8 Alignments for a Healthy Relationship
Readiness, intellect, spirituality, and more.
Eight key dimensions contribute to the health and longevity of a romantic relationship.
These include intellectual, emotional, physical, values, spiritual, avocations, chemistry, and readiness.
These alignments are not static but can evolve.
I always find it amazing that love relationships ever come to fruition and sustain themselves. Relationships seem so complicated, particularly those of the romantic variety. There are so many aspects of a relationship that determine or not.
Over the years, I cataloged the dimensions that I believe contribute to the quality of a romantic relationship. I have ultimately landed on eight dimensions that have provided a taxonomy for understanding the complexities of relationships.
For a long time, I struggled with finding a framework that would describe those dimensions in a way that was intellectually rigorous and emotionally resonant. Only recently did I find that structure. It's conceptualized as the degree to which two people are similar or in agreement as opposed to dissimilar or in disagreement. How aligned two people are along the eight dimensions can determine the health and longevity of a relationship.
1. Intellectual. This alignment refers to how intelligent you want your partner to be. This dimension can be a proxy for educational level, or it might reflect “street smarts” or common sense. For some, high intelligence may be critical.
For example, satisfying their needs for intellectually stimulating conversation about a wide range of topics might include philosophy, politics, psychology, world events, and many others. For others, intelligence may be less important than other alignments.
2. Emotional. Emotional alignment may be the most important alignment. Two aspects of emotions play a role in alignment. First, how emotionally accessible is your prospective partner? For genuinely healthy relationships, emotions and vulnerability are essential for meeting each other’s needs, feeling loved, and communicating effectively.
At the same time, alignment rather than absolute emotionality may be more important. For example, if you are emotionally defended, you will not likely align with someone who is emotionally open.
Though this alignment of emotional defended-ness may not lead to the healthiest relationship (because neither of you will be able to fully “go there.”), it will more likely meet your immediate emotional needs of keeping some distance between you and your prospective partner.
3. Physical. If sex is important to you in a relationship, then physical attraction is necessary. Whatever internal standard of what you find attractive in a partner (in other words, whatever turns you on), whether height, weight, body, type, face, what-have-you, must be met for there to be sexual interest. Of course, your physical attraction to another person can be affected by intellect (perhaps you’re a sapiosexual), emotions (if you feel their love), and chemistry (you just feel this deep connection).
4. Values. Values are the foundation of everything we do in our lives. They act as the signposts that direct and guide us on our life’s journey. Values specify what is important and what we prioritize in our essential values dictate how we spend our time, energy, and money (three of our most essential resources). Given the essential role that values play in our critical, it is not surprising that they are also crucial to forming and maintaining relationships.
Values can touch every aspect of your life. They can include educational and career choices, hobbies, religious and political beliefs, the types of relationships you have, where you commit your charitable efforts, your relationship to money, how you believe people should be treated, and so on.
Values are so deeply held that they become inextricably entwined with our self-identities. Because of this deep connection between our values and the kind of person we perceive ourselves to be, value alignment seems truly fundamental to the partners we choose. In my experience, it is rare to find two people in a healthy relationship with vastly different and conflicting value systems.
5. Spiritual. Spiritual alignment is often central to a healthy relationship because spirituality frequently informs much of who we are, what we value and believe, and how we view and engage with the world. I use the term “spirituality” in a broad sense.
It may indicate a strong belief in a monotheistic God espoused by traditional religions. Or it may refer to a personal journey to find meaning and purpose in life outside of ourselves. In either case, people who value spirituality often need someone who is aligned with them spiritually to feel a deep connection.
6. Avocations. The nature of a committed, long-term relationship is that we spend most of our daily time with our partner for a significant part of our lifespan. This fact, by definition, requires that this time needs to be filled with something, usually activities in which both can participate and share experiences, thus strengthening their connection.
Times have certainly changed in recent generations about the activities that partners do together. In previous generations, couples led much more separate avocational lives. Men did “men” activities with their male friends, and women followed suit with their female friends.
In recent decades, though, the relationship between partners has become more encompassing, where they are seen as best friends who share their avocations. This shift in loving relationships has resulted in partners spending most of their free time together, sharing and enjoying their aligned activities, thus making avocation alignment far more important for healthy relationships.
7. Chemistry. This alignment may be the most elusive because it can’t be rationally understood or explained; rather, it’s just something we feel. I have often described it as a balance between comfort and excitement. You feel safe and secure with your partner, yet also passionate and stimulated. What aligns chemistry is that both people feel the chemistry at the same level of intensity.
Due to its elusive nature, knowing where chemistry comes from is often a mystery. At the same time, it’s not unreasonable to posit that chemical alignment could be the culmination of alignment in the previous five dimensions that influence a relationship.
8. Readiness. Too often, I have seen burgeoning relationships with what appeared to be considerable alignment go off the rails because one or both of the people weren’t ready based on where they were in their life’s journey. Readiness for a healthy relationship can involve exploring and letting go of emotional baggage that prevents them from being a part of a nourishing relationship.
Unfortunately, emotional baggage is a part of the human condition that can interfere with the establishment of a nurturing relationship. Common baggage can include not feeling worthy of love, fear of rejection, need to please, and need for control, any of which can cause us to be attracted to people who aren’t healthy for us or that will set up the relationship for failure. Gaining readiness involves acting on your world (and those in it) based on who you are rather than who you once were.
Despite the internal alignment that may exist between two people, outside forces may derail the potential that may exist for a nourishing relationship. Geography, career, marriage status, the presence of children or elderly parents, and physical health are just a few of the factors that, if not aligned, can make the previous seven alignments moot.
9 (Bonus) Timing. Despite the internal alignment that may exist between two people, outside forces may derail the potential that may exist for a nourishing relationship. Geography, career, marriage status, the presence of children or elderly parents, and physical health are just a few of the factors that, if not aligned, can make the previous seven alignments moot.
Alignments Are Dynamic
One important clarification: These dimensions aren’t dichotomous; in other words, they are not “Do they have them or not?” Instead, you should consider each dimension as lying along a continuum in which they might have varying degrees of alignment. Where on the continuum they might lie depends on how important each dimension is to you and how you prioritize any specific alignment in the “meta alignment” of your overall feelings for and relationship with a person.
Alignments can also change in a relationship. Alignments can deepen as people evolve in any or all of the eight dimensions. These stronger alignments can result in a relationship growing deeper and more resilient, which can stand the test of time.
Conversely, alignments can also weaken or disappear completely as people change in ways that aren’t, well, aligned with their partner. The result is either the two people inhabiting a misaligned relationship or that relationship ending because there are not enough alignments to keep the relationship intact.
Jim Taylor, Ph.D., - Website -