a million labels (Autism, Trauma)

But no matter what I’ve learnt at-least with my partner you can explain all you like, and she is so understanding, but still it closes off the two of you in a way. She will still feel it, and so will I.

Although I have to push myself, once past this, there’s a openness and love that comes which grows, through those first touches.

I think sometimes relationships stagnate due to feigned familiarity, people lapse to their perception, and will craft their interaction with a partner.

That may contradict above (as sometimes I have to consciously counter perception through reasoning)

but what I mean is, that people have preconceived notions, and not act or say what wants to come because of fear or this false assumption of familiarity.

A continuous sense of self and with your partner is important, but realising also each day is new, and not a repeat. Not settling into a routine but an exploration. Not just through the body, or conversation but in unison from whatever you do together.

I notice when I lapse to etches of routine and familiarity, I’m more closed of, and feel less wishing to relax into the moment with my partner. My issue.

When I really feel into it, and open, let ourselves be who we were, are but also anew each and everyday, the love magnifies.

No one will ever be perfect, and certainly I won’t. I’m hard on myself, likely to much in a way that causes a blip that inversely worsens my closed offness.

I don’t give up, I love this woman, and I’ve observed the cascading bliss that comes from a genuine effort to keep growing.

Cliche or whatever but a relationship is a flower.

Not a Roman concrete road that will work forever without any further input. (A weird metaphor and stretch but good enough lol)
 
After 30 years, I’ve learned that a strong marriage grows with each person. Embrace change, support each other, and celebrate your differences instead of trying to fix them. You will both evolve, accept this. "When you grow, I grow, we grow!, When you hurt, I hurt, we hurt" Treat marriage as a team, choose kindness every day, laugh together, and never stop choosing each other. You are their cheerleader and the one person they can always count on being there for them, so do it. Your vows are sacred, never forget them. The little daily acts of love and respect are what make a relationship last. Always have a dream planned. could be a vacation, a new house, a paid loan. Live your dreams together making them come true one at a time. Make new dreams.
 
Be honest, don't hide your feelings or hold in resentment, don't entertain thoughts of someone else, these are all high on the list.

Doing all of those things you listed for 45 years is pretty mind boggling, congratulations on your success and hopefully y'all remain happy
 
Don’t cheat.
Communication.
Not forgetting the simple things (the simple things like breakfast in bed, nice massages, making their fave meals, slipping lil love notes their way. It seems a lot of people forget these things and they are important in maintaining a good/healthy relationship cheers
 
Wife & I been married 45 years. What makes a long lasting relationship?
Patience
Listening
To them other person's point of view is as valid as your own
When significant other says fuck you..thats not an invitation
Don't interrupt
Let him/her have their space
Encouragement
Work as a team
Share responsibility
Give each other a break
Say the L word (love)
Don't try to be leader in everything.

Got something to share?
Care if she loves you
Don't steal each other's things
If they are vegan consider converting
Have a job, contribute, care give
Imo man should take out the trash, it's degrading
Use a dish wand, sponges are gross
Have a bathroom where you can most quietly shit
Oh and you might care if they're a fucking orphan even if the relationship is over
Rainbow Six Shrug GIF by G2 Esports
 
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LISTEN to each other.

... Like, REALLY listen. Don't dismiss your partner when they need to talk about something, no matter how insignificant it seems to you. Allow differences of opinion, without immediate reaction.
 
Wife & I been married 45 years. What makes a long lasting relationship?
Patience
Listening
To them other person's point of view is as valid as your own
When significant other says fuck you..thats not an invitation
Don't interrupt
Let him/her have their space
Encouragement
Work as a team
Share responsibility
Give each other a break
Say the L word (love)
Don't try to be leader in everything.

Got something to share?
Really good sex and often.
 
Oh shoot 45 years --- that is slightly longer than I have been alive.

I have only been in "long term relationships" so I figured I may have something but 12yrs and like 7yrs are not really in the same ballpark.

Do small random kind things. You should be way past the 'thats corny' barrier so I would think any gesture would be appreciated and a reminder that you think about your partner. ( I admit I'm out of my depth here )

Sorry --- My ma had a 35 yr marriage (Before pops passed) -- "Keep each other safe, don't go to bed angry" were here shout outs.
 
Full transparency agreement in the beginning with discussion about our terms of agreement, terms of disagreement, and establishing boundaries that we both clearly see and understand.
Within those is the core principle of Love in a relationship, sounded by a great many of things.
We agree to speak rationally at discourse should there be any among the records of transparency from the beginning to find a mutual resolve.
Future planning and talking points with that are also among those.
The reason I use this process is because it helps come up with solutions to conflict without escalating unless absolutely forced to.

Date your partner.
Even if it's cheap dates, the point isn't the price, the point is to have a good time together conversationally and bond.
Small sentimental moments are what make the biggest differences in the long-run.
 
Shared values, regular communication including honesty and transparency, team work, quality time together, compatible conflict styles.

Shared values is #1. If you don't have that then there can be no foundation.

Also important and often overlooked, is the simple willingness to be in an LTR and not give up easily. I've had times when things seemed to align but after the first minor disagreement the dude fucked off. I suppose it did weed out the weaklings though.
 
The "other" is always right. Even if they ain't they are til they figure it out for themselves.
Not saying be a rug but be big enough to eat shit when necessary (not literally ffs - unless that's your thang no judgements... lol)
 
After living in close quarters ( an Rv) from June 1, 2024-September 30, 2025 we are finally in our house after a pickup crashed through the dining and laundry room walls May 3, 2024. Living with 4 dogs and each other for that length of time was extremely stressful, I don't think could have made it without prior camping experience, however, our relationship is on the mend now things are getting back to normal...whatever that is.
We are not swearing as much at each other as before, the six of us lives were confined to the living area, the bedroom and a small bathroom in the Rv. Now we can stretch out, in the house we can go an entire day without crossing paths if we wanted to. Absence makes the heart grow fonder as opposed to being in each other's face 27/7.
 
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