Adding Synergy to you Communication with your Partner with Dr. Ray and Jean Kadkhodaian

Adding Synergy to you Communication with your Partner with Dr. Ray and Jean Kadkhodaian Love Vitamins for Life

In our conversation with relationships coaches and experts, Dr. Ray and Jean Kadkhodaian, share their personal stories and many frameworks to help people build healthier relationships, listed below 👩‍❤️‍👨 Time for Hearts – Relationship Check Ins 3️⃣ Things you can do to change your relationship right now. Spoiler: Something new, Surprise each other, Sleep naked ⏳ Finding time and building deeper connections with your partner 🤕 Dealing with conflicts and pain – Comfort vs Discipline 🪴 Individual Growth LoVita – Love Vitamins for a healthier is a community by Partners for Partners. We share stories about how Partners are working intentionally towards building a healthier relationship. To learn more check out the links below 🔗 Website – https://lovita.blog/ Newsletter – https://mailchi.mp/81f58463e76b/subscribe Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/lovitalovevitamins/ Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/lovitalovevitamins All below links in a single page – https://linktr.ee/lovitalovevitamins Connect with Dr. Ray and Jean Kadkhodaian Website – https://couplessynergy.com/ Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/couplessynergy/ Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/couplessynergy/ Twitter – https://mobile.twitter.com/drrayandjean

Dr. Ray & Jean have been married since Valentine’s Day in 1998, and in 2002, they Co-Founded the Lighthouse Emotional Wellness Center, a counseling center in the Chicagoland area. They created and perfected a unique approach to coach couples to have amazing relationships, called Couples Synergy, and have helped thousands of couples transform their relationships. When it comes to relationships, they believe that they cannot teach it unless they live it. They are a real couple who have worked hard to create an amazing relationship through the difficult challenges life brings us all. They cohost the podcast, Couples Synergy: Real Couples, Real Storie… Real Relationships. Dr. Ray & Jean help couples create the relationship of their dreams, with the partner they fell in love with!

The quotes below are taken from the episode transcription and might have some minor errors or missing words.

Relationship Check Ins – Time for Hearts

When asked about the value of doing regular check ins in a relationship and how to check in with your partner, Dr. Ray had the below to share

It’s not a surprise that we are all locked up in our head, right? We are ultimately alone in our experience, our human experience, and it is very common for couples to feel alone, even within a loving, committed partnership. And if couples are not checking in with each other. And getting to know their partner, where they’re at in that moment, then we lose that opportunity of consistent evolution together. And so that check in is not just about, how you doing, but it’s really about what is, what is your experience right now in this world, in this moment.

And so one of the things, we definitely do. As a check in and as a show of affection towards each other, is that we always start and end the day off with a show of affection, of an embrace, so the first thing that you’re doing in the morning when you wake up is you are starting that day off with an embrace with your partner, and that the last thing you do at the end of the night is you are closing out that day with that embrace.

Jean adds that this a practice in time that they call as time for our hearts to have a conversation

And it reduces anxiety, it reduces depression, it increases oxytocin and the bonding hormones. So it just makes you feel better. And there are certain days we don’t get to do it cuz like we gotta catch a plane or something and we feel off. All day.

Deeper Connections

We touch on the above need for check ins in a relationship as a trigger and not necessarily a long conversation. On the topic of how to get to a deeper level if there is something that needs to be discussed in more details, Dr. Ray shares the below

A lot of times people have the cart before the horse. Think that when I have a conversation with my partner, I’ve gotta jump into the deep stuff, and so what happens is they, they have this long periods of time where they are not connecting with their partner. And then when they do have that time now, they try to stuff all of these deep conversations into a small period of time. Typically, it’s maybe a vacation. They’re not spending time together, they don’t have quality time. And then they say, well, you know, when we go on vacation in a month, then we can connect. And then what happens is they go on vacation and then everything that’s stuffed in the closet comes out. They end up in a fight.

So it’s, it’s the, the smaller touch points, the smaller connections that add up. To be able to have , those deeper conversations. And by that time you already are connecting with each other, priming each other, understanding all of the different dynamics that are occurring. So when you are having the deeper conversation, half of it is already done.

To summarize: Check-ins really are like cashing into your emotional bank account. They are creating deposits of happiness and love and care and affection, which you are then able to leverage as that healthy foundation for when you do need to have those deeper conversations. But the concept of a daily check-in doesn’t need to be a conversation per se. It could be something more, a little bit more intimate, like a physical touch, which is what the embrace example is kind of catering too. Usually when we think of check-in, our brains automatically does go to a conversation like, “oh hey, how’s your day doing?” Or “How’s your day been?” Or “you seem a little off, you wanna talk about it?”

Finding time with your partner

If there is a conversation that you do wanna have on a deeper level, how do you get alignment from your partner? What sort of techniques do you use to get each other’s attention? Do you block some time on your shared calendar, if you have any or anything else? Jean shares

This idea of time, we hear it all the time. That We don’t have time. We very rarely spend time on screens. So once our day is done, we typically go outside, we have a fire and we talk, or we have records if we’re inside, cuz it’s cold out and we listen to records and we talk and we do this five times a week. We’ve always enjoyed doing stuff like that more than, being distracted by something. Those allow you to have those more organic conversations.

Dr Ray adds

I think that it depends for each couple, for some couples. Maybe they do need to schedule a time to talk and they say, Hey, if you got some time this week, I really want to connect. I really want to talk some things out. And that might be okay for that couple, but for another couple, that actually might be a trigger, it may be a way of having power and control over each other. It may be a way of putting off your partner. So it really comes down to each couple. How each couple needs space and time, emotional consideration in order to have those deeper conversations. So the investment in the account is happening separate from the rebuilding and the healing.

We all know that the most successful people in the world, they always talk about meditation and starting their day out. Because we need to be able to center ourselves before we, go out into the world and, and deal with everything that we’re being bombarded with. Well, now you have the complication of two people coming together and, having different needs. And how do you find that that sync between the two of you when the world is going to be affecting you in many different ways.

The research says: that couples should be spending a minimum of five to six hours of quality time per week, and that is without screens. So it’s not even cuddling up and watching the same show together. That doesn’t count. Or going out with another couple that doesn’t count either. It’s spending that time connecting and bonding and talking about each other’s experiences through this world.

3 THINGS YOU CAN DO TO CHANGE YOUR RELATIONSHIP RIGHT NOW

To get to a better future and change your relationships, Dr. Ray and Jean explain 3 things you can do right now

1️⃣ Do something new, exciting and thrilling together.
When focused on an activity, especially if something new, allows you to bond at a different level. For a while it substitutes the labels of you being partners for being friends and lets you stay away from bigger topics and just focus on having fun.

2️⃣ Surprise each other
Surprising each other is a really good way to add to that connection so that you can get into the more difficult stuff later. Surprises can add that missing spark and help you communicate how much you care for each other

3️⃣ Sleep naked together
Yes, sleeping naked. Shocker right. Experts found 57% of couples who slept in the nude claimed to be happy together, compared with 48% of those in pyjamas, 43% of nightie wearers and 38% of those in onesies.

These three things shared, remind us of the concept of reconnection through recalibration. A jolting of your system by doing things that you don’t normally do, a complete opposite of monotony. By introducing these elements into our everyday life, we make it easier to talk about the harder stuff later.

Dealing with Conflicts

On the topic of dealing with conflicts and tips on solving the problems in relationships, Jean suggests.

What we focus on grows and the human brain is designed to seek out negativity or potential threats much faster than something positive and so people wanna talk about the problem instead of where do we wanna reach for.

When we’re first interviewing a couple, we ask them, “if you had a magic wand, how would you like your relationship to be?” And sometimes they’ll say, “well, I don’t like that.” We’re not doing this. Like, no, what do you want? that place. Which then it’s like if, if you get that agreement that you both have a common vision of where you wanna be, well then you can work backwards and and reverse engineer it. If you start focusing on the positive stuff what you like about your partner, what they’re doing well, it’s easier for you to do more positive stuff and you’ll see more. And that is the momentum because the other stuff, we don’t have to practice.

When you think about in the beginning it’s what can I get? And the longer you’re together and the more common experiences you have, the more your brains mirror each other. Cuz our brains are designed to do that. And so then you want to say, what can I give? Because if I give him something that makes him happy. My brain becomes happy too. If I give him grief, I get grief. You can feel what your partner’s feeling and it’s not so selfish anymore. And, and the selfishness in the beginning, it’s not good or bad, it’s just the way we’re wired. It’s the way we’re designed, and as we mature, we care more about making sure they’re. because we can’t be happy if they’re not happy.

When we’re younger, we can, when we’re younger, we think, you know, I can keep score and I can win and, and my partner’s gonna lose and I’m gonna win. you don’t keep score with your teammate.

Dr. Ray adds

The fact of the matter is conflict is inevitable in every relationship. We can expect it to happen. We just don’t know when or where, but it’s gonna happen. Analogy I use when it comes to conflict is that it, it’s like a credit card bill and the the bill is always gonna be due. And the choice you have at that point is whether you’re gonna pay it now or you’re gonna pay it later with interest? This calibration has to happen. It has to happen consistently. When you are focusing on the problems, then that is what you’re gonna create more of.

Keeping Love Exciting and New

In the beginning of a relationships, everything’s new and exciting. You’re interested to learn more. But as you spend more time with your partner, your frequency tune in sync and the sense of security makes you start feeling comfortable. So how do we keep exploring and how does one keep maintaining that curiosity, that mysteriousness within each other?

What is it that you do to keep exploring and how do we keep maintaining that curiosity that mysteriousness within each other? Let us know in the comments below. Listen to the episode to learn about our guests story and learn what they do to keep the fire burning.

Comfort vs Discipline for Dealing with Pain

Jean shares an analogy of comfort and discipline. We notice a trend here, which is that a relationship is built over time and discipline. That component of showing up, checking in with your partner, doing the fun activities, creating that organic space that’s disconnected from tech to be able to have those deeper conversations. All of these are forms of discipline so that eventually one day when that fire say, diminished a little bit, instead of feeling like “everything’s breaking apart and I don’t know what to do”, you can be like, “hey, I have a feeling that things are getting a little bit cold in this relationship. Can we do something about it?” All of the work that you would’ve done previously enables you to then have a successful and healthy conversation at the end. But really it’s the building up of those smaller things that we do every day, rather than taking the easy way out and choosing the route of comfort and being like – oh, I don’t need to worry about this.

When we’re in pain, we have two choices. The first choice is to comfort ourselves so we drink, eat, stuff we shouldn’t eat, watch tv, distract ourselves. All of those things make us numb. and make us sicker over time. so the pain comes, I hurt my back. I’m gonna take a pill and lay on the couch. Well, now my muscles are getting atrophy. And, and you need more and more of that comfort stuff. And you get less and less sensitive to the subtle pain where you could actually do something. The other thing you can do when you’re in pain is discipline. Really takes discipline to love another human. takes the discipline of, if we are using the back as an example, I gotta go to physical therapy and it’s gonna hurt and I’m gonna push through it and I’m gonna get stronger and I’m gonna heal and I’m gonna get you joy. comfort leads to temporary pleasure that goes away where doing the discipline consistently leads to a joy and, and a feeling of safety in the. And connection, and you cannot have that without work. You have to know yourself. You have to know your partner. You have to invest, you have to do your work just in the same way, taking care of your body.

Individual Growth

First we talk about how to channel your pains and communicate with your partner without assigning blame, to which Dr, Ray says

You can’t prevent that from happening. You are going to dish out blame from time to time. It doesn’t matter how, how peaceful a person you are, at some point it’s gonna happen. And that’s, that’s, it’s one of the rules that we came up with when we did the hike. You know, we, we hiked 180 miles. It was grueling. We crossed 10 mountain passes, all our food survival gear on our backs, and the first thing we noticed is that when you go through difficult times, you go through pain, you go through discomfort, the first thing you’re gonna do is you’re gonna blame your partner. Yeah. It’s just, it’s just what happens. You know? It, you, your partner is your closest, the closest human. The closest connection you can have to another human being, physically, mentally, spiritually, emotionally. And so when we hurt on the inside, we have to get it out. Yeah. And the first thing that that we’re gonna do is it’s gonna go at our partner.

Jean adds

It’s really important when your partner does blame you to not take that personally as best as possible. And also to to understand everything is a 50 50 in a relationship, meaning that you’re both contributing equally to what’s going. And so the question I always ask myself is, what is it about me that chooses to hang out with someone like this? Ha. if this is not that pleasant in that moment. So what, what have I done to teach him how to treat me? What, what boundaries do I need? What, what do I need to show up at? Maybe nurture him because he’s hurting and I’m treating him in a way that maybe someone else did and, and I’m activating that and, and. Tricky things to figure out and they require a lot of calmness. Yep. That you don’t have initially in blame. When you’re in blame, you can’t figure that out. Your brain doesn’t even work. You’re just like, what? You’re, you’re in fight or flight and it doesn’t work. And then later you can dial it back and you can look at what, what’s going on here? And typically if you’re the person who, you know, stepped on your partner and they got a reaction, Blasted you, you didn’t even know you did it. And you’re like, what, what did you hear me say? And it’s like the telephone game. They’re hearing something that they heard 20 years ago. And if you take that personally, you keep it up at the surface and now you’re fighting about whatever toilet paper, right? not about that. It’s about what it brings up. And that’s true for all of us.

Iceberg Moments

Dr. Ray explains the above with an example and something they call Iceberg Moments

Those moments where you’re in pain and. Have this need to blame your partner. Or that it happens. It is something we call iceberg moments, and you think about an iceberg, 15% above the water, 85% under the water. And when, when each of us as individuals go through something painful it brings up something from our past that 85% under the. And we are dishing out a hundred percent onto our partner when maybe they’re only part 15% part of what the issue is. And so when couples do that deep dive and they really start understanding more and more about their partner and where they came from and what they brought with them, it’s easier than. Like easy at all. But it’s easier to see that moment as an iceberg moment, and to not take it personally. Oh, my partner is hurting right now. And what’s being brought up for them is this whole past history that I was not part of, but it’s being played out in the moment.

Jean adds

and you’ll always attract a partner. Who knows exactly how to smash into your iceberg because your iceberg smashes into theirs and if it didn’t, you probably wouldn’t have a relationship. And so it’s designed that way because we get wounded through relationship and we heal through relationship. And so we come with all our wounds and no one teaches us how to heal that. And a lot of it is very unconscious. We’re not very aware of why we’re so activated by someone. and it’s, it’s that discovery that can lead to a deep sense of healing between two people. That’s where the work is and it’s, it’s incredibly beautiful and most often when we first meet a couple, they’re saying, if my partner would just change this, I’d be fine and of course it’s never about that, but they don’t even know that. They don’t even know what it’s really about. And, and that discovery of bringing that deeper stuff up into consciousness, I think someone said we learned how to have a conversation we didn’t even know we were supposed to have. Mm-and it takes that type of, eyes to see it. We can’t see it. Just if two people are so close, they can’t and you have to get that distance and sometimes that pain can give you some distance to understand yourself and then to come back to your partner and go, this is what I discovered through that.

Walkabout – Conversation with yourself

We then talk about our last topic of how do you work on your own individual self and Jean sheds her insights on this with a practice they call Walkabout.

There’s an exercise we practice and we give to people, and that is to go on a walkabout. And a walkabout is 48 to 72 hours. By your to go somewhere you’ve never been and you can’t have any agenda. You have to feel what you feel at any given moment. Are you hungry? Go find food. Do you wanna sleep? Sleep? Do you want to learn something? Go out in nature, whatever you wanna do. And people are so scared, they’re like, well what if I don’t wanna go home in the end? Or what if my partner doesn’t wanna come back? We’ve never seen that happen, but I’m sure it could. But we don’t have that type of time cuz the. 24 hours, you’re just all in your head. And then it starts to go, and then you can have a conversation with yourself in, in, in a bigger part of yourself, a higher self and the universe. And then you can come back. And I do it when I’m angry. You, you do it more regular, like as a schedule. Right. I’m a runner, so that’s kind of my process. Right. But, but it’s a difficult thing. Absolutely impactful.

Dr Ray then shares a beautiful idea below. It is scary to ask because a lot of the times, people are afraid of what they’re going to find. If they do take the time to have that conversation with themselves, they’re afraid of the scary things that might come up and therefore the reckoning that they’ll have to do. By embedding this as a daily practice, it becomes a little bit less scary and you don’t have to indulge in it or schedule time and make it into the special big thing. You can also just piecemeal it and that makes it a lot less scary and therefore just a part of your everyday life. And that’s how you’re able to bring not only the best of yourself to the relationship, but also help yourself grow in the process.

The whole point is to completely, unplug, to disconnect yourself from, the monotony of life and everything that is. All the pressure that you have. So you can’t be online. , you can’t be on your phone, you radio, read books, drink. If you check into a hotel, you can’t watch tv. You can’t listen to the radio while you’re driving. you can’t talk to anyone either. Mm. So you know, you can order at a restaurant if you’re going to. Or you could check in a hotel, but from that point forward, you don’t have conversations with people because that is gonna pull you outside of yourself, and we need that time within to really understand our insecurities. And, the things that we wrestle with, Carl Young talked about it being the shadow, the shadow. Part of ourself that we hide from the world, and if we don’t understand that and our focus is just on removing it, well, it is going to permeate into our relationship for sure.

Connect with Dr. Ray and Jean

Website – https://couplessynergy.com/
Instagram – couplessynergy
Facebook – couplessynergy

Empowering Women in Relationships with Charlene Byars a Certified Empowerment Coach

Empowering Women in Relationships with Charlene Byars a Certified Empowerment Coach Love Vitamins for Life

In this episode, listen to Charlene Byers talk about masculine and feminine polarity, feminine embodiment and romantic relationships. She is an expert on male/female relationships. She shares her stories and learnings from her 25 years as a relationship coach. She talks about her struggles as a woman that she faced early on and how she was able to overcome them and build a healthy relationship with her husband. We explore the answer to the very important question of “How do Women Want to Feel in a Relationship?” Learn about the RAM (Relationship Attachment Model) Model and how it can help you in your relationships. In the full episode we go over the below topics 1️⃣ Impact of men around Charlene in her youth 2️⃣ The effect of that in her Relationships as an adult 3️⃣ Struggles of leaving the past behind 4️⃣ Slowing down to find alignment And much more… LoVita – Love Vitamins for a healthier is a community by Partners for Partners. We share stories about how Partners are working intentionally towards building a healthier relationship. To learn more check out the links below 🔗 Website – https://lovita.blog/ Newsletter – https://mailchi.mp/81f58463e76b/subscribe Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/lovitalovevitamins/ Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/lovitalovevitamins All below links in a single page – https://linktr.ee/lovitalovevitamins Connect with Charlene Byers Website – https://www.charlenebyars.com/ Tik Tok – @levelupforlove Instagram – mscharlenebyars Facebook – mscharlenebyars YouTube – Charlene Byars

Charlene Byars is a leading relationship expert, Certified Empowerment Coach, and women’s revolutionary mentor. She helps women heal their hearts and attract devoted, masculine men who want to be in a long-term relationship. She is on a mission to equip single, successful women with the tools they need to attract the man of their dreams.

In this episode, Charlene talks about masculine and feminine polarity, feminine embodiment and romantic relationships. She is an expert on male/female relationships. Her style is direct, entertaining, and she has a very dynamic personality. She shares her stories with us and learnings from her 25 years of relationship coaching experience. In our discussion she shares her story and we talk about her struggles as a woman that she faced early on and how she was able to overcome them and build a healthy relationship with her husband.

As a women’s coach she helps women find their person, heal from a past break-up, and level up their relationship with themselves and their lover. Something that motivates her to do her work is that, she has a very inspiring story – a long term relationship of 23 years with 4 kids in an abusive situation. When she realized she needed to leave, that’s when her journey towards the work she does today started.

The Past

Transcript from Charlene talking about her childhood and experience with men around her.

“When I was a little girl. Um, both of my parents are a Cuban, and so I am first Generation. So both my parents spoke Spanish. That’s my first language. And I, um, saw, you know, not my father because my mother and my father, they, um, divorced when I was about four years old. When I was a little girl, I saw the men in my life, um, really mean, really mean. So I grew up in an environment with a really mean stepfather, abusive stepfather who, you know, emotionally, physically, you name it, abused me and my brother. And so I knew that. The way that I grew up and the way that I saw men and the way things were, I knew as somebody, I was like, Ooh, this is, this is not good. This is not good. I want something more. I want a real connection. No one teaches you relationships, teaches you how to pick a partner for the rest of your life. You dunno, I was young, You dunno all that.”

Impact on Relationships as an Adult

Transcript from Charlene talking about her ex-husband and her first marriage.

“So what happened? I fall in love with this. And, I’m like crazy love, like, you know, like I, I like love and love and love, I love, and, and the guy, and lemme just tell you something about this man. His core is a good human being. He was an asshole with me though. I’m just being honest with you. He was a good person, but he didn’t know how to also be in a relationship. He didn’t even know, you know, like how to truly, honestly treat a woman, how to show up with kindness, how to show up with respect. He was like, he was almost kinda like a wild man. Like he had no filter. So I went throughout this marriage, you guys just so confused. What is this? So hard?

So then we started gonna counseling and you know how long we went in counseling? I’m not even kidding you. 10 years. And guess what we learned in counseling? Zero. So that was just for me, just beyond Confus. Because I was thinking, how can you have two people be going on a regular basis for over 10 years? And we’re still talking about the same thing that we talked about 10 years ago and nothing’s changing. So I finally realized you can’t change a person. You can only show. And, be what you want that person to be with you, right? So I started showing up respectfully differently. He didn’t do anything. like, you know, it was all, it was all me, me, it was of me, you know, Hey and be nice and happy, and he didn’t do anything. So then we went another, How many more? And then I realized it was getting worse.

I had to leave. I finally decided after 23 years, and lemme tell you something, that is the hardest decision, you know someone’s gonna make because I was a married woman with four kids. So you can only imagine what that was like for me. It was. Um, but I was determined. I was like, you know what? If I’m gonna be in a relationship, it needs to be aligned and we, we cannot fight the way we’re fighting and it can’t be this hard. If it is something is not right, we’re just not meant for each other.”

Struggles of Leaving your Past Behind

Transcript from Charlene talking about her experience about leaving the relationship and moving on to the next chapter

“I was, at the time, I was a stay at home mom, remember I had four. And so I knew to leave him that I was gonna have to make sure financially, that I can stand on my own two feet. So I hired a coach and it took me six years to leave my ex-husband, he had no idea. So in the background, Because he was abusive. So in the background I was, I was preparing. Because I knew for me to leave a marriage that I’ve been with for 23 years, he was the, the one that made the money. Um, I could not just leave and, and, and no, I have to take care of my children. I had to, um, provide a home for them and I didn’t want him to give me money. I didn’t want that. No, because I knew that we were gonna be 50 50 custody.

Before I was a stay at home mom, I owned, um, businesses and I was a sales trainer. So I just got back into that. I got back into work. So by the time I was gonna leave my ex-husband, I was making a lot of money. So anyway, I did it. I left the guy, I got the house on my own. I had everything by myself. And now I’m a single mom for the first time with four kids, and I am working like crazy? Like, I’m working, I’m busy, I’m going, I’m going, I’m going, I’m going. So then finally, when that settled, I started dating again.”

Slowing Down to Find Alignment

Transcript from Charlene talking about a key realization that she has – to slow down

“Okay. So I slowed all this down and I started thinking about, okay, Charlene. Something’s up here. Because if you keep attracting those type of guys, what’s up? What’s up? So I went in again, I went in again and I got coaching again. I got therapy and experience and I figured out something. And this, I figured out on my own. And I didn’t understand that I still for so long was operating on a belief system that all men were assholes. And that’s not true. That’s not true because they’re amazing men out there is what I learned. Oh, they’re so good. They’re amazing men out there. The first thing that I, I did for Charlene is I had to learn polarity. I had to learn really what it was to be in masculine and feminine energy and how that really played a part in romance, because I wasn’t looking for a friendship.”

How do Women Want to Feel in a Relationship?

New research from the menstrual cycle tracking app Clue in collaboration with other researchers analyzed the answers from 68,000 people in 180 countries. And overall they found: personality comes out on top, with 88.9% of women considering “kindness” a very important trait in a partner. Close behind were “supportiveness” and “intelligence,” which were chosen by 86.5% and 72.3% of women, respectively.

When Charlene asked this question to her clients, she found a slight variation – her top two findings were: safety (mental, physical) and men who choose to be with them

RAM Model (Relationship Attachment Model)

The R.A.M. Model (Relationship Attachment Model) was produced by Dr. John Van Epp in his research regarding relationships progression. It’s a simple way to look at how relationships should grow to become healthy relationships. It consists of five dynamics: Know, Trust, Rely, Commit & Physical. Essentially, it’s about progressing through these 5 steps linearly, instead of jumping from getting to know someone to committing to them or getting physical in your relationship right away.

Transcript from Charlene talking about why this is essential.

“You get to know someone, then you get to trust someone, then you get to rely on someone and then you commit to someone and then you’re physical. So you have to slow down. You have to get to know them. You have to be able to trust them. Once you start trusting, then you gotta rely on them and see if you can rely on them. Once you rely on them, then you commit, then you commit. So the RAM system really helps people slow down and get to know people.”

Limiting Beliefs

Transcript from Charlene talking about her learnings.

“I had to learn what limiting beliefs were. Okay. And because I had certain beliefs about certain things and I had and that kept taking me to each relationship. So even though I was with a different man, I had certain beliefs about how men are. Your beliefs and you don’t take care of why you are the way you are and why you do the things you do and how that actually affects your new partner, then you are gonna bring all that to your new partner.”

Connect with Charlene Byers

Website – https://www.charlenebyars.com/
Tik Tok – @levelupforlove
Instagram – mscharlenebyars
Facebook – mscharlenebyars
YouTube – Charlene Byars

Unleash Prosperity in your Relationship with Victoria Rader a Possibility Coach

Unleash Prosperity in your Relationship with Victoria Rader a Possibility Coach Love Vitamins for Life

In this episode, we chat with Victoria Rader, a possibility coach on how to unleash prosperity in your Relationships with Victoria Rader, a Possibility Coach. Amongst other things, we learnt about a 4 step Ass Principle 1️⃣ Validation      "What an ass." 2️⃣ Ownership    "But he/she is my ass." 3️⃣ Forgiveness  "I choose to forgive them." 4️⃣ Love               "I choose to love them." 🎧 Listen to the full episode on https://lovita.blog/podcasts We discussed other topics like Self Identity and Conflicts Finding time for your relationships 5 Love Languages Relationship Vision Learning to listen LoVita – Love Vitamins for a healthier is a community by Partners for Partners. We share stories about how Partners are working intentionally towards building a healthier relationship. To learn more check out the links below 🔗 Website – https://lovita.blog/ Newsletter – https://mailchi.mp/81f58463e76b/subscribe Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/lovitalovevitamins/ Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/lovitalovevitamins All below links in a single page  – https://linktr.ee/lovitalovevitamins Connect with Victoria Rader Book – Proser mE: https://a.co/fTZYPzO Website – https://yu2shine.com/ Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/vica_rader/ Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/Yu2shine/ Email – reach@yu2shine.com

Victoria Rader, Ph.D. is a Possibility Coach™, transformational speaker, founder of YU2SHINE, and an internationally best-selling author of Prosper mE: the 35 Universal Laws to Make Money Work for You (and three other books). She is also the creator of Empower-mE and Master-mE apps, and the founder of Free mE EFT and Quantum Freedom.

Victoria has been married to her husband for 27 years and puts her relationship with her husband first.

Self Identity and Conflicts

We chat about self-identity and how it conflicts with your partners or anyone else’s identity when in a relationship

Victoria says “When you don’t know who you are and you are learning these boundaries by bumping into somebody else’s.” As an individual in a relationship, you are responsible for your own happiness. You can be happy without any changes in your partner or making anyone else responsible for the happiness.

Finding time for your relationships

The takeaway for us was on the value of having deeper conversations. It is much more impactful and fulfilling in a relationship to find opportunities to have a more meaningful conversations rather than spending more time with each other and having only shallow conversations (like talking about the weather). As Victoria and her husband were often travelling, they would get less time to talk to each other being in opposite ends of the globe, but it would be a much deeper conversation which they found to be a benefit to them. They always get time together on the calendar first. With their own mechanisms to spend time together, like travelling quarterly, watching silly shows, walking the dogs and more, they have set their non-negotiables and get plenty of opportunities to catch up and sync in with each other.

Now how does one get to having a meaningful conversation? At, LoVita we discuss many Frameworks to help this conversation started. The key is finding what works for you and your partner, and building on top of it. Then of course, sharing it with others not only reinforces your learning but also provides you opportunities to validate your thinking and learn from others. If that still seems too daunting, here’s a simple suggestion. Start with asking a question that you would like them to ask you. Start with asking questions, not just about the weather but things questions that will provide you an deeper insight of your partner.

5 Love Languages

We talk about the 5 Love Languages

  • Quality Time
  • Words of Affirmation
  • Acts of Service
  • Receiving Gifts
  • Physical Touch

Understanding your own language and then your partner’s language, and then being able to speak in that is so much easier on your relationship than trying to teach each other a brand new language.

Being aware of the love language of the partner takes communication, observation and time. Rather than defining a relationship, self centered as any human would through your own love languages, it can be a lot more beneficial to identify your partner’s love language. While being aware of each others love language is the first step, the next is to set markers for the minimum fulfillment and then to deliver a little bit more.

Ass Principle

Victoria talks about the Ass Principle. In times that your partner knows very well, something that they’re doing is very upsetting to you and they’re still doing it. When there’s a behavior or a pattern that is frustrating to you, do the below

  1. Validation – in your mind. Look at the person that you love and say, “what an ass.”
  2. Ownership – Say to yourself, “But he/she is my ass”. Own up to your relationship with them.
  3. Forgiveness – Say to yourself, “I choose to forgive them”. You neither excuse the behavior, not punish it.
  4. Love – Time to say, “I choose to love them.”

This 4 step process explained by Victoria, is a “two minute if that, it could be a 30 second mental reset that gets you validated, that gets you resituated in your relationship. That reminds you how the power of forgiveness and you actually look at them [with love]”

She explains how the 4 step process above can be applied to not only relationships but also to strangers. With some variations, she explains with an example of what to the next time someone cuts of off on the road while driving and you can “become a part of the greater healing versus, tearing yourself from inside.”

The power of this Principle is how the whole story, starts from you and ends with you. You’re not at all trying to change what the other person is doing which is powerful. Instead you are inviting them into the process simply by the choice of language that you’re using. Then by adding humor on top of it when you get comfortable with this principle is so beautiful. This can be very empowering, so the next time you bother your partner, you can try saying “Honey, I’m your ass” and see how that goes.

Relationship Vision

Victoria says, “we all go into the relationship with partial agenda, if we’re being honest, we have a vision. And that vision, our ability to communicate that vision to the person we’re considering commitment is going to either save you 10, 15, 20 years prior to divorce of strife or help you find the soulmate.”

Issues or your vision in your relationship should be addressed before anyone deepends their relationship into a romantic level. To those who have jumped into a relationship without this conversation prior, she says “you can say, Look, let’s start from ground zero. Let’s should start from ground zero. We just met today. This is what we haven’t done that we should have done three years ago, 10 years. Where do you see us going and what are the ways you want us to get there? And what are your non-negotiables? And if you see that the person can never meet your non-negotiables, please have enough love for you and for them to end the relationship. It’s not easy to end a relationship, but it is simple”

Learning to listen

Learning to listen without need of giving an answer. There is a simple exercise that she recommends. Set a timer for 15 minutes, and give undivided attention without asking one question, but just listening. Ask your partner, what’s on their mind and just listen to everything they’re saying. Listen, not only for the content, see when does their emotion go up and down cuz you will know more about them than they might be aware of. Then listen for repitition. The more they talk, the more they’ll start saying something and it’ll be a word or a phrase that they repeat. Understand that that is where they need the support the most.

How does this exercise help? Victoria says “We’re trained to listen with the purpose of understanding and even we try to understand so that we can act. Versus understand so we can love. There’s a huge shift to, I can completely disagree with you and still understand you and love you. And when listening is shifted to that, it’s a gift.” To validate your listening, something that you can do is, she adds, “empowering person back and saying, thank you for vulnerably sharing with me. I know you can figure all of this out. You don’t need a savior. I know you can figure this out.” She emphasises at the end on the point that as human being we all want to have somebody else say, you got this. As a partner, you not only have to say it but mean it.

Prosper mE

Victoria Rader has her latest book come out, Prosper mE and it’s about money. Check it out from the link below and also if you haven’t take a quick quiz to begin your journey of empowerment.

Communicating Relationship Boundaries with Brenden Kumarasamy

Communicating Relationship Boundaries with Brenden Kumarasamy Love Vitamins for Life

In our latest episode with Brenden Kumarasamy, communication expert and the founder of MasterTalk, shares some tips on topics like Setting boundaries in a relationship Healthy communication practices Establishing a shared vision in your relationship Boundary setting in your relationships Set clear and healthy boundaries Specificity is the key to boundary setting. Writing them out helps. Make it fun Start easy and start with something small. If you can’t argue about the small things, forget about arguing about the big things. Celebrate and reciprocate Ping pong on boundary setting with your partner. How do being an effective speaker skills help you build healthier relationships? The key is, that it doesn’t matter what you say, as much as HOW you say it. Use Relationship Visioning, as a Framework to define what you want the relationship to be. Use Relationship Selection to ask all the hard questions upfront. Make a list of every quality you want in someone else. Look at the list and become that person. The key is to try and be the best version of that person and if you are true to it you’ll attract such people to you. LoVita – Love Vitamins for a healthier is a community by Partners for Partners. We share stories about how Partners are working intentionally towards building a healthier relationship. To learn more check out the links below 🔗 All below links in a single page  – https://linktr.ee/lovitalovevitamins Website – https://lovita.blog/ Newsletter – https://mailchi.mp/81f58463e76b/subscribe Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/lovitalovevitamins/ Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/lovitalovevitamins Connect with Brenden Kumarasamy MasterTalk Website – https://www.mastertalk.ca FREE Live Training –  https://www.rockstarcommunicator.com YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/c/MasterTalks Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/masteryourtalk Email – brendenkbusiness@gmail.com

In our latest episode with Brenden Kumarasamy, communication expert and the founder of MasterTalk, shares some tips on topics like

  • Setting boundaries in a relationship
  • Healthy communication practices
  • Establishing a shared vision in your relationship

Boundary setting in your relationships

  1. Set clear and healthy boundaries
    Specificity is the key to boundary setting. Writing them out helps.
  2. Make it fun
    Start easy and start with something small. If you can’t argue about the small things, forget about arguing about the big things.
  3. Celebrate and reciprocate
    Ping pong on boundary setting with your partner.

How do being an effective speaker skills help you build healthier relationships? The key is, that it doesn’t matter what you say, as much as HOW you say it.

Use Relationship Visioning, as a Framework to define what you want the relationship to be. Use Relationship Selection to ask all the hard questions upfront.

Make a list of every quality you want in someone else. Look at the list and become that person. The key is to try and be the best version of that person and if you are true to it you’ll attract such people to you.

Build with Love with Juan Lee

Build with Love with Juan Lee Love Vitamins for Life

“Until you can know yourself, you don’t know what you have to offer. Till you know what you have to offer, nobody else knows what you have to offer.” – Juan Lee on his teachings on love. In this special episode with Juan Lee, we learn about how Juan and Tracy do to build a healthier relationship. Some of the topics we talk about Build together Identifying and working with your partner's strength. Open communication Vulnerability We talk about Building together – relationships get built together collectively over time. It's a daily effort to bring something to the table and bring our own strengths individually to the table. Recognizing what your partner's abilities are at work. LoVita – Love Vitamins for a healthier is a community by Partners for Partners. We share stories about how Partners are working intentionally towards building a healthier relationship. To learn more check out the links below 🔗 All below links in a single page – https://linktr.ee/lovitalovevitamins Website – https://lovita.blog/ Newsletter – https://mailchi.mp/81f58463e76b/subscribe Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/lovitalovevitamins/ Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/lovitalovevitamins Juan Lee is an author and teacher on the powerful principle of love. For over 30 years, he has studied organized religion to find the elements that unite humanity and share the message with those who need it. Based outside of Washington DC, Juan is a decorated US Air Force veteran and author of Love Made Simple. To connect with Juan Lee Book – https://amzn.to/3PhWP3q Website – https://juanleetheauthor.com/ Clear Journey – https://clearjourney.org/ Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/juanleeauthor/ Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/juanleeauthor Twitter – https://twitter.com/LoveMadeSimple LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/in/juan-lee-the-author/

Guest appearance by Juan Lee is the author of the book Love Made Simple a Guide to Inner Peace, Contentment and Success. Wan is also the founder of clearjourny.org, a charity organization with a mission to share the practical application of love with the world.

Below are some snippets from the episode. Enjoy!

We have learned so much, not only about ourselves, but each other. And at that time, we had to realize that we were putting something together, we were building something.

A good point that you made there, because I believe that people don’t realize that that’s exactly what we’re trying to do accomplish more together than we could possibly ever accomplish individually. And to know that, I think, is critical in building a real strong relationship is because it has those strengths that each of you have or each of us have. We’re able to do much more with the two of us having strengths, and in many cases, being able to offset each other’s weaknesses, in many cases, the other person’s strengths.

It’s real easy to put that example of maybe building the house together, but you’ve got to know what each other’s components are, what they’re bringing to the table. In any given relationship, people are going to have different components. And recognizing what your spouse’s or your partner’s relationship or abilities are is the work, to be honest with you, is the work. Because it’s something that I talk about in what I teach on love, is that until you can know yourself, you don’t know what you have to offer. And it’s till you know what you have to offer, nobody else knows what you have to offer. And so it’s that ability to be able to articulate that to one another so that when you enter into the relationship, you know exactly what it is they’re bringing.

If you’re looking for a plumber and you get electrician, that’s not going to help you in building your house. Maybe you got electrician, but you’re looking for a plumber right now, you need a plumber. And so it’s not that electrician is not needed, but maybe you all collectively know you need to go out and get electrician, but I need a plumber. That’s what I’m looking for. I want a plumber. And so that’s what basically the challenges is the work is that process of understanding what each other’s skill sets are, what their abilities are that they’re going to bring to the table so that we can build this relationship into something that’s different from us as an individual.

One of the things let’s go back. I’m going to share something with you. I did not think I was ever going to get married. Okay? I never thought I was going to get married because I had low self esteem. I didn’t have anything that would really identify who I was. My strengths now, as it relates to marriage now, because at that point, I had gone to the military, had come back, I had found out who I was, so to speak. But then I didn’t see myself as marriage material, so to speak. One of the things that I did was something that I did not very it wasn’t something very easy for me to do, and that was to articulate my learning disability. I spent many years trying to hide that, and it was when I realized and even when we got married, I realized that I could not hide this from her. And so I was very forthcoming with that information. It was like if we’re going to get into this, what you see and who I am is two totally different things. And I think many of us enter into relationships with a mask on and it takes for us to be able to pull that mass down and to allow the other person to see exactly who they are. And many times that doesn’t always happen. It comes out piece by piece as it pertains to challenges that come up in the relationship that you end up getting into some types of conflict and you really don’t even know that the conflict is something that you have no conscious knowledge of. It’s something that the other one is holding on to because they’re trying to hide it or present something that’s really not the case. But that was one of the things that I had to. And even in that process though, she was the one who helped me. And this is very ironic because she helped me find out and identify my learning disability. Because when we got married, I had a learning disability but it was not diagnosed. It wasn’t diagnosed. We got married when I was 33. It wasn’t diagnosed until I was 37. Wow. But I had been challenged, I had been struggling with not knowing, figuring out how to maneuver, not knowing that I had one. And she was the one and helped me, the one that helped me identify what it was that I was dealing with. And it really liberated me to a point where it began to allow me to see that it wasn’t something that I was not doing. It’s now something that I have to deal with and I know how to address.

You just hit one of the critical words in relationship and that’s ability to be vulnerable. That ability to be vulnerable will eliminate so many areas of conflict, at least on those things that you have knowledge of because you know them. See, there’s things that you don’t know that you don’t know it, but then there are these things that you know that you’re not sharing and those are the ones that you could be vulnerable and sharing those things that you know that will allow for a smoother process.