Creating Attunement in Relationships: A Daily Walk Together

My husband and I take a walk every morning to get a Starbucks and talk. After 40 years of friendship, our walks are part of the glue to our relationship.
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

My husband and I take a walk every morning to get a Starbucks and talk. After 40 years of friendship, our walks are part of the glue to our relationship. They start our days with a moment together sharing a dream, a plan, a memory, or an experience in conversation. We talk about our kids, work, friends, philosophy, and the meaning of life. It's a time of pure listening and attunement.

Perhaps walking with another human being day in and day out over many years is key to increasing attunement, the creation of harmonious relationship. Despite the physical boundaries (two bodies), we walk in sync, with our steps hitting the pavement at the same pace, crossing streets at the same time, and experiencing morning skies and sounds together. It seems to bring us into greater harmony through the physical synchronizing. Then there is a mental attunement revealed in thoughts going back and forth, feelings shared, and reflecting back to one another a whole range of emotions from worry to calm, trepidation, and courage. There are the mutually shared external experiences -- the Starbucks' baristas, the neighbors at the same table every morning, the homeless man who waves hello, and the patch of land we pass that in October houses pumpkins and in December, Christmas trees.

The familiarity of our walk despite its changing nature is a metaphor for life itself, constantly changing yet familiar across generations in terms of love and loss.

Taking a walk used to be part of everyone's "daily constitutional" a means of keeping healthy and promoting overall well-being. I think the daily constitutional is crucial in this age of information overload, high stress, diets rich in fat and sugar, and the overall rising rates of obesity and diabetes in our country. Yet, taking a daily constitutional with a partner in life is also one of the best ways to strengthen the scaffolding of a relationship so that the union grows stronger than each of its parts.

For more by Susan Smalley, Ph.D., click here.

For more on conscious relationships, click here.

Popular in the Community

Close

HuffPost Shopping’s Best Finds

MORE IN LIFE