It seems like many people I talk to have been in a relationship that sounds something like this: You got together and really enjoyed each other's company. However, as time continues you start to feel less and less satisfied with the relationship. Either the two of you don't see eye to eye on the big issues (marriage, children, what it means to be in a relationship) or maybe you simply don't feel like they are the right one.
That all being said, we as humans hate change. Change scares us. It scares us to the point that we rather be less than 100 percent satisfied with the person we're with than change the situation or become alone.
These relationships are called ambibilivant relationships and if you find yourself in one, I suggest reading the book, Too good to leave, too bad to stay by Mira Kirshenbaum. The book is less about giving advice and more about asking you questions to consider, should I stay or leave?
Below is a 35 question quiz presented in the book. Go through the questions and think deeply about your answers. By the end, you may find some answers.
1. Thinking about that time when things between you and your partner were at their best. Looking back, would you now say that things were really very good between you then?
2. Has there been more that one incident of physical violence in your relationship?
3. Have you already made a concrete commitment to pursue a course of action or lifestyle that definitely excludes your partner?
4. If God or some omniscient being said it was okay to leave, would you feel tremendously relieved and have a strong sense that finally you could end your relationship?
5. In spite of your problems, do you and your partner have even one positively pleasurable activity or interest (besides children) that you currently share and look forward to sharing in the future, something you do together that you both like and that gives both of you a feeling of closeness for awhile?
6. Would you say that to you, your partner is basically nice, reasonable intelligent, not too neurotic, okay to look at, and most of the time smells alright?
7. Does you partner bombard you with difficulties when you try to get even the littlest thing you want; and is it your experience that almost any need you have gets obliterated; and if you ever do get what you want, is getting it such and ordeal that you don’t feel it was worth the effort?
8. Does it seem to you that your partner generally and consistently blocks your attempts to bring up topics or raise questions, particularly about things you care about?
9. Have you got to the point, when your partner says something, that you usually feel it’s more likely that he’s lying than that he’s telling the truth?
10. In spite of admirable qualities, and stepping back from any temporary anger or disappointment, do you genuinely like your partner, and does your partner seem to like you?
11. Do you feel willing to give your partner more than you’re giving already, and are you willing to do this the way things are between you now, without any expectation of being paid back?
12. Do both you and your partner want to touch each other and look forward to touching each other and make efforts to touch each other?
13. Do you feel a unique sexual attraction to your partner?
14. Does your partner neither see nor admit things you’ve tried to tell him/her to acknowledge that make your relationship too bad to stay in?
15. Is there something your partner does that makes your relationship too bad to stay in and that s/he acknowledges but that, for all intents and purposes, s/he’s unwilling to do anything about?
16. This problem your partner has that makes you want to leave; have you tried to let it go, ignore it, stop letting it bother you? And were you successful?
17. As you think about your partner’s problem that makes your relationship too bad to stay in, does s/he acknowledge it and is s/he willing to do something about it and is s/he able to change ?
18 &19. Has your partner violated what for you is a bottom line?
* If my partner did......................................................................................... ...then I’d feel I’d have to leave the relationship
* If my partner didn’t do.................................................................................then I’d feel I’d have to leave the relationship
- If these things were true about my partner..........................................then I’d feel I’d have to leave the relationship
21. In spite of all the ways you’re different, would you say that deep down or in some respect that’s important to you, your partner is someone just like you in a way you feel good about?
22. With your new, more complete, more realistic set of information about what it would be like for you if you left, have you discovered new, more probable realities that now make leaving seem impossible, difficult or unpleasant?
23. With your new, more complete, more realistic set of information about what it would be like for you if you left, have you discovered new, more probable realities that now make leaving seem easier, more attractive and make staying no longer desirable?
24. Does your partner do such a good job of conveying the idea that you’re a nut or a jerk or a loser or an idiot about parts of yourself that are important to you that you’ve started to really become demonstrably convinced of it yourself?
25. As you think about your partner’s disrespect, is it clear to you that you do everything possible to limit your contact with your partner, except for times where you absolutely must interact?
26. Do you feel that your partner, overall and more often than not, shows concrete support for and genuine interest in the things you’re trying to do that are important to you?
27. Whatever was done that caused hurt and betrayal, do you have a sense that the pain and damage has lessened with time?
28. Is there a demonstrated capacity and mechanism for genuine forgiveness in your relationship?
29. Is it likely that, if you have a reasonable need, you and your partner will be able to work out a way for you to get it met without too painful a struggle?
30. Is there some particular need that’s so important to you that if you don’t get it met, looking back you’ll say your life wasn’t satisfying, and are you starting to get discouraged about ever having it met?
31. Given the way your partner acts, does it feel as though in getting close to you what he’s most interested in is subjecting you to his anger and criticism?
32. When the subject of intimacy comes up between you and your partner, is there generally a battle over what intimacy is and how to get it?
33. Does your relationship support your having fun together?
34. Do you currently share goals and dreams for your life together?
35. If all the problems in your relationship were magically solved today, would you still feel ambivalent about whether to stay or leave?