Why Love Relationships Fail

Science has provided ample evidence that a healthy love relationship is the cornerstone to optimal health, longevity, happiness, and success.

The findings of different bodies of research are well-aligned in highlighting the power love has in impacting how well we will do in life and on our ability to reach our full potential and become the best versions of ourselves.

However, despite the amazing breakthroughs in understanding the science of human connection, love relationships still have an extremely high failure rate.

More than half of marriages fail! And that statistic does not account for the couples who stay together despite being distressed because of either real or perceived lack of choice.

We have never had as much knowledge, as many medical breakthroughs, or as much access to information as we do today. In fact, we have made such astonishing medical advances that we can cure diseases that not that long ago were fatal. Yet, half of us continue to experience the pain and suffering of a broken heart.

Why do so many relationships fail?

Researchers have tried to answer that question for several decades.

They have done so by studying the physiology and neurobiology of couple’s interactions, putting them through FMRI machines, and monitoring their every movement as they grapple with the day-to-day difficulties that all couples face.

And has science found an answer to the question of why relationships fail?

We tend to defend our relationship failure or our single status by saying it is because we have not yet “met the one,” or even worse, because our ex was a real “piece of work.”

Science, however, has illuminated the truth about what the biggest culprit to success in love is: Fear!

None of us want to admit that fear runs our life to the degree that it does. However, the sooner we face the deep, hidden fears that fuel any and all deadly behavioral patterns that are killing our love, the quicker we can regain control and change the trajectory of our most important relationships for the better.

How do we know that fear is the real criminal? Well, it’s clear by the behavioral patterns that accompany the day-to-day shenanigans of the relationships that unfortunately fail. Dr. John Gottman, recognized as one of the ten most influential therapists of the past quarter century, has completed seven studies that can predict divorce with 93.6% accuracy. The studies link four specific behaviors to relationship failure: stone-walling, contempt, criticism, and defensiveness. All of those behaviors are aligned with the bodily responses that result from our fear alarm going off in our brain.

Here are the top reasons why we are such scaredy-cats:

  1. Our brain’s negative bias

Our brain has evolved with the propensity to assume the worst because, frankly, that is how we have managed to stay alive throughout the history of our species. Underestimating threats can be deadly, so our brain would rather just assume the worst most of the time. Considering that our need to love and belong is as vital as oxygen and water, the thought of losing the vital force of love is very potent in activating our negative bias. We have to slowly, but surely, train our brain much like a puppy to “come, sit, and stay” with this present moment and not go off fighting non-existent dragons. Luckily, our brain can continuously get reshaped based on where we place the attention of our mental activity. Love can become our new default position if only we remain open to it!

  1. Our past hurts that we still need to heal

We behave the way we do in order to meet our needs. Safety, survival, and security are our fundamental needs. When we have a history of getting hurt in a relationship where we depended on another, /data has been stored in the intricate connections inside our 100 billion nerve cells, which will ring an alarm bell when we find ourselves in a position to depend on another again. Thus, when we fall in love, all the alarms will go off—until and unless we make sense of our past hurts in a way that allows us to stop carrying them along with us.

  1. Our injured self-worth

The question, “Am I good enough?” is a universal barrier to our happiness and is also part of our human experience. Issues with self-worth need quite a bit of self-compassion, because they originate in events we had no control over. Additionally, depending upon how responsive or not the external world has been to our needs, we will sculpt our sense of internal value on models of the world. So, whether the environment did not reflect us because we grew up in a dysfunctional family, or because we grew up as an immigrant in a non-ethnically diverse neighborhood, our self-worth can suffer because of the way our experiences have established whether the world is a safe place for us or not.

Love has divine power in pointing us to the path of increasing our self-love and self-worth, as it is now clear and supported by the systematic generation of theory from research: We cannot love anyone any more than we love ourselves!

 Life is such a magical journey and such an amazing experience with a never-ending supply of ups and downs.

There is an undeniable part of life that involves a significant amount of suffering.

It is in those times of suffering when we can feel the most what science is now teaching us about love—that nothing is as comforting to our soul as the tenderness and power of human connection. Nothing other than love can help us heal as fast from adversity and pain and maintain our nervous system in perfect balance in the face of any threat.

It is, perhaps, why when we are in secure, functioning relationships, we are not preoccupied with things that could go wrong, and we soar in all of our personal and professional aspirations.

As much as we resist the thought of falling in love again after one more failed relationship, our embodied intelligence takes over inviting us instead to rise to love.

Because, after all, the only thing that stands in the way of you and the love of your life, is you.

Why We Should Let Love Rule

Do you know what the best predictor is of how long you will live, how well you will do in life, and how healthy you will be?

Are you ready? The best predictor for well-being is…drum roll…love!

After my marriage, which had lasted the majority of my adult life, failed, I vowed to never fall in love again. I announced to myself, to the world, and to all interested parties that I was not willing to fall for love ever again!

Until one day, when I least expected it, one of my best friends—who I adored—kissed me and decided to move the moon and the stars in order to change my mind and make me fall in love just one more time.

The all-encompassing love that followed had a profound impact on my life and awakened me to levels of consciousness and self-awareness that I never knew were possible.

If you, like me, have found yourself disappointed and disillusioned by love, let me give you ten good reasons to reconsider!

  1. Love—a fundamental need

After food and shelter, one of our most fundamental needs on this planet is to connect with others. The way we see and perceive things is shaped by our connections. Research clearly shows that nothing appears to give us a larger advantage in life than a healthy primary relationship.

  1. Love as a predictor of well-being

A happy love relationship is one of the strongest predictors of physical and emotional health. People in healthy relationships recover faster from illnesses, live longer, and are less prone to disease and ailments than their single counterparts.

  1. Love’s survival benefit

Having a secure attachment to a special one also appears to offer us a significant survival benefit through an apparent activation in our brain that diminishes threats in the face of situations that are perceived as stressful. At a time when stress is believed to be the epidemic of the century, love seems to be one of the most effective ways to neutralize its toxic effects from the inside out.

  1. Loves antidepressant and pain-relieving properties

Physical and emotional closeness is one of the most potent antidepressants and pain-killers. When we hold or touch the person we love, the hormone oxytocin is released into our blood stream. Oxytocin appears to have a significant impact on many central nervous system functions, including those modulating anxiety, depression, and pain perception. So, when you are stressed by your job, forget about Xanax. Make love instead!

  1. The power of love on your attachment style

If you happened to have been raised by parents who were not attuned to you, you probably developed an insecure attachment style. Although you had nothing to do with the creation of your insecure attachment style, it will determine the way you relate to others in intimate relationships. And trust me, I know from personal experience that we don’t relate in healthy ways when our attachment style is insecure. Research, however, shows us we can transform our insecure attachment style to a secure attachment style, which has the qualities of relationship harmony, bliss, and joy. But guess what? We can only accomplish that transition through the power of a healthy adult relationship. This is the most effective way to replace the relational pattern that was developed with our primary caregivers in childhood. (See Attachment Theory Review in the Science section, if you would like to learn more.)

  1. Love’s invaluable insight to self

A relationship with a significant other is the most profound mirror to our soul, which reflects not just our beauty, but also any wounds we carry that still need to be processed, healed, and released. If you pay close attention to your complaints about your partner and/or your relationship, you will get incredible insights about the raw spots in you that need your attention and healing. Don’t you think that instead of blaming and walking away from love when we experience past pain, we should actually be ever so grateful to love for illuminating the path to our complete freedom from pain?

  1. Love and self-mastery

Falling in love is an intense opportunity to practice mastery on so many fronts, because when it comes to love, the stakes are very high. For example, when our lover’s behavior is not what we would like it to be, it is the perfect opportunity to practice letting go of what we can’t control. Or, if we have been conditioned to be independent, and we are not comfortable asking for anything for ourselves, a primary relationship is the perfect space to practice how to state our needs in effective ways.

  1. Love’s impact on success

When we make an authentic connection to someone we can truly depend on, we can absolutely soar as an individual. Our confidence is at its highest, and we are more courageous in going after our dreams and aspirations. Studies reveal that people who are happily coupled have a significantly higher average income than their single counterparts. Paradoxically, it appears that this unique interdependence is a catalyst to our own self-love and independence.

  1. Love’s power to defeat fear

Love is the most potent antidote to fear. One of our biggest challenges in this information-overloaded era we are living in is that fear has become our BFF—our best friend forever. We see fear everywhere: in politics, news, displays of violence, school shootings, and terrorist attacks. Love and fear cannot coexist. Since feeling connected is a primary source of security in life, love is an incredible shield against fear.

  1. Love and happiness

Harvard University’s longest study of human development throughout history, which aimed to uncover the secrets to a fulfilling life, came to the following conclusion: “Happiness is love. Full stop.”

Knowing how many incredible gifts love brings to our lives, wouldn’t you agree that nurturing healthy love is one of our most important human projects?

However, statistics reveal that healthy love is challenged by high relationship failure rates. Join me next week for an empowering perspective on the reasons behind relationship failure. Learn how to open up avenues for solutions within your control, and give love another chance.

Know Thyself—What You Need to Know About Your Brain to Reduce Stress

STRESSED

A long time ago, when I first heard the famous aphorism “Know Thyself,” by a fellow Greek named Socrates, I had no idea what he was talking about.

Today, I realize that truly getting to know our selves from the inside out is a great path toward optimizing our physical, emotional, and mental health and performing at our best at work and in our personal life.

Do you ever find yourself feeling overwhelmed, irritable, worrying, or having a hard time sleeping? What if I was to tell you that you already have the solution to all those troublesome states of being? You just have to learn how to collaborate with the best asset you will ever have at your disposal—your brain.

Meet your brain: Hello, gorgeous!

In the material world we currently reside in, we try so hard to find happiness. We measure our worth in relation to material things, like the size of our bank account, our house, or our car. Or we measure our worth by our external, physical appearance. In reality, our brain is truly the most gorgeous and valuable part of us, not to mention our best ally in finding happiness.

No physical improvements to our body can top what an incredible job our brain and nervous system do as they work tirelessly around the clock to process information in order to keep us as well as possible.

Beyond our cognitive awareness, our brain continuously connects the outside world with our amazing, interior wonderland to assign meaning to our experiences so that we can navigate through the obstacle course of life with as much ease and pleasure and as little pain as possible, and, of course, with the highest chance for survival.

Just like the intricate components of our home security system, our brain uses an amazing network of one hundred billion nerve cells, each one capable of connecting to up to 10,000 other nerve cells, to create an astonishing one hundred trillion pathways (synapses) that can take us to either happiness or misery!

Now, “How is that?” you may ask. Well, the synapses of our brain cells are essentially circuits of the path of least resistance that become our default way of thinking, feeling, and acting based on the meaning we have assigned to any experience.

But let’s look at a specific example to bring this closer to home.

Driving is a skill that involves risk. When we first learn how to drive, we associate elements with actions. For example, we associate a red light with the need to employ the action of stopping in order to stay safe.

Beyond our cognitive awareness of how our actions are driven by the color of a traffic light, mental activity induces neural activity that builds and reinforces connections between nerve cells.

These connections form freeways that we hop on when similar occasions present in our reality. Without much thought, we take the action of stopping when we see a red light time and time again.

Beyond skills like driving, synapses between neurons also build pathways to evoke certain feelings, like warmth and joy when someone buys us a gift, or disappointment when our spouse forgets our birthday. Although, in fact, the only person who ought to feel bad for forgetting our birthday is our spouse, we have formed a circuit that is linked to disappointment when someone forgets our special day.

On a larger scale, this is how certain regions of our brain become more developed than others. And different parts of our brain contribute to different characteristics that we possess. These characteristics can be strengths, weaknesses, fears, hopes, or other elements of ourselves.

Professor Eleanor Maguire (University College London, UK) is well known for her research on the noted structural changes in the brains of London cab drivers due to the extraordinary demand they place on their brains to memorize an astonishing labyrinth of over 25,000 streets. The grey matter of the London cab drivers, in the part of their brain associated with memory and spatial navigation (hippocampus), was found to increase significantly following their training and an assessment of their memory retention.

On the opposite side of the spectrum, shrinkage of the hippocampus has been observed in those of us suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). It seems like our brain is trying to protect us from having flashbacks of our traumas by atrophying certain structures to shield us from negative memories.

Our feelings, sensations, and why we do what we do are interwoven inside the intricate connections between our nerve cells that connect based on our mental activity.

I lived in England for nine years, and I still remember how expensive London cabs are many years later.

But the high cost of taxis in London cannot compare to the price we pay every day by wasting our brains’ super powers, when we translate events as threats that are not actually threatening. (For example when our manager gives us a poor performance review). Using our brains power for defense for imaginary threats that are not here now, prevents our brain from performing well in keeping us in balance. (Homeostasis). (Employing our brain for defense at the rate that we do, also changes the structure of our our brain to be more prone to be ready to fight to flee or freeze in the future as well.)

I want to offer you a few, simple, everyday ways to reconnect with your long-lost asset—your brain. You can use these practices to induce synaptic activity to change your brain circuits in ways that promote well-being.

  1. Accept what is without resistance.

Adversity and change are absolute certainties in life. Sometimes we will handle them with grace, and sometimes we will fall flat on our face. But we will certainly not accomplish anything by resisting what is. Imagine swimming against the stream of a powerful river. How could we use our energy better, instead of in resisting an inevitable reality? We could be creating a list of all the lessons we have learned, or journaling about changes we will make. How much energy do we lose in the act of resisting?

  1. Establish a sense of curiosity and wonder.

No matter how bad a situation may seem in the moment, everything in life, including the greatest defeats and disappointments, are here to bring us a very specific gift, lesson, or pearl of wisdom. What if instead of spending several hours ruminating over our friends’ betrayal, we redirect our energy in answering the question: “What is the message this person/event is here to teach me?

  1. Stay present.

According to a Harvard study designed to assess habits and happiness, our mind takes off and thinks about things other than what we are doing 47% of the time. Isn’t it crazy to think that we are not present for about half of our life? The same study showed that a wandering mind is strongly linked to unhappiness. I know we have been trained to consider “multi-tasking” an invaluable skill. Can you challenge yourself to find a reason to stay present every time you catch your mind wandering away from you?

Despite my great admiration for the wisdom of Greek philosophers, I must admit that it has taken me a lifetime to make sense of the practical application of their wisdom for my happiness and well-being.

But if you find yourself navigating life with a degree of dissatisfaction that interferes with your well-being as I did, you can absolutely change that.

Although our Socrates is long gone, it is you who holds the key to how to be your own superhero. And it rests right between your temples.