One thing that everyone will agree, long-distance relationships are never easy. There are some tips you need to follow to keep your love alive and strong, help your relationship go beyond the extra miles. Do you have a lot of long-distance relationships in your life? Do you sometimes tend to feel very sad about that, and feel a deep yearning for them?
In the technological dark ages of my youth, when the phone would ring, Dad would pick it up. And then Iโd hear, โHey Bet, quick. Get on the phone. Itโs so and so calling long distance.โ And Mother would come flying.
Not only did a long-distance call cost a lot of money, but the message must be very special for a loved one to phone in. Hopefully, the news was happy. But sometimes it was because whoever was on the other end of the line needed comfort or quick information. So being there was paramount.
After all, it was โlong-distance.โ
Now when you think of long-distance, it has nothing to do with urgency. You might think of two people in love whose jobs require frequent trips to Chicago or India. Or your high schooler being headed to Paris for their senior trip.
Or a friend doing an internship in Brazil. The reality of normal โfamily lifeโ in 2020 frequently means that youโre trying to maintain close ties with parents, children, and grandchildren who are living in another part of the country, or even the world. And friendships often have to weather the hellos and goodbyes of living far apart.
Technology makes all of that easier of course. Between FaceTime, Whatโs App, Skype, Instagram, or Snapchat, you can keep in close touch. Or at least, you can โseeโ each other and keep conversations going.
But bear hugs arenโt possible over FaceBook. Nor can tears be dried over a text. So healthy long-distance relationships require some basic core beliefs that can help to maintain their warmth and depth, while simultaneously managing their inherent vulnerability.
Read 12 Reasons Why Long-Distance Relationships Are Totally Worth The Effort
Iโm quite familiar with this topic. I moved away from my hometown when I was seventeen years old, my adult son lives hundreds of miles away from us, and many of my best friends live in different cities. So I know what itโs like to be separated from people I care about, all of us living busy lives and yet surviving through it all โ and connecting with each other in person when we can.
Itโs very possible to have happy, warm, loving relationships with people you donโt see as often as youโd like. Here are some basic skills you can adopt to help keep those relationships thriving, despite time and distance intervening.
Four skills to keep long-distance relationships thrivingโฆ
1. Let the time you have together be whatever it shapes up to be.
Avoid the impulse to think, โThe weekend has to be perfect!โ Or the infamous, โI have to cook all his favorite things.โ Because you actually may not know his favorite things anymoreโฆ maybe heโs trying out vegan. Or no longer drinks chai tea.
Donโt force things. Prioritize whatโs most important but be flexible about the rest. Enjoy being together while you have the chance, allowing the moments to evolve naturally. Remind yourself that if you try to make everything special, you might miss โnormal.โ
Read One Of These Days, There Will Be No Distance Between Us
2. Realize that celebrations can happen any day.
You can perform incredible Cirque du Soleil-like twists and turns (and demand that others do the same) in trying to make a certain celebration or event. Obviously, if itโs something that only happens once, it makes sense to do all you can to be there, front and center, smiling and applauding
However, when there are hundreds of miles between you, long-distance relationships can thrive if you adjust your expectations and realize that holidays or birthdays can be celebrated on whatever day that you can be together. Birthdays might fall during finals week, or when your boss needs you for a presentation.
Life gets complicated and being tied to a calendar date can bring unneeded stress. Itโs the togetherness that matters, whenever you can make that can happen.
3. Donโt compare yourself to others.
Maybe your best friend has her daughter and grandchildren living a couple of blocks away, but yours is on the other side of the country expecting her first child.
Or perhaps your neighbor has all of his siblings and their children over every Friday for a huge family gathering, while your siblings are scattered around the world and you havenโt all been together in over a decade.
Itโs difficult to not compare your situation to others, to mourn what you donโt have in the face of others having it. Social media can make this even harder to ignore. But as the old saying goes, the comparison is the thief of joy. And the best thing to do is avoid the bitterness is to make peace with what you have โ and what is possible.
And itโs interesting to noteโฆ you never know who is looking at your situation and wishing their life looked more like yours.
4. Make sure you donโt let too much time go by without some form of contact.
The marvelous thing about all of the technology available today is the incredible variety of communication you can have with someone. From ordering flowers for no special reason to asking Alexa to turn on lights as your partner gets home, to the arrival of a Candy-gram, all can celebrate the quality of your caring. The distance might be regrettable, but ultimately it means nothing because the relationship remains meaningful.
Yet every relationship requires a loving touch from time to time and relationships need nurturing no matter what the distance involved. So you want to be aware and do your part to keep the fire of the relationship fueled. Thatโs unique for all relationships, whether itโs one that depends on more or less frequent contact.
If it works for both of you, then thatโs the ticket. But sometimes finding out how much contact is enough to contact involves compromise.
But itโs more than achievable.
Read 10 Reasons Long Distance Relationship Might Be Tough. But They Are Worth It
All four of these lead to having a much calmer and more fulfilling relationship with those you love. And help to keep your awareness on the side of the glass thatโs half-full, instead of half-empty.
And that can be a huge gift to give yourself, as well as those you love.
Written by Dr. Margaret Rutherford
Originally appeared in Dr. Margaret Rutherford
Long-distance relationships can be incredibly tough, especially emotionally and mentally. Everyone wants to stay close to the people they love, and in case that doesnโt happen, sadness sets in. But, there is light at the end of the tunnel. There is a lot you can do to keep long-distance relationships, happy and thriving; you just have to know-how.
If you want to know more about how you can keep long-distance relationships thriving, then check out this video below:
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