Trust And Commitment: Why Every Happy Relationship Needs It

 / 

,
Trust And Commitment In A Relationship: Important Things

A thriving relationship is built on trust and commitment. Let’s delve into the elements that are vital for happiness and security in your love life.

Believe me when I say, a happy relationship is IMPOSSIBLE without trust and commitment. Donโ€™t believe me? Keep reading.

Love is like Legos. In each passing moment, we are either building a wall between ourselves and our lover or a bridge into each otherโ€™s hearts.

Each Lego is an interaction between romantic partners. The deciding factor of whether we open or protect our hearts is the quality of trust.

โ€œWithout trust, there can be no meaningful connection.โ€ โ€“ Brene Brown

Often trust is seen as a big word. A massive Lego that connects two people, allowing them to connect easily. But this is false.

The Truth About Trust In A Relationship

Trust is built brick by brick, an accumulation of small choices made every day. (Check outย the Love Tank Theoryย to see what I mean.)

Trust is earned slowly. The earliest risks of sharing our hearts with a new person tend to be superficial and impersonal, allowing us to observe how that person responds. If they respond in a trustworthy way, we share more emotionally meaningful stories and feelings with time.

As we build a bridge to another person, we do so by becoming more vulnerable, building our side of the bridge, and engaging fully when the other person is building their part of the bridge to us. Trust between two people NEEDS two trustworthy people.

Speaking of vulnerability, I break downย the six commandments of vulnerable communication right here.

Bids for Connection

Dr. Gottmanโ€™s research, which is based on observations of both happy and unhappy couples in his Love Lab, highlights that trust is built in the tiniest of moments. He calls theseย bids for connection, because each moment offers an opportunity for emotional connection.

Sometimes these bids are small Lego bricks that appear insignificant, and if they are ignored on occasion, itโ€™s not a big deal because one missing or ill-placed brick can be replaced by another brick in the future. But if the small bids are ignored on a consistent basis, we start to feel unappreciated, unloved, and hurt. We start building a wall between ourselves and our partners. We share less and donโ€™t ask for what we need.

Some bids are more precious Lego bricks and need lots of trust to take the risk. Thatโ€™s why we only share them with a select few people throughout our lives. It takes time for us to work up to placing these bricks on the bridge.

In Drs. John and Julie Gottmanโ€™sย book, they share that every partnerโ€™s number one concern in a relationship is trust. Their number one fear is betrayal.

What is Building Trust In A Relationship?

According to Dr. Gottman, trust exists in a relationship when partners behave in ways that are in the best interest of both partners. The more trust in a relationship, the more you have each otherโ€™s back.

Trustworthiness, according to Dr. Gottman, is each partnerโ€™s willingness to make sacrifices for the relationship.

When partners are trustworthy, they are inherently saying to their significant other, โ€œYou can depend on me.โ€ Repeated demonstrations of trustworthy behavior allow lovers to take shelter within the relationship.

To maintain trust, both partners have to be fully committed. Without commitment, there is no security in trusting.

How To Have A Happy Relationship? Be 100% Emotionally Invested

When partners are 100% emotionally invested in building their relationship over the long haul, they reap the following benefits:

  • The relationship becomes a safe haven to continually regain emotional stability, reduce stress/fears/anxieties, and regulate our emotions
  • The relationship is built on a โ€œwe-ness,โ€ with an ongoing attitude of teamwork
  • Loyalty: We see each other as irreplaceable
  • We build a bridge to each other and a wall to keep alternative relationships out
  • We โ€œ[c]herish each other and the relationship and cultivate gratitudeโ€
  • Weโ€™re there for each other no matter what 
  • We have a positive love story and intentionally think about our loverโ€™s good qualities while avoiding a fixation on their flaws
  • We make pro-relationship choices and sacrifice opportunities for short-term indulgences in order to protect the relationship, even when we do not immediately know how doing so may benefit ourselves
  • When there are issues, we kindly express our needs and feelings to our partner in a constructive manner, rather than distancing ourselves, cultivating resentment, or whining to others about our relationship problems 
  • We take more risk and explore the world because we know we have each otherโ€™s back if something doesnโ€™t go well 
  • We donโ€™t get nasty during conflicts with our lover 
  • Weโ€™re willing to acknowledge our personal flaws and work on things because we know we are worthy of love, connection, and growth 
  • We are more curious about the world, our lover, and ourselves. As a result, we are open to new information that may change our beliefs 
  • We assume the most generous thing about our partnerโ€™s words, intentions, and behaviors1

When both partners are trustworthy and committed to the relationship, they invest more into the relationship, make sacrifices on behalf of the well-being of both partners, and nurture gratitude for what they have. In essence, they are intentionally making a decision to stay in love day after day.

Trust + Commitment = Security

โ€œThe core of a happy relationship is a deep trust that partners matter to each other and will reliably respond when needed.โ€ โ€“ Dr. Sue Johnson

In the early history of our species, we survived by staying close to each other, and as a result, our brains adapted by building anย attachment systemย that:ย 

  1. Monitors the emotional and physical closeness to our lover as adults
  2. Motivates us to reach out to our lover to ask for support when we are unsure, upset, or feeling low
  3. Rely on our lover as a secure base to enhance our personal growth and promote exploration in the world

Essentially, this attachment system is scanning the relationship and asking, โ€œIs it safe? Can I depend on this person? Is this person trustworthy? Are they committed to me?โ€

When we perceive disconnection, real or imagined, with our lover, or sense something that may threaten the security of the relationship, our attachment alarm goes off.

The goal of the attachment system is to get security and protection from our partner. It motivates us to seek closeness when we are distressed. When this goal is not met, all Legos break loose.

Less Security, Nastier Conflict

Trust And Commitment: Why Every Happy Relationship Needs It

Couples who have built trust in their relationship have drastically different conflict conversations than couples who struggle to trust one another.

Couples with a high trust metric, as per Dr. Gottmanโ€™s research, are more affectionate and kind during conflict. They focus on maximizing the benefit for both partners and are calmer and accepting of their lovers sadness or angerโ€ฆeven if the anger or sadness is a result of something they, as the lover, did.

When our lover is emotionally unavailable or unresponsive to our feelings or needs, itโ€™s like the Lego bridge beneath our feet is crumbling. We feel lonely and helpless.

In such situations, our mature brain getsย hijacked by our primal brainย and we experience what neuroscience Jaak Panksepp calls a primal panic.ย When we experience this, we try to maintain our relationship byย becoming demanding or by withdrawing.

These methods may work initially, but the more they are used, the more toxic cycles of insecurity are formed in the relationship. Since neither partner trusts the other to be there for them, they become increasingly defensive and assume the worst about each other.

The longer partners go without trust, the more they start behaving like they are at war with each other, rather than like they are lovers.

Practically every conflict conversation is aboutย building trust and commitment. Directly or indirectly, both partners are evaluating the security in the relationship and asking:

  • โ€œCan I trust you to stay faithful?โ€
  • โ€œAm I the most important person in your life?โ€
  • โ€œWill you listen to my sadness? Hear the longings beneath my anger?โ€
  • โ€œWill you be there for me when I have a bad day? Am overwhelmed? When I need you?โ€

When security in a relationship is not created or maintained, partners begin betraying each other.

The Opposite of Trust is Betrayal

Dr. Gottman not only created a trust metric, but also devised a betrayal metric which measures โ€œhow unwilling each partner is to sacrifice for the other [partner] and the relationship.โ€ Essentially, betrayal happens when a partner tries to get the best deal for themselves at the cost of their partners well-being.

Examples of betrayal include:

  • Continually not listening to feelings or needs
  • Withdrawing without any reassurance to your partner
  • Threatening to end the relationship as a way to manipulate your partner into committing
  • Emotional and sexual affairs
  • And more.

When a coupleโ€™s betrayal metric is high, it leaves the relationship and partners vulnerable for infidelity and other forms of disloyalty.

How does betrayal happen?

Here is the Gottman-Rusbult-Glass Betrayal Cascade 

  1. Turning away or against bids for emotional connection (dismissing emotions and losing emotional connection)
  2. The conflict escalates, and repairs fail to de-escalate conflict
  3. Self-disclosing feelings and needs are replaced with criticism, and conflict is avoided
  4. Focus on trashing the partner in thoughts, rather than on cherishing the partnerโ€™s positive traits
  5. Negative comparisons (real or imagined). Start thinking โ€œI can do better with someone else.โ€
  6. Less investment in the relationship and seeking emotional connection outside the relationship
  7. Slowly building a wall between your partner and yourself and a bridge to someone else
  8. Viewing partner as replaceable and finding others more desirable
  9. Infidelity

Betrayal happens by the small choices we make, brick by brick. Part of these choices are due to the interactions in the relationship. Another part is due toย self-gratification. The remaining part of these choices are influenced by ourย past experiences of trust and commitment.

This is why insecure individuals struggle to build a secure relationship.

Early Experiences of Security

Like Lego instructions, our minds form a blueprint based on our early relationships on how to regulate our emotions, what to expect in our relationships, and how to assign meaning to specific actions of our lovers.

Depending on how we were loved early in life, we likely formed one of three love styles.

1. Secure

Your caregivers were responsive, caring, and emotionally available. All emotions were welcome and you felt supported.

As a result, you see yourself as worthy of love and view others as trustworthy and willing to commit to you.

Because to this, you view relationships as workable. Youโ€™re open to learning how to be a better partner or patiently teaching your partner how to be a better lover to you. In conflict, you openly share your disappointment and ask for support from your partner in a gentle way.

2. Clingy

You caregivers were affection and caring, but inconsistently available to meet your needs.

As a result you tend to beย insecure about your own self-worth and lovability.

Due to the lack of trust and uncertainty of commitment, you frequently seek validation and reassurance that you are lovable. During a conflict, you may become hostile and catastrophize the conflict by bringing in irrelevant issues. The deep fear of abandonment leads you to try and control your partner by making demands or threats, which harms trust in a relationship. 19

3. Distant

Due to early experiences of being neglected or controlled by your caregivers, you take on a mindset of โ€œI wonโ€™t depend on anyoneโ€ and view others as fundamentally unreliable and untrustworthy.

To protect yourself from being hurt, you tend not to fully commit and/or to behave in ways that do not offer reassurance, trust, and security in the relationship.

While our early experiences offer us a blueprint on how to love and be loved, our adult relationships offer the opportunity to modify the blueprint into something more secure.

When we invest in our relationship and work to bring our best selves, we change how we love. We become more open, more trusting, and more secure in the belief that we are worthy of love and connection.

Building Trust In A Relationship

Building trust is like building a house with Legos. You have to negotiate and work together in ways that consider both partnersโ€™ well-being. Each partner has to show up and bring their best self and intentionally focus on being kind, patient, generous, and loving to each other and themselves.

For the house to stand the test of time, both partners have to be committed to repairing, working through issues, making time for play and connection, and truly caring about each other.

Skills & Actions That Build Trust and Commitment In A Relationship

Working through conflict:

Building trust requires moving from attack-defend mode into sharing feelings and collaboration mode.

The first step is to understand each other before you try to resolve your issues. When you do this, you transform conflict into a catalyst for connection and trust. A trustworthy partner sees their partnerโ€™s problems in the relationship as their own problems,and works hard to fix things.

Healing past emotional wounds

To rebuild trust, itโ€™s vital that couples dig up past events where trust was broken and work through them together so the pain is no longer a barrier between them.

Be responsive to bids for connection

Sometimes the seemingly insignificant bids for connection are the most meaningful of all. Do your best to be aware of the bids your partner makes and respond by connecting with them.

Attunement

Attunement is the ability to delight in your partnerโ€™s joys and success and feel troubled when they are going through a hard time. It is only possible when we understand each other on a profound level.

The most frequent block to attunement, especially with difficult emotions, is how partners feel aboutย difficult feelings.

Be emotionally available

Stay open to your partner even when you feel insecure. This includes learning to work with your emotions so they donโ€™t overwhelm you and cause you to attack or withdraw.

Be a reliable lover

Trust is built when your words and actions align on a consistent basis. In essence, you say what youโ€™re going to do and you follow through.

Holding yourself accountable

When you make an error, you take ownership for your mistake, apologize, and repair. Itโ€™s impossible to trust someone who doesnโ€™t take responsibility for their actions.

Protect your loverโ€™s vulnerabilities

Whenย vulnerabilities and insecuritiesย are used as weapons in a relationship, partners have betrayed each other. Building trust is protecting what your partner has shared with you and not using it against them, even when youโ€™re upset.

Ask for help

A trusting relationship is only developed when both partners can ask for help. This means expressing wants and needs openly.

If you think less of yourself for needing help, then you have some personal work you need to do to address the subconscious double standards. Because, as Brene Brown puts it, โ€œYou cannot judge yourself for needing help but not judge others for needing your help.โ€

Small Steps Establish Trust and Commitment

While most believe that trust is created by the grand gestures in a relationship, the research cited in this piece highlights that trust is built in small, seemingly insignificant moments. These are the moments that demonstrate your commitment to your partner. Theyโ€™re the moments that highlight you as a trustworthy lover and as someone capable of deeply caring for and protecting your partnerโ€™s heart.

Looking at all of the research in the context of my work with couples, itโ€™s crystal clear that a happy and long-lasting relationship is built on a rock-solid foundation of trust and commitment.

For most of us, we have to learn what this looks like and how to build it in our relationship.

Lucky for both you and me, our relationship keeps handing us new Legos to rebuild, repair, and reinvent ourselves and our relationships. When we devote ourselves to cultivating mutuality and to offering our full selves to our lover, and when they do the same, we build something deeply meaningful and beautiful.

With love,
Kyle Benson

  1.  Decades ago, relationship researchers couldnโ€™t explain why some partners stick together and why others leave, even if the relationship was good. Luckily, Caryl Rusbult spent 30 years solving this mystery. Check out: Wiseselquist, J., Rusbult, C. R., Foster, C. A., & Agnew, C. R. (1999). Commitment, pro-relationship behavior, and trust in close relationships. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 77(5), 942-66. Also, see Rusbult, C. (1983). A longitudinal test of the investment model: The development (and deterioration) of satisfaction and commitment in heterosexual involvements. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 45(1), 101-117. doi:10.1037//0022-3514.45.1.101 โ†ฉ
  2. A safe haven, as described by John Bowlby, is when your partner allows you to take refuge from lifeโ€™s challenges and can calm you down. Dr. Sue Johnson talks about this in her books Hold Me Tight and Love Sense.In one of Johnsonโ€™s studies she exposed women in romantic relationships to an electric shock while under an fMRI machine. Women in insecure relationships (those lacking in commitment and trust) responded to the shock more intensely than women who felt securely connected to their partners.At the end of 20 sessions of Emotionally Focused Couples Therapy (EFT), the insecure female partner was tested again. Since the couples had rebuilt trust and commitment during therapy, the shock only felt โ€œuncomfortable.โ€Source: Johnson, Susan M., James A. Coan, M. M. Burgess, L. Beckes, A. Smith, T. Dalgleish, R. Halchuk, K. Hasselmo, P. S. Greenman, and Z. Merali. Soothing the threatened brain: Leveraging contact comfort with emotionally focused therapy. PLOS One, in press.A secure relationship with an emotionally responsive partner who is trustworthy and 100% emotionally committed makes it easier to reach out when we are hurting and quicker for us to recover from difficult moments in our life. โ†ฉ
  3. Dr. Gottmanโ€™s research from observing couples in his Love Lab discovered that couples who have cultivated high levels of trust and commitment have a โ€œwe are in this togetherโ€ mindset. To learn more check outย The Science of Trustย andย What Makes Love Last?ย ย โ†ฉ
  4.  Caryl Rusbultโ€™s 30 years of research on her investment model in couples found that a key attitude of commitment in a relationship is a belief that you have won the lottery with your partner and there is no one better suited for you. For additional readings, check out the publications listed in citation one. โ†ฉ
  5. Shirley Glassโ€™s research on betrayal and commitment has determined that when given other opportunities to betray or pursue personal pleasure, 100% emotionally invested partners block out these alternatives and invest even more into the relationship.ย  Check out:ย Not โ€œJust Friendsโ€: Rebuilding Trust and Recovering Your Sanity After Infidelity.ย โ†ฉ
  6. ย Dr. Gottman discovered that happy and committed couples cultivate a culture of fondness and admiration in their relationship. They cherish each other in their minds and express what they cherish.ย They also nurture gratitude for the things their partner does and openly acknowledge those things to their partner. Check out:ย The 7 Principles For Making Marriage Work.ย ย โ†ฉ
  7. Stan Tatkin, PsyD. says that lovers โ€œshould serve as the primary go-to people for one anotherโ€ in his bookย Wired for Love. Doing this means making a 24/7 agreement that says, โ€œIโ€™m here for you and with you through it all.โ€ย โ†ฉ
  8. ย Check out the articleย The Story of Us: The Difference Between Happy and Unhappy Couplesย โ†ฉ
  9. See citation one โ†ฉ
  10. ย This is true of secure relationships as mentioned by Takin, Johnson, and Gottman. Additional attachment research on this can be found inย Adult Attachment: Structure, Dynamics, and Changeย โ†ฉ
  11. When we feel we have a secure base (a safe place to return after exploring the world), we are more willing to take risk. This is called the โ€œdependency paradoxโ€ย โ†ฉ
  12. ย A relationship with high levels of trust and commitment tend to have a strong friendship. According to Dr. Gottmanโ€™s observations of couples in his Love Lab, secure couples do not get nasty during conflict. In fact, they are five times more positive in conflict than negative. Check out:ย The Magic Ratio of Happy and Healthy Relationshipsย โ†ฉ
  13. Research cited inย Adult Attachment: Structure, Dynamics, and Changeย highlight that individuals who have experiences of secure relationships have feel worthy of love, are willing to openly explore their flaws and seek guidance to grow, and can be more vulnerable in sharing their weaknesses with others. This also means being willing to change core beliefs to better enhance oneโ€™s life and relationships.ย โ†ฉ
  14. See citation above. โ†ฉ
  15. Brene Brownโ€™s trust model (B.R.A.V.I.N.G) explains that trust means giving your partner the most generous interpretation about their behavior. I call this offering benefit of the doubt. Check it out here:ย How You Think About Your Spouse Determines How You Love Themย โ†ฉ
  16. ย As referenced inย Adult Attachment: Structure, Dynamics, and Changeย โ†ฉ
  17. ย As cited inย Hold Me Tight: Seven Conversations for a Lifetime of Loveย โ†ฉ
  18. ย This is a highly condensed and summarized version of the actual cascade mentioned inย The Science of Couple and Family Therapyย and The Gottman Instituteโ€™sย Treating Affairs and Traumaย training manual.ย โ†ฉ
  19.  Simpson, J., Rholes, W., & Phillips, D. (1996). Conflict in close relationships: An attachment perspective. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1996, 71(5), 899โ€“914. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/0022-3514.71.5.899 โ†ฉ

Related: 11 Reasons Why Trust Is More Important Than Love In A Relationship

Both trust and commitment in a relationship is important for lasting love. Tell us your thoughts about it in the comments below!


Written by Kyle Benson
Originally appeared in Kyle Benson

how to have a happy relationship

— Share —

— About the Author —

Leave a Reply



Up Next

Taylor Swift’s ‘Tortured Poets Department’ Is A Wake-Up Call For All Those In Situationships

Tortured Poets Department And Situationships: Lessons To Learn

Taylor Swiftโ€™s most recent album, โ€œThe Tortured Poets Department,โ€ explores current relationships and sheds light on what many call โ€œsituationships.โ€ With powerful words and haunting tunes, she describes the emotional roller coaster that happens when love is mixed with confusion.

Situationships And The Tortured Poets Department Taylor Swift

On her eleventh studio album โ€“ which was met with both excitement and trepidation โ€“ Swift talks about her person



Up Next

Is Your Relationship Sucking The Life Out Of You? 9 Signs Of An Emotionally Draining Relationship

Signs of an Emotionally Draining Relationship

Have you ever found yourself feeling exhausted, emotionally depleted, and constantly on edge after spending time with someone close to you? Perhaps you’re stuck in a relationship that leaves you feeling drained, but you’re unsure why. If so, you may be caught in an emotionally draining relationship. 

Today, we will explore what such a relationship entails, identify common signs of an emotionally draining relationship, and provide practical advice on how to fix an emotionally draining relationship. So, let’s dive in.

What is an Emotionally Draining Relationship?

An emotionally draining relationship is characterized by constant



Up Next

This Viral โ€˜Bird Testโ€™ Can Predict If Your Relationship Will Last

Unique Bird Test: Can Your Romantic Relationship Pass It?

The “bird test” is a viral TikTok trend and it is a unique way of assessing reciprocation in relationships. So, are you ready to validate (or expose) your relationship? Let’s go!

As users evaluate their significant others with the โ€œorange peel theoryโ€ โ€” which measures how willing they are to do small favors for you โ€” another concept has taken hold of the platform recently: the bird test relationship.

So, What Is The Bird Test For Relationships?



Up Next

Dive Into The Mind Of A Distancer: The Partner Who Pulls Away

Discover The Mind Of A Distancer: Things To Know Well

Pursuer distancer relationships cause a lot of heartache, especially for a pursuer. Learn about the mind of a distancer to understand your own or your partnerโ€™s behavior so you wonโ€™t take it personally.

As codependants, we usually gravitate toward insecure relationships where weโ€™re a distancer or a pursuer. We may be a distancer in one relationship and a pursuer in the next. This is due to early attachment problems and dysfunctional parenting.

Reacting makes it worse! A distancer reacting by withdrawing or the pursuer reacting by pursuing exacerbates conflict and unhappiness.

Understand The Mind Of A Distancer



Up Next

What Does Reverse Psychology Mean And How To Use It To Get What You Want

What Does Reverse Psychology Mean and How to Use It

Sometimes things go exactly the way you want them to. Other times, not so much. Especially when you are dealing with people. So how can you turn things in your favor without being manipulative? Two words: reverse psychology. But what does reverse psychology mean?

Sometimes, the conventional methods of persuasion fail, leaving us perplexed and frustrated. Reverse psychology is a fascinating technique that can turn the tables and unlock hidden paths to influence and persuasion. Its positive strategy for positive results.

Letโ€™s dive deep into exploring its meaning, and understanding how does reverse psychology work and even explore how to use reverse psychology on a narcissist. So, buckle up and get ready to uncover the captivating world of reverse psychology.



Up Next

Stop Texting Your Ex ‘Happy Birthday’ – Here Are 5 Reasons Why!

Stop Texting Your Ex Happy Birthday: Important Reasons

Have you found yourself scrolling through Snapchat memories, thinking of texting your ex happy birthday? You think to yourself, can sending a simple โ€œHappy Birthdayโ€ text hurt? But donโ€™t be fooled by temptation โ€“ itโ€™s never a good idea.

Life is full of ups and downs, but some things are better left alone. Making contact with them on their special day could stir up old emotions and put you in a tough place.

It not only opens doors to issues but also sends mixed signals, confuses both parties involved, and even more so can bring back haunting memories that should stay in the



Up Next

Are Screenshots Ruining Your Dating Experience? Exploring 5 Pros and Cons

Are Screenshots Ruining Dating? Clear Pros And Cons

Screenshots can make things easier, but also much more difficult. Soโ€ฆ are screenshots ruining dating? Let’s find out the pros and cons of it!

In the time we live in, technology has changed nearly every aspect of socializing and dating. One common feature thatโ€™s become increasingly prevalent is the screenshot.

Today weโ€™ll be going over five ways screenshots are both beneficial and detrimental to todayโ€™s dating experience.

Are Screenshots Ruining Dating?

Let’s learn how screenshots ruin relationships in the modern world.