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Ask Marwa: When usually does this boredom phase start making its way to relationship?



Usually in strong standing, long-lasting relationships, comes a phase of extreme stillness and boredom that comes out routine and the lack of new feelings and events. At this point in time, relationships get tested, whether they’re strong enough and in enough synergy to get over this phase, or give up on each other because it’s no longer fun, interesting and entertaining! Here’s to the one who always has our backs when it comes to relationship advices, our Relationship Expert, Marwa Rakha.

When usually does this boredom phase start making its way to relationship?

There is no one specific timing when boredom erupts in a relationship; here are a few known and noted “boredom phases”:
  • Right before the couple commit to one another.
They have been flirting, hunting, chasing, playing hide-and-seek, and getting to know one another. Right before they commit, one of them, or both of them, feel bored. This boredom is doubt in disguise. They are simply unsure.
  • Right before an official step.
They have been dating steadily, and a step is expected; a proposal, a ring, meeting the parents, engagement, or even, marriage. Right before “the step”, boredom might creep in. This time, it is fear-of-commitment in disguise.
  • Stagnant relationships.
They have been dating for what seems like forever; three, four, five, or seven years. Literally, nothing is happening. Stagnation kills relationships. Looking forward to getting engaged, making a home, living together, adopting a pet together, having a kid together, raising the kid, growing up together, etc. – when a couple does not grow and evolve, their relationship, naturally, withers and dies. They think it is boredom but is actually a stand still.
  • Losing focus.
This is seen a lot after marriage. The couple, or one of them, loses focus; they no longer know what brought them together. They no longer share a vision, a future, a dream, a hobby, or even a meaningful conversation. They grow up in different directions, and eventually, end up apart.
  • Rightful boredom.
This is the only case when boredom is simply boredom. After the lust and attraction fade away, there is nothing in common to keep them together. They feel bored and they break up.

How can a couple drift they wheel from their way to boredom and losing interest to the way of flirting and have things spiced up like they just met?

Depending on the type of boredom that hit the relationship, a couple can stir the relationship back in the right direction.

If boredom hit right before they committed to one another, they need to just let it be. It is a high wave and they need to duck down. Resisting it will turn their boat overboard. If they are truly a match, it will pass, and they will be attracted to one another again.

If boredom hit right before an official step, they need to talk. Maybe one of them is not ready. Maybe there are reasons and justifications. They need to be open and frank about their feelings and needs.

If you are bored because you are in a stagnant relationship, the obvious step is to move on. Doing something together, that would bring you closer, help you grow, and strengthen your bond is the best advice I can offer.

If you are married, and are losing focus, you need to work together to remember why you are on this journey together. Remember your common dreams, goals, and needs. Do not just look into the past, when the two of you first met, because you are no longer the same people. You need to rediscover yourselves and redefine your goals and vision for your future together.

If you are in the wrong relationship, and boredom naturally happens, any effort you do to revive that relationship would be an equivalent to bribing your partner into staying with you; more outings, more romantic dinners, more wild sex, more gifts – these are all bribes and desperate attempts.

Do things really get as good as they were before this dull phase? Or the couple just get stuck in the stage where they just cling to keeping things going regardless to how happy together they really are?

Expecting things to be as they were before a cloud of boredom, is unrealistic. If a relationship survives boredom, the couple grow and mature just a little bit more. It is like moving to a new level in a game; you cannot win the game by playing using the same moves.

Expecting the butterflies in the stomach, when you have been together for more than six months, is not a realistic expectation. But looking forward to hearing your partner’s stories of how the day went, is more real.

Expecting sex for the tenth time to be the way it was the first time, is ridiculously funny. It might not be as exciting, but it will certainly be more intimate.

Sometimes, the problem is not with boredom; it is with our expectations that mislead us into a false sense of boredom.

For a couple to be happy together, they need to accept aging as a natural event in the lifecycle of a relationship. The relationship might no longer be the cute baby or the playful toddler; none the less, it is still a great relationship that is going through a bad phase.

Is there by any mean a set of things/precautions that a couple can carry out  to avoid –from the beginning- finding them selves stuck in this tedious phase?

There is no way to avoid wrinkles and grey hair. There is also no way to avoid feeling bored in a relationship.

The worst thing that could happen in a relationship is taking your partner for granted. When a person takes the other for granted, they stop listening, stop showing care, stop working on a relationship, stop talking about their feelings, stop thinking of the little things that would make their partner happy, stop going out of their way, stop sharing their dreams and daily details, and eventually, the relationship stops evolving and it dies.

Think of it a someone who has a lovely mango tree in their orchard. The tree is leafy, blossoming, and about to bloom, when that person takes the fruits for granted.

“It will bear its fruits, as usual, in the summer.”, he says. Then he no longer waters it on schedule, no longer fertilizes the soil consistently, and no longer accurately removes weeds and parasites.

The tree will not drop dead all of a sudden; there will be subtle signs that the tree is suffering; leaves with yellow spots, leaves falling, blossoms dying on the stem, fruits that are not growing, and more unhealthy signs that go unnoticed.

That person has no clue that his tree is not going to bear any fruits in the summer. He thinks that by occasionally throwing in a bucket of water, and by occasionally adding nutrients to the soil, he is doing his best.

But occasionally taking care of your partner, or occasionally talking about your relationship, or occasionally showing that you care, would not save a relationship from boredom, and eventually, dying.
من هي مروة رخا؟
مروة رخا: موجهة مونتيسوري معتمدة دولياً من الميلاد حتى 12 عام. Marwa Rakha: Internationally certified Montessori educator from birth to 12 years.

بدأت “مروة رخا” رحلتها مع “نهج وفلسفة المونتيسوري” في نهاية عام 2011 بقراءة كتب “د. ماريا مونتيسوري” عن الطفل والبيئة الغنية التي يحتاجها لينمو ويزدهر. تلت القراءة الحرة دراسة متعمقة للفلسفة والمنهج مع مركز أمريكا الشمالية للمونتيسوري

“North American Montessori Center”