By Sean Hyde
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November 3, 2020
For most of us there comes a time in a long term relationship when it shifts from being an exercise in passion and excitement, the sparks fade away, and it suddenly changes to feeling more like work. Work we are underpaid for. And I’m not talking about work you are passionate about, I’m talking more like the the chores your parents made you do as a child. Work you know needs to happen, and you understand that it’s part of being a family, but you don’t feel like you get enough out of because it’s boring and mundane. So where did that spark, that passion, that energy you used to have go? Did elves steal it? Is it a secret plan by “The Man” to keep us all down? Is it just the way life goes? Believe it or that phase doesn’t have to happen, the excitement doesn’t have to leave the relationship, and the phase where it starts to feel tiring and mundane isn’t required. And those adorable older couples that are still chasing eachother through retirement don’t happen just by chance. Today I want to talk about how to keep the energy and excitement in your relationship, and how to put the spark back into your relationship if you have lost it. Most of you are familiar with the 80-20 rule or Pareto principle. Sometimes people will tell you it’s actually a 90-10 rule. I agree with the latter school of thought. If you are unfamiliar with this concept, it’s the idea that 80-90 percent of our results on any given task come from 10-20 percent or our actions. Meaning that if we can identify the 10-20% of our actions that are the most productive, we could remove 80-90 percent of the other stuff we are doing, and still get pretty closet to the same result. Who wouldn’t want 80-90 percent of their time back to do whatever they want with? You’re probably asking yourself how my bringing up boring productivity principles can help add excitement to your life and your relationships, but I promise I’m going somewhere. Most of us when we are trying to create positive relationships get so caught up in what we think they are supposed to be, that we don’t notice what they actually are. What do I mean by that? If you are single, you are supposed to go to bars, get on tinder, dress a certain way, stay fit and attractive, etc etc, right? How many of us have ever actually gotten into a healthy relationship with someone we met at a bar on an alcohol fueled night of fun? Or after swiping right? Those behaviors have probably gotten you hookups, sexts, attention, and some short term feel-goods, but if we are honest, most of us will admit that our best relationships grew out of connections we had already created in our life. Speaking for myself, almost every quality relationship I’ve ever had came from one of three places: My friends, my work, or my passion projects. I’ve certainly met some interesting women on night’s out or through random online connections, but they’ve never turned into anything interesting. For those of you already in relationships, I swear, I’m about to get to you too. So if so many of us, if we are honest, have to admit that we don’t meet quality partners, friends, and love interests through “traditional” dating behaviors like going out drinking, online dating, etc…then why do we do it? Because we ignore the Pareto Principle. If we paid attention when we were single, we would have noticed that the activities that produced the most results were building quality connections and putting ourselves in circles of people with similar interests. People with similar interests as us probably have single friends who like people with our interests right? And if it’s solo synchronized underwater basket weaving you have a passion for…no judgement…then name a better place to find someone you could be compatible with then a solo synchronized underwater basket weaving class, competition, club, or whatever other gatherings “interesting” people like you have. Worst case scenario, you make more friends, more connections, and get exposed to more experiences…with more people who share interests and passions with you…who probably can introduce you to people that could be really good partners and lifelong friends. Seems like a reasonable consolation prize to me. Now that I’ve just shown the single people how to find the perfect partner while eliminating 80-90 percent of the bullshit out there, let’s move on to our people already in relationships. So those of you in long term relationships wondering if I’m about to tell you to give up your partner and start dating again with my new Pareto Principle dating strategy, I’m not, so stop creating that tinder profile. Want to get the energy and passion back in your relationship? What if you got 80-90 percent of your time and energy back and still got the same(and probably better) results? Ahh you see where I’m going now don’t you? Most of us in relationships are stuck in even worse patterns than single people when it comes to doing things over and over again that don’t make sense. You put in allllll this effort that your partner doesn’t notice, because he or she doesn’t care about what you are focusing your effort on, and you feel unappreciated, exhausted, and eventually start to feel like you have nothing more to give and why do all relationships suck, and why are people so lazy and selfish and you don’t think you are asking all that much for them to notice what you are doing for them geez. But the thing is you probably aren’t doing it for them, you are doing it for yourself because it’s what YOU think you are supposed to do in a relationship…the problem is…drumroll…they don’t care because it’s not what THEY think matters in a relationship. How many of us have been in a relationship where we spend all day being thoughtful of our partner, doing the little things that show we care, putting in serious time and effort to plan the perfect things to do, find the perfect gifts, solve our partners every problem, and make rainbows and butterflies appear wherever they go…just to have them tell us they really wished we had gotten them a pizza today. Hours slaved away at being the best partner the world has ever seen, and not only did they not notice, or care, or reciprocate, they asked us to do something else on top of all that, and it was something ridiculously simple and mundane and steam is coming out of our ears? Ask yourself this. If you had not spent the hours doing all the amazing things your partner never notices anyway(which means they are really just for you), and had just gotten a pizza, how would you feel? And how would they? You could have spent those hours focused on yourself, chasing your passions, learning, exploring, becoming more, and you would have been happier, and then just spent ten minutes grabbing a pizza on the way home, and then your partner would have been happier, so why didn’t you? Your brain is probably screaming right now “That’s not how relationships are supposed to go! Relationships are about investing everything in your partner and giving them everything whether they know they want it or not!” But are they really? Or is that just something we’ve all been trained to believe? Aren’t relationships about growing together, supporting each other’s growth and happiness, and putting our partner first so they put us first? Is spending hours a day focused on activities your partner will never notice and getting frustrated over and over again that they don’t notice and “they just won’t change!” Supporting your happiness and growth, or theirs? It’s not. So why do we do it? There are a lot of theories, but my personal opinion is that we have this old leftover drive from days where our survival literally depended on being a useful part of a group. That old part of our brain nags us that we aren’t doing enough, that we aren’t good enough, and that we have to be right…. It nags us so much that we don’t notice that many times we are actually doing way too much…that we aren’t good enough to ourselves…and that we are too busy doing and never observing to notice that in fact, we aren’t right. So here’s my challenge to you. For the next week, make your focus of every day to just notice what’s actually working in your life. You can focus this on your relationship, but it can also be work, parenting, dating, fitness, friendships, anything you’ve lost your passion for that now seems mundane and you don’t know why. Make a real effort to notice what is actually getting results and not what you think SHOULD be getting results. What actually makes your partner happy, what actually makes your boss happy, what actually makes your more money, more fit, more happy, or helps you meet more quality people. And then just do that, and forget the rest for now. Once you get your passion and energy back you can add in little things to get that last 10-20% in there, but for now focus on only putting your energy into actions that create results. And then use all of your extra free time and energy to make yourself happy. Read more, walk more, do more, dance more, whatever. I promise you that the perfect formula for getting your excitement and passion back in your relationship and your life is to stop putting energy into things that frustrate you, and start putting it back into yourself and the things that make you feel passionate and alive. And if I’m wrong I offer a double your money back guarantee on what you paid for this free blog post, so what do you have to lose? Go live a life full of love and passion again, go get that spark back in your broken relationship, and go start right now. You’ve got nothing to lose but a lot of frustration and wasted time. your own from a different source.