When you think about compromising, what are you compromising? Are you compromising with a partner you love out of caring for yourself and your partner or are you compromising yourself to control how your partner feels about you or reacts? RELATED: 7 Things You Unknowingly Do That Make A Guy Lose Interest It’s all about intent and knowing how to compromise in relationships.

The Simplest Way To Know When To Compromise … And When Not To

1. Loving Compromise: GOOD

When your intent is to be loving to yourself and to your partner, then you will find a resolution that feels right to both of you. When you and your partner are in a true intent to learn about yourselves and each other, then you can explore why what you want is important to you, and why your partner wants is important to him or her. As you open to yourselves and each other, both of you will likely be changed by the process of learning. What you come up with may be very different than what you started out with. Resolution occurs when you come up with a joint resolution and neither of you feels that you are compromising yourself or your integrity. Neither of you is giving yourselves up to control the other. Both of you are happy with the resolution. In fact, when you explore with an intent to learn, neither of you may feel that the resolution is a compromise. RELATED: 30 Things People In Healthy Relationships Never, Ever Do Instead, it may be a whole new way of looking at and resolving an issue.

2. Self-Abandoning Compromise: BAD

When you give yourself up and go along with something that doesn’t feel right to you inside, you are abandoning yourself. You are trying to please the other person so that he or she will approve of you, not reject you or not get angry. This kind of compromise is an intent to control, rather than the intent to love yourself and your partner. While you might feel some relief for the moment, when you give yourself up and compromise your integrity, you will feel anxious, depressed, and/or angry about it in the long run. We cannot compromise our personal integrity without suffering these consequences. You might think you’re anxious, depressed, or angry because of your partner’s demands, but the truth is you are causing these feelings by trying to control your partner with your caretaking. How to know when you are appropriately compromising and when you are abandoning yourself? Tune into your feelings. This is step one of Inner Bonding. If the compromise feels good inside, then you are loving to yourself. But, if you feel bad inside — anxious, depressed, angry, ashamed, less-than — then you are abandoning yourself. Your feelings are a very accurate guide to whether your choice is loving or unloving to yourself. RELATED: If He’s Really Your Forever Person, He’ll Have These 3 Qualities There are certainly times in any relationship where one person really wants something or wants to do something and the other person goes along with it out of love and caring — even if it’s not what they really want. When you love someone, you may feel good inside going along with what they want — provided it doesn’t go against your personal integrity. We can do things for others or with others without losing ourselves when our motivation is coming from love rather than from fear. If it’s coming from fear, then it’s not loving yourself or the other person. RELATED: 10 Little Communication Tricks That’ll Lead To A Much Deeper Love When you come from fear and a desire to control, the resulting compromise will be unloving to yourself and to your partner. When you come from love and a desire to learn, the result will be an appropriate compromise. Dr. Margaret Paul is a relationship expert, noted public speaker, and educator. This article was originally published at Inner Bonding. Reprinted with permission from the author.