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kim.haas@thrivinglifecounseling.net

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Dear Diary,

I’ve been thinking a lot about growth lately.

The ways people grow.
The effort required to grow.
The environments where growth flourishes—and the ones where it quietly dies.

I’ve found myself wondering about the relationship between personal growth and relationship growth.

Which Comes First?

Do we need to become healthier individuals before we can have healthy relationships?

Or do healthy relationships create the safety that allows us to become healthier individuals?

As therapists, we tend to land somewhere along that spectrum. One perspective says healthy people create healthy relationships. Another says healthy relationships create healthy people.

Both make compelling arguments.

So, which comes first?

I’ve been realizing that’s probably the wrong question.

Because relationships shape us.
We shape relationships.
Both are always happening at the same time.

Healthy relationships create healthier people.
Healthy people create healthier relationships.

It’s never one or the other.

When Someone Becomes the Project

And that’s where things get complicated.

Because when one direction is emphasized more heavily, one of two things often happens.

Someone begins to feel like the project—as though they’re carrying everything that’s wrong with the relationship.

Someone else begins to feel like the project manager, carrying the burden of helping the relationship grow.

One carries shame.
The other carries responsibility.
Neither is actually carrying the relationship.

Neither feels good.

The longer I sit with it, the more convinced I am that no one wants to be someone else’s project.

And everyone deserves a partner who remains committed to growing.

The Questions Underneath

And neither person is intentionally creating hard feelings.

One person isn’t waking up thinking, How can I avoid growth today?

The other isn’t waking up thinking, How long can I make my list of demands?

Underneath those behaviors are usually two frightened people asking very different questions.

One quietly wonders,

“If nothing changes, I’m going to lose this relationship.”

The other quietly wonders,

“If I have to become someone else to be loved, I might not be good enough to love at all.”

One experiences invitations to grow.
The other experiences criticism.

One feels abandoned and alone.
The other feels judged and inadequate.

Both make sense.
Both hurt.

Both are shaping the relationship and the individuals within it.

Ready and Willing Are Not the Same

But maybe we have to step back and recognize the difference between being ready to grow and being willing.

We all have places inside ourselves that are difficult to face.

Fear.
Shame.
Old wounds.
Grief.
Insecurities.

It makes sense that we may not be ready to step into those places.

Readiness deserves compassion.

We should never force someone into places they’re not ready to go.

But we also can’t pretend those places don’t affect the relationship.

Because whatever we refuse to face within ourselves eventually shows up in the relationship between us.

Example:

So, while you can’t make someone grow, if you are never willing—even when you don’t feel fully ready—your relationship will eventually absorb the cost.

And, you cannot wait for someone to step into their work before you step into yours.

Growth can’t be forced.
Responsibility can’t be avoided.

What Are We Creating?

Relationships don’t stay the same.

They’re always becoming something: good, bad, or ugly.

Every conversation.
Every repair.
Every avoidance.
Every act of courage.
Every moment of protection.

They’re all shaping the space between us.

Maybe that’s the question I’ve been carrying lately.

Not, Who’s right?

Not even, Who needs to change?

But…

What do I owe myself?
What do I owe the person I love?
What do I owe the relationship we’re creating together?
What does the relationship itself need if we’re going to keep building something worth building?

Maybe becoming the best version of ourselves isn’t separate from that work.

Maybe it’s one of the ways they both happen.

Concurrently.
Interwoven.
Interdependent.

Because…

Relationships shape us.
We shape relationships.
Both are always happening at the same time.

I don’t think I have all the answers yet.

In fact, I think I’m just beginning to ask better questions.

Maybe that’s enough for today.

Sincerely

A therapist—who’s human too.

Reflection questions:
Do you feel more like the project or the project manager in your relationships?
What’s one area where you’re not fully ready to grow…but you might be willing?
Which question stays with your most?
-What do I owe myself?
-What do I owe the person I love?
-What do I owe the relationship we’re creating together?