Beyond the first few months of giddy affection and the feeling of
butterflies, few -- if any -- romantic relationships are easy. Sure,
some look that way, but usually that's because two people are putting in
a lot of work behind the scenes.
Long-distance relationships are
even more difficult to maintain, and the reasons why they can fail are
numerous. Many long-distance relationships certainly succeed, but they
require careful navigation from the people involved to steer through the
obstacles brought on by geography.
Of course, with the right
mindset, plenty of emotional preparation and lots of work throughout,
long-distance relationships can and do work out. But many potential
pitfalls await every hopeful attempt at cross-country love.
What
are 10 reasons long-distance relationships just don't work? Here's a
clue: Romances rarely come to a boil when conducted by fax.
10: Communication Breakdown
Couples
in long-distance relationships have to make up for a serious lack of
face time. In this modern age, there are plenty of alternatives: phone
calls, text messages, instant messaging and pretty much any other
communication technology developed since the carrier pigeon. However,
much of our hasty electronic communications are hammered out in
shorthand, and this can easily become the native language of
long-distance relationships.
The flip-side of this is that these
forms of communication often don't pay off with a truly fulfilling
interaction. Whereas it was once easy to chat in person, now those
normal, daily interactions are severely curtailed. It requires real
effort to keep in touch and feel connected.
If the relationship
began long distance, it might be easier to communicate from afar because
that dynamic is the only one that's existed. If both parties are used
to being in one another's presence, it might become increasingly
disheartening to communicate in less personal ways as time goes on.
A
relationship can morph into a voice-and-text situation that assumes its
own shape, making it somewhat strange when a couple actually spends
time together in person after a long absence.
There is one type of
person who does well with long-distance communication: the man or woman
who truly values his or her own space (and a lot of it), but also wants
to nurture a connection with a loved one.
9: A Murky Future
If
you and your significant other (S.O.) are in a long-distance
relationship, it's a sign that your lives are different enough that
circumstances prevent you from living in same ZIP code, state or even
country.
Maybe you just met but don't know each other well enough
to move to the same city. While there's strong chemistry, both of your
lives are chugging along on parallel tracks. You can't just sell your
house, quit your job and move. Or can you? And what if you moved but it
didn't work out? What if he or she moved to your city (or into your
home)? Would it be a dream come true or a suffocating nightmare?
Or
perhaps you started off together, but circumstances, dreams, desires or
conscious decisions created the physical distance now between you. It's
important for a relationship to foster a sense of togetherness, and
that the bond has a mutually acceptable sense of stability and momentum.
But over time in a long-distance relationship, you may feel as present
in your S.O.'s life as you do in the life of the coffee-shop regular you
keep bumping into in your own ZIP code -- and you may realize the same
could hold true for your S.O.
If further long-term commitments are
made by both parties (like a lease extension or acceptance of a big job
promotion or transfer), and those commitments don't bring the two any
closer together, someone's likely to pull the plug.
8: The ZIP Code Rule
The
"ZIP code rule" establishes the scoundrel's primary philosophical
question when it comes to monogamy: Is it cheating if it happens in a
different ZIP code from the one occupied by your S.O? And all too often,
the conclusion is: "What they don't know won't hurt them." As a bonus,
if the S.O. does find out, he or she will likely be too far away to key a
car or smash some plates. A cad will behave like a cad no matter what,
but the chances are perhaps greater when his or her S.O. lives far, far
away.
Monogamy can be a challenge over time even under direct
supervision. (Of course, ideally, direct supervision isn't a requirement
for monogamy.) Most people, though, are either the cheating sort or
decidedly not. But some people who would normally stay true to their
S.O. don't respond well to long-term physical separation. Loneliness
creeps in, new and interesting people appear when you least expect it,
and then there's alcohol. More than a few bad romantic decisions have
been made under less-than-clear-headed circumstances. (It also presents a
twist on the ZIP code question for deceitful boyfriends and girlfriends
everywhere: "Does it count if I barely remember it?")
Distance, loneliness and alcohol often grease the tracks for the derailment of a long-distance relationship.
This leads to our next reason long-distance relationships just don't work: a lack of trust.
7: Lack of Trust
If
you're currently in a long-distance relationship and have just read the
preceding section, you're probably freaked out by now. And by freaking
out, you may just jeopardize an otherwise healthy long-distance
relationship. (Sorry about that.)
Plenty of relationships end
because of trust issues (whether real or perceived), and long-distance
relationships are a minefield of them. There's really no way of knowing
whether or not an S.O. on the other side of the country is cheating on
you. But remember that close proximity offers no guarantees, either. A
healthy, monogamous relationship requires of its participants a moral
compass, ethical grounding, commitment and devotion. A trusting
relationship has a lot to do with your personalities, your dating
histories, your behavioral patterns and whether you're naturally a
jealous person.
If your S.O. is very flirtatious or has issues
with being on his or her own, you may be dealing with a batch of real or
perceived problems -- and the difference between the two, as it relates
to the health of your relationship, is negligible.
Your S.O. may
not have a wandering eye, but your fear that he or she does may cause
your long-distance relationship to collapse under the weight of
suspicion. Or, in a misguided effort to protect your heart, you may
decide to make some bad decisions of your own.
But, as we'll find out next, even if jealousy doesn't ruin your long-distance relationship, financial strain could.
6: The Cost of Keeping in Touch
While
you were once able to meet for a sandwich and hang out downtown,
getting together with your S.O. these days may mean booking airline
tickets and securing hotel reservations.
For people in romantic
relationships who live in different regions of the country, a few yearly
visits to maintain the relationship could cost big bucks. Add to that
long-distance phone bills, the shipping costs for care packages, and
going all-out when you do get to spend time together, and you may be
looking at a pretty pricy love connection.
Of course, overall,
your relationship's financial costs may actually be the same or less,
since all those former daily outings and nighttime entertainments aren't
happening -- but that's assuming your social life shuts down in the
absence of your S.O. More likely, you still go out, but now you hit the
town with your friends instead of your sweetie. In fact, a sense of
loneliness or a need for distraction may leave you with a fuller social
schedule than you had before the commencement of your long-distance
relationship.
Even if you tighten your financial belt on regular
social outings, the costs of maintaining that long-distance relationship
can be quite high. There's the expense of traveling to one another
(pricy either by car, train or plane), taking time off from work and
kenneling a dog, as well as what you'll actually pay while in each
other's presence after long periods of separation.
5: Time Versus Returns
Depending
on the personalities and approaches of both parties, maintaining a
long-distance relationship can be time-consuming with little in the way
of return on the investment.
The frequent e-mails, phone calls and
cards sent through the mail take up a lot of time and effort, and as it
turns out, keeping up with each other's news isn't necessarily the same
as growing closer.
As more time passes, the distant object of
your affections can begin to seem like something abstract and less than
real. An e-mail in your inbox isn't the same as having someone nearby
who can help you in person, who can share your day with you, and who can
create new memories with you. The distance can be a serious wound to a
relationship, and the efforts to maintain long-distance contact can seem
like mere bandages placed on a gushing artery.
Eventually, the
growing loneliness may make the wound too severe to warrant more
"treatment" -- it may be time to declare time of death.
If
concrete plans to reunite aren't in the near future, the projected gains
may be too little to warrant moving the relationship down the temporal
road.
Next: Is your long-distance relationship a painful separation or a trial separation?
4: Prelude to a Breakup
You've
done everything in your power to keep your long-distance relationship
going strong, but it still seems like it's faltering. You write letters,
keep up with your S.O.'s life through phone calls, and plan frequent
get-togethers whenever your schedules allow. So why isn't it working
out?
Sometimes, long-distance relationships are designed to fail.
It can be -- in one person's thinking, at least -- a safe way to start a
new life without right away losing the security and stability of his or
her previous life. Even if a person has no intention of staying in a
long-distance relationship, he or she may also fear jumping into a new
environment without any support system whatsoever. However, once the new
surroundings start to feel familiar, those phone calls "back home" may
decrease in frequency, duration and interest.
Aside from the sense
of security a (temporary) long-distance relationship can provide, some
people just don't like initiating the emotional havoc that breaking up
inevitably causes. For people who prefer to avoid confrontation at all
costs, going long-distance with a S.O. may be one in a series of
never-ending steps that lead to an eventual breakup -- likely after the
other person takes the initiative on their own after finally getting the
hint. Whereas breaking up on the telephone is in exceedingly poor taste
in a normal relationship, there may be no other option in a
long-distance relationship, and this may appeal to someone who's
scheduling a move across the country -- and a breakup to go with it.
Next: Great expectations for two?
3: Different Expectations
What
we -- and our partners -- expect out of a long-distance relationship
goes a long way in determining our happiness and the success of those
relationships.
"Long-distance relationship" can mean different
things to different people. It may mean "heart-wrenching tragedy" to one
person, while for the other partner it means "year-long vacation."
If
a couple doesn't share the same expectations before the separation
occurs, it can spell doom for a long-distance relationship. For one half
of the couple, it may be viewed as a test of the relationship's
strength, with an eye toward reuniting as soon as possible. The other,
however, may view the separation as a fresh taste of life all on one's
own. A boyfriend or girlfriend who wants to talk 10 times a day isn't
going to appreciate a partner who thinks it's ideal to check in every
few days. Even over a scratchy phone connection, it won't take long for
someone to realize that his or her S.O. doesn't share the same feelings
about the separation.
Not only do expectations matter when it
comes to navigating the pitfalls of long-distance relationships, they
also matter when it comes to determining where the whole thing is even
going. Is the separation somehow moving the relationship ahead a step,
or does the distance mean it's moving in a less hopeful direction?
2: Separation Issues
Nobody
likes to feel abandoned, and that feeling can rear its head when one
member of a romantic couple moves out of town. The weeks and months
leading up to it are likely to be colored by the impending physical
separation. The anxiety and even anger that can result can drive a
couple emotionally apart before they've even stopped sharing a location.
Some
people respond to separation better than others. For those who have
experienced some real or perceived episode of abandonment as a child, it
can prove nearly overwhelming when a romantic partner moves away
without first severing emotional ties. The situation can be exacerbated
if one person in the relationship didn't have any say in the decision
and feels powerless to affect how the relationship is evolving.
Of
course, physical separation will almost always result in an initial
sense of increased anxiety and unhappiness. Often, the hurt feelings
fade away and the relationship recovers, even at a distance. On the
other hand, these feelings can also contribute to a sharp deterioration
of the relationship, which is now measured in miles instead of shared
dreams.
Next: Que sera, sera.
1: Life Goes On
Many
long-distance relationships are the result of not having a better
answer to shifting circumstances that require two people in a
relationship to live in different cities or regions.
With lease
arrangements, career concerns and indecision, long-distance
relationships can represent a holding pattern. Life doesn't naturally
maintain holding patterns for very long. A couple in a long-distance
relationship may not even notice the seismic change that is pulling them
apart emotionally. Interests, values and friends may cause them to
drift apart slowly and subtly. Or, depending on how different the two
living environments are, these foundation-shifting changes may occur
quickly and noticeably.
Not all relationships are built to last,
and the ending of a long-distance relationship can only sometimes be
blamed on the distance alone. There's always the possibility the
distance served as a catalyst for something inevitable. Some
relationships simply aren't workable in the first place, and attempting
to maintain them at a great distance can only serve to illustrate it
with additional clarity.
Unpredictable X-factors occur: One day,
someone wakes up feeling like he or she isn't in love anymore, or meets a
new romantic interest. Careers advance and new opportunities present
themselves that only serve to move people even further apart on the map
than they already are.
Many long-distance relationships end
because the world keeps turning, but fortunately for those whose
long-distance relationship ends, life goes on for them, as well.SOURCE;LIFESTYLE UK.
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