Jordan Gray says that living with your significant other can kill the passion in your relationship… unless you decide to do these five things.
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Do you live with your significant other, or plan to live with one in the future? Great! Read on…
It’s so easy to take our relationship for granted when we live with our partner and see them every day.
When you live apart from each other they seem like more of a scarce resource. When will you see them next? What will they be wearing? What will you talk about?
But when you can safely expect that you will go to bed with them every night and you will have consistent access to cuddling them in the morning, it’s easy to slip into certain bad habits that can unconsciously de-prioritize your relationship.
Here are five ways that you can be a better partner to live with.
1. Be proactive in your self-care
This point comes first for a reason. The ultimate way that you can be a better person to live with (or to be in a relationship with in general) is to proactively invest in your self-care and self-love practices.
No matter what nuanced details you focus on as a partner, if you aren’t regularly investing in your health, your happiness, or your growth as a human being, then none of the following tips will do much for your relationship.
The greatest gift that you can give your partner is your own happiness. So be intentional about loving yourself and getting your needs met inside and outside of your relationship.
Your partner should never be your sole pathway to happiness. Keep doing the things that attracted them to you in the first place. Don’t let your self-care go soft.
2. Don’t be a score keeper
One of the fastest ways you can kill the attraction in your relationship is to be a scorekeeper.
Whether you’re tracking the exact dollar amount of your share of the utilities, who ate more of a certain food in the fridge, or who did which chores this week compared to last, don’t get hung up on such trivial details.
It’s an absolutely losing game to be overly aware of who did what around the house.
If your mind is too focused on the fact that you’ve done the dishes more times than they have over the past two weeks, then you might be completely blocking out the fact that they did two other chores more than you did.
Don’t keep score around the house. Simply see your acts of service as an act of love and mentally prime your brain to see all of the things that your amazing partner brings to your life.
It doesn’t matter if one of you did/said/paid for more than the other… it all evens out in the end.
3. Occasionally do ALL of the chores
On that note, sometimes it’s good to give your partner a break by doing all of the chores.
Presumably there are certain things that you each gravitate towards doing. Maybe you do the dishes more often than they do, and they take out the trash more often than they do. That’s all well and good. You’re allowed to have your individual preferences.
But every now and then, surprise your partner by doing all of the chores that you have to do. Prepare dinner, do the dishes, do the laundry, water the plants, etc…. and do all of it without expectation of reciprocity or congratulations. Do it because you love your partner. Not because you have an ulterior motive.
Bonus points if you can pull off all of the chore-handling while your partner is out of the house.
“Surprise! Your life is now easier/cleaner/more awesome!”
4. Look for ways to make your partners life 1% easier
You don’t have to be an awesome live-in partner in one fell swoop.
Maybe your schedule is crazy-packed and doing four hours of chores sounds too daunting. So don’t worry about the big romantic surprise for now. Instead, ask yourself “How can I make my partner’s life just 1% easier?”
Maybe you’re about to go to bed and you know that your partner likes to have a glass of water to wake up to… so you get them a glass of water and put it on their bedside table.
Maybe you know that they’re going to have a hectic day at work and they won’t have any shirts to wear for their big night out… so you take their laundry out of their basket and do some laundry for them.
Maybe their clean clothes have been sitting in a wrinkled pile for a few days and they don’t seem like they have enough time to get around to them… so you air fluff the clothes in the dryer and fold them while they’re at work.
Whatever you do to add value to your partner’s life, you’re allowed to start small.
Think about things that you know would make them happy, and do those things. Simple as that.
5. Regularly invest in your romantic life
Just because you are frequently in the same room as your partner doesn’t mean that you’ve necessarily spent any quality time with them lately.
Regularly invest in your relationship by scheduling date nights, extended sex dates, and deep conversations into your calendar.
Anything worth doing is worth doing well. And your relationship is no different.
Don’t take your significant other for granted just because they’re around you. Make them feel seen, loved, and appreciated on a regular basis.
Good Men Project Readers! Click here to check out Jordan Gray’s tips for learning what women actually want in a lover.
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If you enjoyed this post, you might also love reading:
7 Things All Women Need In A Relationship
10 Questions To Ask To Go Deep In Your Relationship
The One Thing To Remember When You’re Dealing With Any Person, Ever
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Looking for a relationship? The Good Men Project promises to have a really good one with your inbox. Sign up for our daily or weekly newsletter here.
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This post originally appeared at JordanGrayConsulting.com
Photo courtesy of Shutterstock
I lived with a man and did all of these. Unfortunately, he kept score and I was going through the stress of relocating to a town (to be with him!) with which I was completely incompatible, starting a new job, settling into a new home, and weathering my parents’ incredibly acrimonious divorce (in which I was caught squarely in the middle). My immune system couldn’t handle the stress and I ended up with chronic pain and anxiety attacks. That relationship turned into a daily hell of nitpicking and distancing, and I became obsessed with trying to figure out how to… Read more »
I do agree that number two can kill a relationship really quickly. But in many relationships it DOES matter if one person is doing more and it may not even out. My first live in boyfriend and i attempted to split everything evenly but it wasn’t really even because he eats A LOT more, watches premium cable channels when i never had cable before, needed the fastest internet, etc. I was spending more money than i was making each month while he made twice as much as me. The only chores he ever did was occasionally putting a few things… Read more »
It sounds like perhaps you two had different goals and lifestyles. That’s unfortunate, I know well the kind of stress it can cause. When you find someone compatible there’s really no need to keep score most of the time. It’s those occasions when things get a bit unbalanced that the temptation arises and has to be kept in check. It sounds like you know what you do and don’t want in a partner, which puts you way ahead of the game.