Love is in the air, restaurants are booking to capacity, flowers are delivered, and romantic movies fill the big screens on this magical love-filled day where partners connect on the deepest emotional levels.
Is this how you'll spend Valentine's Day with "your person" or "your soulmate?" Are you with that one person with which you share the deepest emotional connection? Do you know what makes a partner emotionally available?
Let's look at the signs of an emotionally available partner vs. an emotionally unavailable partner. As well as the root cause of emotional unavailability and what a healthy and emotionally connected couple share with 3 top relationship practices.
First, let me clarify what it feels like to be with someone secure and emotionally available.
Do you feel safe and fully loved by your partner? Or do you question if your partner is emotionally unavailable?
Please know it's not you and that an emotionally unavailable person has difficulty connecting with their feelings and then will have struggles connecting with your feelings as well. Feelings are a foreign concept, often uncomfortable and not welcome. Therefore, they're not available for true emotional intimacy.
Beware - emotionally unavailable people can come on very strong in the beginning. So, it's tricky to maneuver and can be very confusing - if you're up, down, or sideways most of the time.
Emotionally unavailable partners often make you want to believe just about anything they say. Most significantly, they can make you believe they're that one special person created just for you, that you're soulmates.
It's easy to fall into their trap, begin to make excuses for their intolerable behavior, and no longer honor yourself and your life. You've now started to settle for much less in life and a life partner.
We understand that emotional unavailability is rooted in childhood wounding. A connection could have been painful, and there could even have been childhood trauma.
People in this camp are often afraid of being suffocated or engulfed, and their survival tactic is to need space and distance.
And others fear closeness, as it serves them to stay with someone who avoids intimacy.
If you're a person who longs for a mature and deeply connected relationship and finds yourself with someone who can't meet you there, don't get tricked into thinking you can "fix" them. Of course, you can always share how you feel and your experience (in a non-harming way) and see how they respond.
However, unless this partner is willing to see the truth about themselves and committed to self-recovery, there isn't a person for you to connect with in a deep and emotionally available relationship. So, take a stand for yourself to have a life full of love, safety, and healthy connection.
Healthy relationships are where your partner wants you to feel connected with, heard, and supported. Soulmates are created in partnership through a deeper intentional practice by both partners to connect emotionally. So, if you're searching for an emotionally available relationship, here are three tips to make sure you have together:
So, deep and emotionally fulfilling relationships are vital, whether Valentine's Day or any day of the year. After all, human connection and community are linked to studies on life expectancy, well-being, health, and happiness.
Now that we've shared the differences between emotionally available and emotionally unavailable partners and the top three behaviors emotionally healthy couples share ask yourself the following questions.
If you are struggling with emotional availability in your relationship, we're here to help. Check out our virtual and in-person Imago Relationships Workshops and Imago Relationships Therapy.
Discover more about Imago with our Imago Professional Membership, Imago Professional Facilitators, Imago Professional Training, and Imago Educational Webinars.
This blog post was written by Evie Shafner, LMFT.
With a degree in clinical psychology in hand, Evie started private practice in 1979, as a licensed MFT. She was one of the founders of the Los Angeles Women’s Therapy Center, where she worked for over 20 years.
Evie began training in Imago Relationship Therapy in the ’90s, getting certified in 1994. Evie then went on to become an advanced clinician in Imago, a workshop presenter and has served on the Board of Imago Relational International for the last 6 years.
Check out her website too!