T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
391.1 | | BPOV06::FISHER | | Fri Jan 13 1989 09:26 | 11 |
|
Adele,
How are you??? It's been a long time! Have you spoken
to Judy lately? I haven't seen her in more than a year.
Where are you located now?
Thanks for the welcome, this is a good conference.
Tom
|
391.4 | Get to the real issue & compromise | IAMOK::KOSKI | suggestions welcome | Mon Jan 16 1989 12:55 | 26 |
| Consider *all* alternitives.
- are there no Univ's around or is it that one paticular one is
not near by? Investigate the possibilities of another school.
- Move closer to where the school is, if possible, more of a
geographical middle point. (I wasn't clear if partners are living
together at this point).
Rather than working at persuading your partner, work more with
communicating the reasons it is important for you to be going to
the school. Also why partner B is important enough to you to want
"B" with you. Ask yourself this question as well!
If, in this instance, you are speaking of a great geographical boundry,
(between states, across country), then maybe your dreams of an education
and the future do not meet/mesh with the dreams/future plans of
your partner. This would be important to discuss. B's unwillingness
to move might be an indication that B will stay without you, read:
it's time for you to move on.
The art of really communicating about the root issue is what is
important for any big decisions. It leads to the long lost art of
compromise. If A's issues are as important to B as they are to A
then a compromise will be found.
Gail
|
391.5 | | AZUR::HACHE | | Tue Jan 17 1989 10:18 | 16 |
|
Good suggestions Gail, I guess there are many things to be
considered here. For Partner A to get what they want it would
mean a move to another country, partner A is not happy with the
current location and the universities are not within consideration.
There are some major communication problems in this relationship,
the university issue is one of them but all decisions become a
crisis.
At what point have you compromised too much? How much should you
be willing to give up to stay in a relationship? These are mostly
philisophical issues since it's difficult for someone else from the
outside to judge.
|
391.6 | even a rose garden has thorns... | HYDRA::LARU | Surfin' the Zuvuya | Tue Jan 17 1989 11:34 | 14 |
| re: < Note 391.5 by AZUR::HACHE >
� At what point have you compromised too much? How much should you
� be willing to give up to stay in a relationship? These are mostly
� philisophical issues since it's difficult for someone else from the
� outside to judge.
I concur wholeheartedly. There is no one "correct" way to
resolve issues such as this. We each have to do what
"feels right" to us... life is always a series of decisions,
compromises, hard choices. If there's never any pain, you're dead.
/bruce
|
391.7 | What's it worth to you? | IAMOK::KOSKI | suggestions welcome | Tue Jan 17 1989 11:47 | 18 |
| If you are asking yourself "Am I compromising to much for this
relationship?" you probably already are. It sound like your needs
for education (ie your planning for your future) is not a high priority
to your partner.
I strongly suggest that you don't compromise your future for the uncertainty
of this relationship, you'll only end up regretting it in the future.
You mentioned that your communication problems don't begin and end
with this University issue. Repairing communication's problems that
have existed for a while will be very difficult, it's hard enough
repairing them in a new relationship. You and your partener need
to decide if you are both willing to give the extra effort to your
relationship. Is it worth it you? To your partner?
I hope for the best for you,
Gail
|
391.8 | Negotiation | CURIE::ROCCO | | Mon Jan 23 1989 17:24 | 19 |
| I believe one of the important parts of a good relationship is the ability for
both partners to negotiate. (Compromise is part of negotiation).
What this means to me is that with any major issue that affects both of you,
requires sitting down together and going over what is most important to each
of you and what your priorities are. A resolution probably means both people
giving up something, but somehow holding on to those things of highest
priority.
This requires honesty, and also listening and understanding to what the real
needs of your partner are. If either partner is not willing to negotiate, and
compromise then it is very difficult to resolve major problems (whatever
they are). So if you are the one always compromising, then there is a basic
problem in the relationship that may not go away...
I hope you resolve this issue.
Muggsie
|
391.9 | long-distance... it's the next best thing to being there | CYRUS::DRISKELL | | Mon Jan 23 1989 17:47 | 17 |
| have you considered a long-distance relationship? they CAN
work out. whether its 200 miles apart, east coast west coast,
or on different contintnets, it is possible to keep the relationship
and still achieve different goals. i personally know of 3
married couples who experieced this, for periodes of 2 to 5
years. all are still married & living happily ever after...
or at least as happy as humans get ... :-)
this way you don't dissolve the relationship, while at the same
time you work towards individual goals. if the relationship
dies at a later stage, at least you will have continued to
develope as you wanted to.
I've also been in such, if you'd like to talk about it, feel free
to call
mary
|