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5 Ways to Improve a Long-Term Relationship

Posted: 04/26/10 02:00 PM ET

This week's post goes to the heart of keeping a long-standing relationship going. If you're in one - whether with a partner, a spouse or even a roommate - you know that over time, things can get a bit stale. You start having the same fights over and over. You start completing your partner's sentences, in a way that breeds boredom rather than intimacy. You know - with agonizing specificity - exactly what the other person likes to eat for breakfast.

So it's time to shake things up a bit. Change the routine. And also change the way you act towards the other person. You'll be surprised how well it works. Here are five concrete suggestions for how to do this:

1. Make a small gesture. Happiness blogger Gretchen Rubin lists "Give Proofs of Love" as one of her resolutions. By which she means that it's as important to demonstrate your love to someone else as it is to love them. Perhaps even more important. There are lots of ways to show someone you love them. You can buy them a new car. Book an appointment with a career counselor. Decorate their room with their favorite things. But you can also do small things. In my case, I noticed one morning that my husband's toast had popped out of the toaster and was ready to be buttered. While that's not normally something I'd do for him (speaking of breakfast routines), one day I decided that I'd do it, just to be nice. Guess what? He noticed. And thanked me. Then I did it again. He thanked me again. And I realized how even a tiny gesture can speak volumes.

2. Defer to your partner on a decision. If you're in a long-term relationship, chances are you're making loads of decisions together all the time: where to live, which school to send the kids to, how to balance career/family. Some of those can and must be done together. But occasionally a decision will come along where you can afford not to weigh in as much as you otherwise might. In my case, it's our upcoming move. I'm a bit of a control freak. (In case you haven't noticed.) And in an ideal world, I'd probably approach our move somewhat differently than my husband would. But I decided a few weeks ago that I was going to defer to him on this one. He's less spastic (for lack of a better word) than I am about moving. And it just seemed like a real shame to try to micro-manage this particular event in our lives (and all the stress, anxiety and quarrels that would likely provoke), so I just let him take the lead. And you know what? We're both more relaxed about it now.

3. Make A Sanctuary. Once you've spent years in a relationship of any sort, it's easy to start letting other parts of your individual lives (work, kids, relatives) invade your space together. Try not to let this happen. Obviously, you can't seal off your relationship completely. But you can at least try to protect it. I had one set of friends (a couple) who made a rule that "all work stays at the door." By which they meant that their bedroom would be a sanctuary. They were both allowed to work in the evening - they had to, sometimes - but when they were finished working, all work had to stay by the door literally outside their bedroom. I thought this was a great idea.

4. Carve out Time. Of course, a sanctuary isn't any good to you unless you actually spend some time there. So in addition to demarcating your private space, you need also to do things together inside it. Whatever you enjoy most. In my own case, my husband and I try to set aside time every night to talk about the day and then watch something together - a DVD commentary, a BBC documentary, The Daily Show. Another couple I know makes a point of eating dinner together every night after their daughter goes to sleep (*he* cooks, mind you!), even if it's 9:30 or 10 o'clock at night. Still another couple I know takes a run together once a week in the morning and stops for tea mid-way through. It doesn't really matter what you do, but that you do it together.

5. Go On An Overnight Getaway. Ok, this advice may be less good for the room mates at hand. But if you're in a long-term romantic relationship, a great way to re-ignite that flame is to go on an adventure. If you can't afford to pay for a hotel and sitter, then see if you can send your kids to a friend or relative and have the night to yourselves in your own home. That can be just as fun. If you can afford to splurge once in a while, it's well worth the effort. We had some friends in Chicago who spent the entire weekend of their 10th anniversary at a hotel in downtown Chicago just nine miles away from where the live. They had a blast. Last week, we managed to finagle a free room in a fancy hotel in London while my mother was visiting. True, we were on the smoking floor. But I can't tell you how much fun it was to get dressed up and go down to Soho and have dinner at a chic restaurant on a Thursday night and then amble back (at a leisurely pace!) to our fancy digs. Bliss!

 

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This week's post goes to the heart of keeping a long-standing relationship going. If you're in one - whether with a partner, a spouse or even a roommate - you know that over time, things can get a bit...
This week's post goes to the heart of keeping a long-standing relationship going. If you're in one - whether with a partner, a spouse or even a roommate - you know that over time, things can get a bit...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dogma
Dare to be Nobody in Particular
02:39 AM on 04/29/2010
Relationships are cycles of peaks and valleys and it all depends on how skillfully you navigate the valleys.
03:53 PM on 04/28/2010
I like the 90/10 rule when it comes to fighting--after you are together awhile, many couples realize that 90% of the time whatever they are fighting about or are about to fight about is Not worth fighting about. 10% of the time odds are yes. So when a conflict arises, ask--is this really worth fighting about? Or --is this what we are Really fighting about? to get to the 10% zone. So much is better left alone and not worth it! ~Laura http://lauracarroll.com
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Delia Lloyd
American journalist/blogger based in London
09:03 AM on 04/29/2010
Thanks Laura, hadn't heard that one. I like it!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KJLSanDiego
02:27 PM on 04/28/2010
Daycations are a lovely way to spice it up and have some fun!
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04:53 AM on 04/28/2010
"The national ban will still allow hotels to designate some guest rooms for smoking if they wish.
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ziger123
All you need is unconditional love and acceptance
04:51 AM on 04/28/2010
Take the time to maintain a connection to your partner - a great message, thank you
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Simon Woodward
05:08 PM on 04/27/2010
sorry - a bit of artistic licence in here in suggestion 5. there are no smoking floors in UK hotels - all smoking has been banned from public places for several years. so what else is she lying about???
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Delia Lloyd
American journalist/blogger based in London
09:04 AM on 04/29/2010
Feel free to check into the Grand Hyatt in London (Portman Square) yourself and have a look. It's the third floor, BTW.
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human2008
You only live once, so live for a human purpose.
02:07 PM on 04/27/2010
There are a lot of women who write on relationship matters, however, readers are predominantly men. If women were the main readers of these articles, it would make a lot more sense. Communication gap is the main problem in most relationship. If 2 people read this article, they are already agreeing on something - in really it rarely happens.
11:39 PM on 04/26/2010
Spastic? You really couldn't think of a "better word"?
06:27 AM on 04/27/2010
As a fellow control freak, I'm accepting of the word as it seems apt. Anyone who has seen us in action in these situations will attest.

I also see that its more a self-commentary on the behavior of the writer in a given situation than her mate.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Delia Lloyd
American journalist/blogger based in London
09:05 AM on 04/29/2010
@sarasa-sorry if i offended. but yes, @lostriverledger has it right-it was a self-critique. Not meant to offend.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
UltimateLifestyle
09:02 PM on 04/26/2010
Some great advice, thanks!

It really is too easy to become complacent and neglectful of relationships, despite how much we love and adore our partners. Being conscious and attentive is key.

Thanks again.

Lara Jane
Founder of the Ultimate Lifestyle Project
http://ultimatelifestyleproject.com/letting-go-and-moving-on/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DrMiaRose
Author, Psychologist and Wellness Coach
06:05 PM on 04/26/2010
It's often the little things in a relationship that goes a long way towards the making of a happy union. In the end it has a lot to do with understanding our partner's needs and doing our best to fulfill them, whether it involves regular shows of affection, small surprises, or spectacular sex. In relationships, as in life, it's a matter of 'the more we give, the more we get.'

Mia Rose
http://www.better-sex-4-women.com
05:09 PM on 04/26/2010
Such good advice! Sometimes we forget that relationships take work...
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Delia Lloyd
American journalist/blogger based in London
09:06 AM on 04/29/2010
thanks everyone for the fantastic set of comments!