has 160 time to read2010-6-25 19:33|personal category:Teenage
Trust is a two way street; you get it if you give it. For example: if
you want your parents to trust you try trusting them with the truth
about what is going on in your life, if you want a relationship built on
trust you have to trust in the other person as much as you do in
yourself.
Parents will usually give trust freely until you do something to break
it. If this isn't the case in your family and you really can't see why
your parents don't trust you just come right out and ask them for an
explanation.
Sometimes people don't trust you because of the actions of a person
close to you. It is all too common for the behavior of older siblings or
friends to cause parents and teachers to doubt you. Accept that this is
what is happening, don't fight it, and work at proving that in spite of
the actions of others you can be trusted.
Sometimes trust has to be earned. If you had trust but did something to
break it, it is possible to fix things. But in doing so remember that as
the trust breaker you don't get to set the expectations, terms or time
frame for earning that trust back.
In order to fix broken trust both sides have to want the trust back. You
can never force a person to trust you.
Your parents want to trust you! What you see as mistrust of you could
really be fear, mistrust of those around you and/or their natural
protective instincts at work.
Some people have been so badly hurt in the past that they have great
difficulty trusting others. If you have a person like this in your life
accept that there will always be an element of mistrust in your
relationship and be prepared to work overtime to prove that you can be
trusted.
Trust is an essential part of ALL successful relationships be they
academic, romantic, friendly or familial.
Trust is an essential part of sex - if you don't trust your partner 110%
don't have sex with them.
Trust is a gift - you give it and you receive it. It should never be
taken for granted.