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The Best Relationship Advice Ever

Posted: 06/08/11 05:09 PM ET

Recently I read a great interview with Dan Savage right here on The Huffington Post. He's the dating advice columnist and gay rights advocate who started the "It Gets Better" Project, a truly remarkable, brilliant and life-saving endeavor. The interview is fascinating and inspiring, and I recommend it, but I'll cut to the chase: toward the end of the interview, Savage gives, causally, the best piece of relationship advice for anyone -- gay, straight, young, old, married, single... you get the idea.

His interviewer, Joshua Kors, mentions his own frustration with dating. Will Kors ever meet the right woman and stop making the same mistakes?

Savage offers this piece of advice:

I think the best thing for you to do is just live your life. Live a life that's worth living, one where you do what you want to do, pursue your passions. That way, if you meet someone, they'll be joining a life that's already really good. And if you don't meet anyone, you can still look back at the end and say, "You know what: I lived a really great life."

Kors says, "Makes sense."

Savage continues:

Keep going on dates. And don't get bitter, either about women or the dating process. ... Life doesn't owe you anything, and I think it's up to all of us to go out and create a fulfilling life for ourselves. Like, my husband Terry, he left the house an hour ago. We have a life together. But if he never comes back, I still need to have something here, a life of my own, one that's fulfilling in itself.

There it is, folks, in a nutshell, the best (and often hardest to listen to and actually live) dating and relationship advice ever.

And it's quite possibly the secret to life.

We must not allow ourselves to be completely defined by our relationships, by our point in space and time only relative to someone else's point in space and time. Oh, how I wish I could go back to my 24-year-old self, knock the Cosmopolitan out of her hand, shake her silly head vigorously, and yell, "There is more to life than boys! Really! Take some of that energy you're wasting on them and concentrate on you! Your dreams and goals, you silly nitwit! (And why are you wearing that?!)"

When I think of all the time I spent pursuing or worrying about being pursued, or flirting with guys and getting them to pursue me, all so that I could immediately lose interest, or have my heart broken, or agonize over relationships, or wish I was single when I wasn't, or wish I was part of a "whole" when I wasn't -- aughhh!

That's all I can say: aughhh.

And now, when I see my single friends, or my younger friends and sisters, and how much time and energy they devote to their boyfriends, girlfriends or lack thereof (and how many Facebook status updates have to do with their boyfriends, girlfriends or lack thereof), I want to tell them the same thing (minus the nitwit part... usually). Yes, of course relationships are important. Yes, of course you want to find love and happiness, and yes, of course you want your boyfriend to fulfill some part of you and your girlfriend to call you back -- but what else?

What else is important and meaningful in your life? What else fulfills you? How much do you love and respect yourself, as is, through only your eyes and no one else's?

I know how I would have answered that question 10 years ago -- or earlier, back to high school, even -- and it makes me sad. I wish I had met some brilliant therapist or advisor who could have helped me learn about enjoying my own company, enjoying just the twosome of the world and little old me. And the threesome of me, myself and I.

I wish I had appreciated so much more those relationships that didn't revolve around sex and attraction and "am I worthy now?" but rather around love -- my dear girlfriends. What a waste of time, I think now, that my best friend Amy and I spent so much time getting ready to "go out" together, when now I realize that she was the best part of that time in my life. And I thank God, the universe, the great turtle in the sky that I still have her, and my other life-saving, life-affirming friends.

I know, I know. Relationships are a part of life; I mean, it's a natural, biological imperative, right? We want to mate.

And find a mate I eventually did -- for life (I hope). I've grown up a lot, of course, as we tend to do. But when I became a mother and got married, I was still figuring out who I was. I never made time for myself to just be. And it's been a long, long road to finding some kind of comfortable place of being together with someone without completely merging into an identity of "us." I'm happily married (though it's not like a 24/7 state of peaceful bliss, right, Honey?), but there's more to me than my marriage, and there's more to my husband than our marriage, and that's how it should be. It keeps our relationship stronger.

And if we ever did get divorced (which I don't think we will), I really hope that my whole sense of self would not disappear with that loss. I'm taking a good look at my life right now to make sure of it.

Thanks, Dan Savage. I heard you, and I hope so many more people do, too.

A version of this piece appeared at BettyConfidential.com.

 

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03:15 PM on 06/29/2011
Know who I am? I'm 44, married for 23 years and I still am learning about myself and my husband and our relationship. Nothing stagnates in life - even if it feels like it. It ebbs and flows, sometimes we feel it as it rocks the boat, somethings life is smooth as glass, but the current runs deep and never stops...until it does.
11:36 AM on 06/28/2011
I enjoy many different types of "relationships" in my life. But the relationship that ultimately defines the tone of all my interactions with others is the relationship I have with myself. The most important arguments I have to win each day are between the me that wants to sleep in and overeat and my inner-psyche that wants more out of life. When I feel in harmony with myself I am better able to deal with the discord around me. Ultimately all of my relationships benefit when I make peace with myself first.
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Mary Poe
02:25 PM on 06/18/2011
Great article and awesome advice from Mr. Savage. I,too, wish I had listened to those words in my 20s.
I recently did some soul searching, joined a mommies group and now have some rather good friends that I have had some good times with. I realize that I need to find happiness for myself so that I can be a better wife and mother to 2 young ones.
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OtayPanky
You're welcome
06:10 PM on 06/15/2011
It sounds like good advice...until you consider that it's being given by two people who are (apparently) happily partnered.

It's kind of like a wealthy person telling someone who has lost their job and health insurance, and is applying for food stamps, not to fret about making money, because ultimately money doesn't buy happiness.

Well...alrightee then.
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kathleens
Wealth doesn't create jobs. Jobs create wealth.
06:19 PM on 06/14/2011
The only piece of relationship advice my mother ever gave me was a real pearl, too. She said, “Don’t expect your partner to change for you. It won’t happen. Be ready to love them exactly as they are.”

I have been very happily married now for nearly 25 years. Thanks Mom.
07:33 PM on 06/13/2011
You're right -- you have to know and love yourself to be a good partner. The problem is that it takes time to do that. I tell my clients that adolescence -- not physical but mental adolescence - ends around 35. The thirties are the time where -- if you're lucky -- you begin to get sense of who you are really are. So as much as you might regret not being more mature at 22, the fact is you can't rush or really teach maturity -- you have to experience it. Unfortunately the vision of love that many people have is really of dependence --and that is definitely not love and is why people are so unprepared for marriage and a truly loving relationship.
02:46 PM on 06/13/2011
Married people and couples particularly new couples can apparently solve whole world problems over a glass of Cabernet and a steak. Wrong.

I'm married, my third technically though it's only my 2nd official. I tend to think I know more than single people or young people about dating. It's a confidence that's misguided.

Single people are having a blast. They're not solving world problems, discovering deep meanings of human existence. They are chasing lust for life and glad to be able too. They don't need or want advice.

The people who want advice are people who don't want to be single.

And the best advice is to tell them to open your heart and squint your eyes. You have no control over who you fall in love with. You have to help fate and throw yourself into the mix and your heart will chime when it's right. He might be fat, or wear terrible clothes, he may be lazy or kinda dull witted, he wont be perfect but if your honest with yourself you'll know if you can love them no matter what.
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TeamSanity
strong emotions don't equate strong arguments
07:50 PM on 06/22/2011
I really like that "Open your heart and squint your eyes" bit: a very good line and pithy, too. And while it's true we can't control over who we fall in love with, we CAN control what we do about those feelings. My epiphany came when I realized that I was always going to be attracted to a certain type of man, but that type was not a good fit for me. So I promised myself to acknowledge the next attraction I felt for that type (because that visceral response was not going to change) but NOT move on those feelings. Instead, I made space for the nice but "not my type" fellows I had only befriended in the past. And it worked - I found love by getting to know a good man 'without vaseline on the lens' i.e., I got to know him without romantic feelings covering over any faults/danger signs I'd shrugged off in past relationships.

And he certainly makes my knees weak now!

I've read articles that claim - statistically speaking - arranged marriages are just as successful as marriages where partners pick each other. That makes sense: the person we are best suited for might not indeed make our heart go pitty-pat, but that heart might stay open enough to find a mature love - the kind where your soul one day says "Oh THERE you are! I've been looking everywhere for you!"
01:58 PM on 06/09/2011
Nice, very nice. Most people don't love themselves enough so they are scared of loneliness. No man or woman can complete you unless you are strong within yourself and whole and complete yourself. If you don't like your own company, why expect anyone else to.
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Dorree Lynn
Psychologist & Life Coach
10:45 PM on 06/08/2011
Dating is a lot like job hunting, only a bit harder 'cause you have your heart on your sleeve. But, it's also an education. Each date offers an opportunity to learn something and to say "Thank You" for the education. Smart daters do what they love. If you love what you do, and "do it', It takes effort, perseverance, and vacation times to rest between experiences. Dating is really a numbers game. Date and learn and love can follow.
06:07 PM on 06/08/2011
I do wish I would have learned this secret back in my 20's! :-)