What happens when we are aware of our primary love language and realize that it hasn’t led us to healthy relationships? How does someone’s love language help or hinder the relationship? These questions may also leave you questioning how to change your love language so it can better suit you in finding a healthy relationship. Let’s first learn more about what love languages are.
The ways we feel and receive love have been labeled as “Love Languages.” According to Gary Chapman, the author of the New York Times Bestseller, “The Five Love Languages” book, falling in love is easy--it’s staying in love is the challenge.
The book explores five methods of giving and receiving love: acts of service, quality time, physical touch, gifts, and verbal affirmation. Everyone feels loved through these methods, but the author believes that each love language is ranked in order of importance for each individual.
For example, someone may feel more loved through physical touch than they do by receiving gifts. A hug would mean more to that person emotionally than a bouquet of flowers. However, if that same person received regular physical touch, a bouquet of flowers would be an added bonus. There’s no limit to the amount of love someone can receive! What’s your love language? In case you aren’t sure, you can take a free love language test online to discover what your love language is!
Let’s dive in and understand more about how love languages affect you, how they may contribute to unhealthy relationship patterns and how to change your love language:
Like with anything else, a healthy relationship is so much more than a love language. It’s important to understand how you feel love and how you give love as a result. It’s not required for couples to have the same love languages, but when you have different love languages and don’t realize it, conflict can occur.
I had a client who only ever felt love through words of affirmation, but found time and time again that she was falling for men who could say anything and get away with it! After repeatedly going through this, she learned that what she really craved was quality time, but had been so starved of that in her marriage that she couldn’t even imagine feeling loved through quality time. It wasn’t until she ended up in situationships with men who wanted to text her all day--but not set up a time to see her--that made her realize that she needed actions to go along with words.
Once she made that shift, she said, “Words are nice, but I realized that they weren’t enough. Actions really do speak louder, and now I know that when a man wants to see me, the connection is much deeper. Now my go-to love language is quality time.”
Changing your love language is simply re-adjusting your priorities, recognizing what you need and what a healthy need is and expecting it of others, even if that means speaking up to get it.
The best way to achieve a healthy relationship with a partner is to first achieve a healthy relationship with yourself. Once you heal your wounds, work toward self-love and acceptance, and understand what your needs are from a romantic partner, you will be able to live a life that is consistent for your highest good!
Feeling out of alignment in love...and life? We can help you fix that! Book your 1:1 Session with a Certified Love Specialist today!
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