Relational Health

There is a saying for teams that “We are only as strong as our weakest link.” As a college coach this is 100% accurate. One person can completely obliterate a defensive strategy or destroy a designed play.  While teammates can, and do, pick up the slack for the weakest player, it does impact the overall effectiveness and fluidity of the team. Even if you are not on a sports team- the saying is true. When one person in a business or a relationship slacks, other people have to choose to fill in the gaps or welcome failure or weakness on some level.

But- The same is true for relationships:

A relationship can only be as healthy as the least healthy person in that relationship.

- insert contemplative pause-

To clarify, I do not mean to say that an emotionally healthy person will not be able to have a relationship with someone who is dealing with unhealthy habits and tendencies. I only mean to say that the level of boundaries in that relationship will be based on the level of health or unhealth of the people involved.  

When we hear about codependent relationships or situations where people are so obviously enabling someone else’s disfunction, we tend to judge harshly- but let us not be too hastey. Just because we are not enabling someone to whatever that point is- does not mean we are innocent. Every person has a LEAST one unhealthy relationship. Why? Because we are all unhealthy to some extent, and we all know and love unhealthy people! That is not bad, we just need to be aware of it.  Emotional and relational health is something so interesting. We may have all the knowledge and tools as a person, but there can still be that one relationship that triggers us and we totally forget all of our practice and run to unhealthy habits. We all really do need emotionally healthy people in their lives so that they can speak the truth in love to us when we succumb to our triggers and irritations, when we forget grace and live in pride, or when we become so self-consumed that we lose sight of others.  We all need help no matter how healthy we think we are.

So, if you consider yourself an emotionally healthy person in the relationship, it is not your job to “save” other people. On the contrary, it is your job to love them and set boundaries emotionally and physically (when needed) to allow everyone involved to grow and mature. Someone who is emotionally and relationally healthy will embrace the discomfort of confrontation, but be able to confront with love and humility.

There was a whole season in my life where I was totally OK with embracing confrontation, but I would not do it with love and humility- I would do it to show that I was right and they were wrong. I can still succumb to that bad habit if I am not both aware and intentional.  I have to consciously choose health and humility if I want to enjoy intimate relationships.

It is natural for people to develop and change, but it takes intentionality for a person to grow in healthy ways. It takes twice as much intentionality to make sure a relationship grows in a positive trajectory because there is a whole other person involved.

Rest assured, in any relationship, the only way to improve the health of that relationship is to improve your own personal health. Obviously, if two people are growing into health, that is the most ideal, BUT (and this is a big but) you can only change yourself, you have no control over the other person.  As you continue to grow you will see that the responsibility of your relational health rests fully on you. It is your responsibility to look at your childhood training and see where it fell short. If you only learned avoidance then you have the choice to learn how to confront. If you only learned harsh confrontation, you have the choice to learn how to listen. We all have the personal responsibility to choose who we will be and how we will act as an adult.  This means we will have to walk through relearning some hard things, but it is worth it.

Growth is messy, sometimes we overdo a learning or misapply something and it brings added tension. Sometimes we ignore a learning and get mad at ourselves for making the same mistakes. Take heart! Pick up today right where you are. Look in the mirror before blaming someone else.  See what you can choose in the situation. Make a better choice. We all have choices- we need only to learn to embrace and own the consequence (good and bad) of whatever we choose. We can choose to be the weakest link, or we can choose to grow.