Why ‘Single Time’ Between Relationships Is Important

single-woman

I notice so many women rushing from one relationship to the next without realizing the power in being single in between. The evaluation and subsequent life-changing personal growth that can occur during this time can ensure the next relationship is better than the last.

Instead, many women commiserate with girlfriends about how they were unappreciated or how they’re heartbroken over the end of something they thought was forever. What happens with this common response to a breakup is an automatic flood of anger, resentment, blame, and fear of being alone, setting these women up for failure in their next relationship.

Sound familiar? The good news is it’s completely possible to set yourself up for success in relationships with some surprising adjustments to what you’re doing now. The worst way to begin a new relationship is by bringing in negative emotions from your past. Simply thinking differently isn’t enough.

Let me share one of my great life-coaching strategies, which have helped my clients tremendously. After walking clients through this process, they feel better about themselves, are more confident about attracting the right guy, and have a game plan for personal growth and how to make the next relationship more successful than the last — by using their single, in-between time wisely and positively.

Here are three questions to ask yourself during your single time between relationships.

1. What did I do right? 

By asking yourself what you did right during the relationship, you acknowledge how much you’ve learned about being a good partner. It’s an opportunity to measure your personal growth instead of playing the blame game, which always pollutes your next relationship, whether you realize it or not.

It doesn’t matter if you’re blaming yourself or your partner. Blame is toxic to all relationships, even the one you have with yourself.

  • What were you better at this time than in previous relationships (opening up, trusting, communicating, being more loving)?
  • Were you supportive of them (trusting them, encouraging them, showing appreciation)?
  • Did you establish and enforce healthy boundaries, ensuring you were treated respectfully and speaking up if not?

Congratulate yourself on the things you did right. You’ll be able to measure your progress and become a better partner each time.

2. What were the challenges? 

By taking a look at the challenges of past relationships, you identify patterns and specific qualities you want and those you want to avoid in your next relationship. Be honest with yourself to make the most out of being single, and visualize a relationship without these challenges.

  • Did one or both of you have too-high expectations?
  • Did the relationship feel one-sided, with one of you investing more than the other?
  • Were there conflicts that caused irrecoverable harsh feelings?

3. What can I work on before my next relationship? 

This is where being single between relationships can take on a new, powerful meaning. When you gain clarity and learn new ways of communicating, you begin to attract a different type of person.

It’s the law of vibration. Think of yourself as a magnet. In an emotionally healthy relationship, a confident guy is attracted to a confident woman. In an unhealthy relationship, an insecure guy is attracted to an insecure woman because he subconsciously feels threatened by a woman who’s comfortable with herself.

If you’ve been in that position or seen it in a friend, you probably agree.

  • Do you need to release past emotions that keep you attracting the same type of guy?
  • Could you develop more quality gal pals to stay more emotionally balanced and connected?
  • Would establishing healthy boundaries help you to have more confidence in yourself?

By now, you’ve had some clarity and possibly revelations about your past relationship and what you want for your next one. I’m a huge fan of clarity. It inspires great ideas and provides tremendous peace of mind. 

But why is simply thinking differently about your new relationship not enough to make it better? Our logical (conscious) mind can think and reason that a new significant other is different from the previous one, and that this relationship can be even better. Since pain, anger, resentment, joy, love, happiness, and all other feelings are emotions that are in our subconscious mind, thinking differently will only work temporarily, and on a surface level.

That means, at some point, those emotions stored from other relationships are sure to raise their ugly heads. Truly releasing them is powerful and gives you a brand new start.

Feature Image by Andrea Piacquadio from Pexels

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