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How to Choose the Best Partner for Life (and Make
Other Important Decisions)
(by Susan Dunn)
Category:
Life:Romance
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More Details at: http://www.susandunn.cc
How
to choose the best partner for life? Lets use the
investment analogy. Heres how it works.
Im
a fan of Warren Buffett, the worlds greatest investor.
He took $100 and turned it into a multibillion-dollar
company. In the latest Forbes richest people
list, he was declared the second richest man in the world,
after Bill Gates.
This
is admirable, of course, but its how he got there
that has always interested me things about his
personality and character. Hes known for his cool
head about investing, and for sticking with companies
he says he understands. He avoided the NASDAQ
rush, and instead invests in such companies as Dairy Queen.
Hes been known to hold interviews there; he likes
the place. So do I. I think they have the best chocolate
malts in the world.
Yes,
I have eaten in fancy restaurants and had my share of
ganache. However, DQ has the chocolate malt I searched
for my whole life, so I stop right there. I know what
I want, and look for substance, which is what I think
Warren Buffett is all about.
I
recall Julia Child being asked what were the best French
fries, and her reply blew us all away: McDonald's. Wouldnt
you agree? I do; when theyre freshly fried.
Somehow
we feel better when Julia Child gives us permission
to consider McDonalds French fries so good. Theres
something a little shady about getting the best
for pennies. We doubt our perceptions. And this is where
Buffetts cool head comes in. Its
emotional to be in doubt about naming McDonalds
French fries best because theyre fast
food. If we do, we are outthinking ourselves, complicating
things, bringing in emotion. Likewise if we dont
trust our own perceptions and have to ask an expert, like
Julia.
Ive
often used Warren Buffett for examples of emotional intelligence,
i.e., being able to manage your emotions and avoid self-sabotage.
The stock market is highly emotional, causing individuals
to panic, get manic, think and act irrationally. Buffett
believes in making a well-thought out decision and then
sticking with it. Choose the best. Then dont worry
about the rest. (No, he isnt into a diversified
portfolio. Interesting, isnt it?)
He
also doesnt do designer things like
split his stock. He also doesnt sell out from under
his investors. Hes never sold a share of Berkshire-Hathaway,
and hes never split the stock. Buy and hold.
Notice
its not buy low and sell high. More
on this later.
Okay,
now lets apply this investment philosophy and modus
operandi to one of the most important decisions you will
ever make: your partner.
We
have all experienced the effects of the 50% divorce rate
in the US give or take some percentage points.
We know how important a lasting and good relationship
is to our health physical, mental and emotional.
We know these things from research:
#
A divorce stresses a man more than smoking a couple of
packs a day.
# People who are married live longer and are healthier.
# Toxic relationships destroy our immune systems; therefore
our health.
# We need another person to regulate our biorhythms. Not
should have, or it would be better if,
but NEED. (Lewis, MD, Amini, MD, and Lannon, MD).
Warren
Buffetts Rule Number One is: Dont lose money.
His Rule Number Two is: Dont forget Rule Number
One. He has often said an investor doesnt have to
be a genius and do a lot of things right, as much as he
or she must avoid big mistakes.
Choosing
the wrong marital partner is one of the biggest mistakes
we can make. Rule Number One: Dont choose the wrong
marital partner. Rule Number Two: Dont forget Rule
Number One.
Buffett
has also said, Investing is like batting a baseball
except that you get as many pitches as you want and you
never have to swing. Wait for the home run ball
before investing.
If
you have your act together and good emotional intelligence,
you dont have to marry anyone. You can wait for
the home run pitch.
This
also applies: The ability to say no,
says Buffett, is a tremendous advantage to an investor.
Most investment ideas should be said no to.
And what does it take to be able to say no?
Being centered. Having emotional intelligence. Knowing
exactly what youre looking for. Trusting yourself.
This
philosophy isnt about buy low and sell high,
and perhaps this should not be your philosophy in relation
to marriage either. Why not instead choose the best, stick
with it, and reap the rewards?
Buffett
has made investments that didnt work out. I
want to [be able to] explain my mistakes, he says.
This means I do only the things I completely understand.
This
is around emotional intelligence as well. If you choose
a partner for good reasons including your intuition
(and Buffett says he always trusts his eyes
above anything else) and it doesnt work out,
you will understand why.
This
is way ahead of doing something without being mindful,
without having thought it through carefully. Yes, you
are making a decision about romance, a decision of the
heart, but its right in the place where emotional
intelligence sits at that interface between intellect
and emotions.
How
so? Heres an example. Lets say you fall in
love and you dont do the intellectual foreplay.
You fail to investigate about children, for instance,
in this impending second marriage. Once married, it turns
out, as it did with one of my clients, that you adamantly
do not want any more children, while she wants her first
child more than anything on earth, including pleasing
you.
You
see the problem. There is no compromise here.
It
wouldve been difficult to turn away from marrying
someone he was so in love with, but not nearly as painful
in the long run to him, to his children by his
first marriage, to his pocketbook, to the woman, and to
his self-esteem as getting divorced a second time
over an issue that hadnt been thought through.
If
you both have thought and felt your way into the decision
(using your emotional intelligence), youre mindful.
If you havent thought it through, when it doesnt
work out you are left struck dumb over the outcome, hit
much harder emotionally, clueless, unable to correct and
move forward, and worst of all, condemned to do the same
thing again. Thats what happens when youre
on auto-pilot.
Another
client of mine said his friend told him when he was dating,
That woman will never set foot on your boat once
you two are married. How did the friend know when
my client didnt? Thinking in addition to feeling.
Emotions can fog our thinking. The emotion of love is
most delightful, most seductive
like the NASDAQ
was in 1999.
Remember
Rule Number One.
Remember Rule Number Two.
Rule
Number One was dont marry the wrong person,
because the assumption is you want to marry the right
person. Therefore, you must know what the right
person looks like. Do your homework as carefully
as you look em over at bat. Then youll know
the home run pitch when it comes across the plate.
Susan
Dunn may be contacted at http://www.susandunn.cc
sdunn@susandunn.cc.
Click here to view more of their articles.
Susan Dunn, MA, Psychology, Emotional Intelligence Coach,
http://www.susandunn.cc
. Coaching, Internet courses and ebooks around emotional
intelligence for career, relationships, transitions, resilience,
personal and professional development. Mailto:sdunn@susandunn.cc
for free ezine.
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