, 55 tweets, 18 min read
1. Jil morning! Let’s quickly do an exercise. I want you to draw four boxes on a piece of paper, number them 1,2,3,4. You’re going to write some names in those boxes so make them fairly big. #Letr2Jil
2. Label Box 1 “Very Difficult”, Box 2 “Difficult”, Box 3 “Easy”’ Box 4 “Very Easy.” #Letr2Jil
3. Now you need to populate those boxes. In Box 1, the “Very Difficult” box, write down the names of your friends and marital prospects who are VERY difficult people. #Letr2Jil
4. In Box 2, the “Difficult” box, write down the names of friends and marital prospects who are not as difficult as those in Box 1 but difficult nonetheless. #Letr2Jil
5. In Box 3 write the names of friends or acquaintances and marital prospects who are easy to get along with. And in Box 4 write down the names of friends and marital prospects who are VERY easy to get along with. #Letr2Jil
6. This exercise will help you take a wise decision on who to marry; also help you determine the degrees of relationship you should have with people. It will help define your expectations. Let’s look at the groups one by one. #Letr2Jil
7. One thing you’ll notice about the people listed in your Very Difficult box is that you almost always have fights and disagreements with them. #Letr2Jil
8. Doesn’t mean you don’t like them, you do. And that’s what makes the relationship difficult – the fact that you like them but then they’re very difficult to get along with. #Letr2Jil
9. And it doesn’t mean they don’t have wonderful hearts either. Some can be very nice people depending on the situation. They can go out of their way for others, go out on a limb. #Letr2Jil
10. It’s just that they can be so wilful and stubborn. Relating to them is like extracting a tooth. They tend to be strung up, always want to have their way, can be touchy and have a sense of victimhood. #Letr2Jil
11. You can reach out to say hi or to express kind sentiments but by the end of the conversation you’ll regret calling. The whole thing will turn into a fight. They just can’t let go of that difficult persona. #Letr2Jil
12. They want to be valued but then do things that leave you with regrets relating to them. Everything is an argument, everything is a contention. They’re opinionated. #Letr2Jil
13. They’re only loyal to their viewpoint. Can throw you under the bus in a jiffy, which of course leaves you disappointed. And pained. But you love them and therein is perpetual pain. #Letr2Jil
14. If you want me to be stark with you, I’ll advice you don’t pick a spouse from this cluster. You will be drained emotionally, tired, constantly wrung up. Yes, you like the person but you’re going to have regrets. #Letr2Jil
15. And they tend to be tunnel-minded. What they want to do is what they want to do, irrespective of any change in circumstances. They will do what they want to do. In a sense no one can talk to them. #Letr2Jil
16. The Box 2 people, the Difficult but not so difficult people… They are lovable but tend to be selfish and self-absorbed. They’re not into give and take. What they want is all there is. #Letr2Jil
17. Any emotional negotiation with them will be one-sided. They have no other worldview. If they give emotionally it’s because of what they want. #Letr2Jil
18. They’re not emotionally fair. What they demand they don’t want to give. And the degree to which they demand they don’t want to reciprocate. #Letr2Jil
19. The resulting effect is that this drags down the spirit with disappointment. All the selfishness brings pain. And it doesn’t mean they’re not nice people. It’s just that they like to impose, have their way and not reciprocate emotional demands made. #Letr2Jil
20. It’s not as if you can’t marry from the group but be ready for emotional distress and altercations, constant and unending negotiation over trifles. If you don’t have the emotional energy don’t go into it. #Letr2Jil
21. If you marry from the group be ready for weariness of soul, and be ready for constant fights and disagreements. #Letr2Jil
22. The people in Box 3, the Easy group – they’re easy to get along with. They’re dutiful and responsible towards relationship. They tend to be well brought up, hold on to values. It’s why they’re dutiful towards their relationships. #Letr2Jil
23. They’re generally okay people, don’t like struggles in relationship, want to be loved and want things easy. To them things should be easy and uncomplicated. They’re not emotionally complicated. #Letr2Jil
24. They’re easy to get along with. They respect boundaries, are mindful of boundaries and make simple commitments to relationships. Their motto is, live and let live. It’s that simple. #Letr2Jil
25. In general you won’t have issues from this group because of those values and simple commitment. Not a bad group to choose from. You’ll have a simple and peaceful relationship, but don’t push them too far. #Letr2Jil
26. The last box is the Very Easy group. They’re very generous with affection, sacrificial in their relationship, always giving themselves. #Letr2Jil
27. The key for this group is identity. When they identify with you they totally identify with you. You’re them, they’re you. #Letr2Jil
28. They have a simple sense of loyalty, don’t like issues, fights and arguments. They’re very loving though they can be emotionally demanding. That’s because of that strong sense of identification. #Letr2Jil
29. For them the relationship is it. It’s life. They don’t think outside that frame of reference. They tend to be peaceful, easy and gentle. They’re dutiful towards their spouses, contribute their quota to any relationship they’re in without being asked. #Letr2Jil
30. I could go on and on about this group but suffice to say it’s the ultimate group when it comes to what we call a “loving marriage.” Choosing from this group is wisdom. But we don’t all want the same thing. And sometimes we choose personality over wisdom. #Letr2Jil
31. Young people are not always wise. Understandably they don’t know much about marriage, and so they end up using terrible parameters for choice of partner, things that can’t endure with time. #Letr2Jil
32. The easiest analogy is the man who goes to the bank to do short term borrowing for a long term project. The structural dislocation will affect the project. The interest rate will kill him. #Letr2Jil
33. Or how do you explain contemplating marriage to someone you can’t even agree on basic things with, someone you’re always having disagreement with? #Letr2Jil
34. We do that because we tend to concentrate on surface parameters to the detriment of fundamental parameters. #Letr2Jil
35. That’s not saying personality doesn’t count. Personality matters. If someone has a difficult personality marriage will prove difficult. Won’t mean you can’t endure the marriage but the price will be high. #Letr2Jil
36. There are relationships that are unhealthy even though the person is lovable. The party is lovable because you choose to love him or her despite repeated abuse of your relationship. #Letr2Jil
37. That you like someone doesn’t mean you should marry the person. If you can’t get along in peace what’s the point? #Letr2Jil
38. Acquaintanceship is different from marriage. In acquaintanceship you may barely see the person - may be once a week... But in marriage you live with the person, permanently. There are no breaks. #Letr2Jil
39. And it’s not wise to overwrite facts about a marital prospect. You will regret it. The facts you refuse to acknowledge will follow you into marriage. #Letr2Jil
40. Marriage is not supposed to be difficult. Marry someone you can get along with. It’s somewhat like a movie date. It’s not everyone you can go on a movie date with. #Letr2Jil
41. If you can’t ordinarily get along with someone don’t go into marriage with the person. Don’t go into a difficult marriage there’ll be a toll on your soul. #Letr2Jil
42. And like I told you before the one thing about marriage is its use of human life. You have only one life. Why subject it to trauma? #Letr2Jil
43. There are other considerations for marriage of course but I think this question, “Can we even get along?” is so basic. #Letr2Jil
44. Sometimes our desperation gets the better of us and we seek to go into marriage with someone we KNOW we don’t really want; we go into a relationship with someone we know will be difficult. #Letr2Jil
45. May you not know marital trauma. #Letr2Jil
46. This marriage thing... It’s not that difficult. You want someone you can stay at home with, someone you can be yourself with, someone you can commit your heart to... #Letr2Jil
47. You don’t want a marriage in which there are constant fights. And you don’t want a marriage in which there are no fights in the classical sense but then there are constant disagreements. #Letr2Jil
48. Neither do you want a marriage that is in a state of disagreement. There are no fights but then everyone has withdrawn to a corner like the marriage is some boxing arena. That’s a tense marriage. There’ll be fewer co-operations. #Letr2Jil
49. Can you have a conversation without a fight? Can you have a conversation without someone needing to prove a point? Can you have an understanding divergence of opinion? Can everything be subsumed under love? #Letr2Jil
50. Don’t marry someone with the hope of changing the person. That’s rather presumptuous. #Letr2Jil
51. I hope the exercise brings things into focus for you. #Letr2Jil
52. Your mentor, LA. #Letr2Jil
53. Read, share & download #Letr2Jil – BOXES at jacknjillive.com. #Letr2Jil
54. For related letters, search for FOUR QUESTIONS, LOVE IS FRIENDSHIP and LONG SPAN BRIDGE at jacknjillive.com. #Letr2Jil
55. © Leke Alder | talk2me@lekealder.com. #Letr2Jil
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