Commitment:
What Are We Committing and To Whom?
by
Do you make commitments? If so, to whom do you make
commitments? What do you make commitments about? What
does making a commitment mean to you?
Do you honor the commitments you make? Do you expect
others to honor their commitments? Absolutely? Mostly?
Nearly always?
I have recently been rudely awakened to the unfortunate
reality that commitments made by partners in committed
relationships may not mean what they used to. I am
outraged and alarmed to say the least!
Last week I had the great pleasure of interviewing
Shirley Glass, Ph.D. on my radio show. Dr. Glass is
considered one of the world's leading experts on
infidelity and the author of the groundbreaking new
book NOT "Just Friends": Protect Your Relationship from
Infidelity and Heal the Trauma of Betrayal.
Dr. Glass explains that there is a new crisis of
infidelity occurring in the workplace. "In the new
infidelity", she says, "one doesn't have to have sex to
be unfaithful, and infidelity is not between people who
are intentionally seeking thrills, as commonly
believed. Good people in good marriages-men and women
who say they are happily married-are unwittingly
forming deep, passionate connections before realizing
that they have crossed the line from platonic
friendship into romantic love."
In the May 2003 issue of Ladies' Home Journal, Carol
Lynn Mithers reports in her Special Report, Looking For
Love 2003 Style, "If anything, workplace romance may be
as much of a marriage buster as a happy hunting ground.
In an on-line survey of 30,000 people done last year,
nearly half said they had dallied in an office romance
even though they were already in a relationship or
married."
And if all this is not enough, the subject line of a
recent e-mail newsletter from Smartmarriages®, July 22,
2003 read: Online Dating Irresistible to Some Married
Folks. The newsletter reports a study of in-depth
online interviews with men and women who use Yahoo's
"Married and Flirting" or Microsoft's "Married But
Flirting" Internet chat rooms geared specifically for
married people.
What is happening to honoring commitments and
agreements in committed relationships today? Perhaps in
this new world of high tech information, instant
gratification and instant messaging we have misplaced
the art of creating and honoring commitments and
agreements.
What is commitment?
When we talk about love and commitment we are really
talking about attaching to or connecting with people
and things. We connect to ideals, institutions and
beliefs; to our families, pets, circle of friends,
acquaintances and co-workers; to our community and the
planet; and, if we are really blessed, to one very
special love.
When we are able to connect we feel joyful and content.
Poor connections can make us feel angry, sad and truly
miserable. And the lack of meaningful connections or
attachments in our lives can make us feel despair and
empty inside ourselves.
What does it mean to make a commitment?
When we make a commitment to another person we are
making the agreement to be present and available ?
physically, mentally and emotionally.
We make agreements by exercising our personal choice.
We communicate directly to others about what we will
do, how we will behave and what they can reasonably
expect from us, and we are willing to be held
accountable.
We honor the agreements we make by choosing the
behavior that is driven by our values. Someone once
said, "Our personal values are the set of principles we
live by and continually develop as we live our life.
Principles are like lighthouses - we can either use
them to guide us or we can choose to go against them
and smash into pieces on the rocks!"
What is Accountability?
Being held accountable means we accept responsibility
for the results of our choices, decisions and behaviors
instead of blaming others or external factors.
Individuals who believe they are in charge of the
quality and direction of their lives, rather than
victims of circumstance, are empowered to move forward.
They focus on solutions, not problems, and they move
forward towards the goals and commitments of their
shared vision and purpose, both as individuals and as a
couple.
Successful Commitments and Agreements
Couples who have clarified their own personal values,
and individual and couple visions and purpose have a
stronger foundation from which to commit to their
agreements and achieve more consistent and satisfying
results. Their overall effectiveness in making and
honoring agreements is greatly increased. Success is an
almost certainty when both partners keep their
agreements and most certainly can be at risk if one
person doesn't keep his or her agreements.
Crafting Elegant Agreements
Life is an ongoing process of creating agreements with
others. An effective agreement means more than getting
another person to do what you want. It means buy-in and
true commitment from both people.
Most couples have hopes and dreams, and desires and
expectations. They establish goals and make commitments
that are developed from a joint visioning process; a
process that expresses an inclusive vision of desired
outcomes; their road map to success!
Another way to look at this is that we join forces with
others by forming agreements. Agreements are expressed
in writing or verbally during very intentional
conversations. Most of us have never learned how to
craft effective, explicit agreements. It is a skill we
were never taught, even though it is fundamental to all
relationships and a basic life skill.
While this is a method offered for committed partners,
any two or more people who wish to make agreements can
easily adapt it. So here goes!
Here is a straightforward 15-step method you can use to
craft elegant and effective agreements:
- Create and clearly articulate your joint vision with
as much rich detail as possible. Be sure that both of
you participate with eagerness and passion;
- Be sure that both of you are creating the agreement
with intention and with a belief that you are well
served making and honoring the agreement;
- Make a list of each person's strengths, gifts,
skills and talents that are available to be drawn on
by each of you.
- Identify, with as much detail as possible, all the
aspects of what it is you are coming to agreement
about. A joint plan works best when you are both
working toward the same joint vision;
- Be certain that each of you understands and
acknowledges the actions (behaviors), attitudes, and
responsibilities that are associated with the agreement
for yourself and your partner;
- Decide together if the actions and attitudes are
sufficient to result in the desired outcome(s). If no,
identify what additional actions and attitudes must be
included and by whom;
- All agreements must have specific time deadlines for
each part of the agreement to be completed or
finalized. These are "by whens"?by when will you do
this, and by when will you do that. In addition, the
time period the agreement will be in force must be
specified.
- Does the agreement as a whole and do all the parts
of the agreement forward the joint vision?
- Clearly identify the evidence or positive outcome(s)
that you expect to result for each person from making
and honoring the agreement;
- Does the agreement as a whole and do all the parts
of the agreement truly satisfy each person and result
in each person being whole? Being whole refers to being
sure that neither person experiences a loss or losses
as a result of pledging their time, attention and
commitment to the agreement;
- Bring all your concerns and fears to this
discussion. This can often minimize the disagreements
that may occur during the process of crafting the
agreement. This discussion will deepen your commitment
to the agreement and to your partner or reveal a
problem that might already be brewing in the
relationship.
- No matter how optimistic and clear you both are
when you craft an agreement, one or both of you will
likely come back to the table and ask for the agreement
to be renegotiated or changed in some way at some
time. This is not a personal failure or a failure of
the process! This is an expected, anticipated part of
crafting and honoring agreements!
It is critical to include a mechanism that will take
into consideration the many changes that normally and
naturally occur over time in a couple's relationship.
Being realistic about this at the beginning enables
the relationship to evolve and prosper. It is
imperative to provide each person with a way to
accommodate change ? an exit strategy you can both
follow with dignity. Anyone who feels imprisoned in an
agreement, commitment or relationship will not be his
or her best self or offer all possible personal
contributions to forward the joint vision.
- It is inevitable for conflicts and disagreements to
arise, and perhaps, one of you will not honor the
agreement. Establish an attitude of good will and good
intention and a plan to repair hurt feelings and
disappointments;
- Both people must be responsible to ensure that the
agreement is honored;
- Unless and until you are satisfied, do not move
into action. Do not agree. Be sure each person is
satisfied, ready to take action, and that outcome will
be worth it and the joint vision is becomes more a
reality.
Now that you have a solid model for crafting elegant
agreements your work is to decide what you want to
agree and commit to and to whom. This work starts by
becoming more and more aware of who you are, what you
want, what you value, and how to get your needs met
respectfully and responsibly.
Ask yourself:
- Are you a committed couple who is strengthening your
bond and deepening your intimacy and trust day-by-day
and year-by-year?
- Are you engaging in meaningful family and work
relationships and friendships, and asking for what you
want, saying your real yes and your real no and hearing
others who may be asking you for something?
- Are you crafting agreements consciously and with
intention?
- Do you expect others to honor their agreements and
commitments and do you intend to honor yours?
One of the best books I have ever read by an
extraordinary couple for extraordinary couples is
Conscious Loving: The Journey to Co-Commitment. Drs.
Gay & Kathlyn Hendricks wrote this timeless book and
they talk frankly about what it takes to create
co-committed relationships complete with exercises to
guide couples who are courageous enough to be on the
sacred journey of committed "coupleship" together.
Whether you are a committed couple or an amazing
singleton, as they call it in the UK, let's educate
ourselves about agreements, commitments, boundaries,
conflict, and fidelity. Let's start risking being our
deepest most magnificent selves! Join me and let's
start today!
Only you can make it happen!
Dr. Jackie's Coaching Mission:
Dr. Jackie's mission is to challenge you to explore the old beliefs, old expectations and outdated values which cause you pain; to awaken you to the new realities of relationships; to revitalize you so that you will be ready to welcome the ideal partner when he or she comes into your life; and provide tools to couples based on a contemporary model for marriage and commitment.
www.DrJackieBlack.com
1.888.792.6224
©1999-2003
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