Getting to Know Someone

by Olatunde Howard, MA, LMFT

How long does it take to “get to know someone?”  Really.  Before we even answer that question, what does it even mean to actually know another person?  I’ve thought about this based on a recent conversation, a recent session, and my own experiences. Because I’ve always valued authenticity and connecting intimately, and because I am a very intense and focused person, I tend to not know how to…ease into relationships I guess?  Since high school, I never really wanted to “date.”  I just wanted to meet “the one” and be with that person for the rest of my life.  I’ve always believed that all it takes is one good/real/authentic conversation with someone to determine a real connection.  Yet it has always seemed that the world around me ascribes to an assumed amount of time that people have to interact before they “know each other;”  that they have to know a certain amount of information about a person.

But even after this happens, I hear some couples say that “they never really knew their partner.”  This can be after as many as 10-20 years married.  While there are other clients who feel like they deeply know someone they’ve only been interacting with for two or so weeks.   

Sometimes I think “getting to know someone,” whether that means increased time with them, or increased information about them, is overrated.  Why?  Because again, even after some couples have been together for years, know all kinds of information about each other, and have spent all kinds of time with each other, they still seem significantly disconnected.  So the time and information seem to have done nothing for their connection.

Keyword:  Connection

I think my conclusion is that real connections don’t require a lot of time or information.  I think that time and information only solidify true connections.  But an essential or fundamental connection can happen when two people who want to connect simply, vulnerably, and authentically share their thoughts and emotions in the present moment they are actually in.  When they do that, they not only “get to know each other,” they truly do know each other already.  And as time passes, and information is learned, if they keep connecting, their connection grows, matures, and solidifies. 

So how do two people  “get to know each other,” or really come to know each other?  I believe they do two things:

  1. They consciously seek to connect with someone who also wants to connect with them.
  2. They simply, vulnerably, authentically, and mutually share their thoughts, beliefs, emotions, and passions in the moment they are in.

 If they decided they wanted to do this for the rest of their lives, they simply commit to doing so–daily, weekly, nightly–consistently.  They make this a habit.  And as time passes, as they continue to connect in varying situations over time, learning more information about each other, the essential connection they had only grows, matures, and solidifies.  Not because of time or information.  But because of a decision to continue their connection.  And even if this isn’t a life long connection, when it happens, it’s still very real.  They can actually and genuinely say, in the present moment of their connection, that they are not just getting to know each other, but that they actually do know each other. 

Olatunde Howard, MA, LMFT

Olatunde is a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist Associate. Read Full Bio

Browse More Blog Articles

Do colors make you mad?

For real. Like, when you go into an office, room, or place, do you leave feeling…agitated? But can’t quite put your finger on why? Then later you think, “It was the vibe of the place. That’s what it was!” And after you think about what the vibe was, it dawns on you.

read more

The Magic of Therapy is Clarity

I’ve noticed that some clients think therapists are magicians and that therapy is magic. And if the magic doesn’t kick in after one or two sessions (3 tops!), then therapy isn’t working. Now the thing is, therapy can begin to “work” after one or two sessions, depending on the client and the presenting problem. It may even work after one session, and this is where therapy can be magical–if we understand what the magic really is.

read more

A Life Without Regret?

I used to want to live a life without regret. That was my actual goal. By a life without regret, I meant a life with a clear conscience. A life where I don’t make stupid or avoidable mistakes that have lasting consequences. And that is still my goal. But I stumbled on something in my time of meditation:

read more
All therapists at One-Eighty Counseling, P.A. are contractors and the information and opinions posted in each individual therapists' blog, is the expressed professional and/or personal opinion of that therapist. One-Eighty Counseling, P.A. does not endorse any specific opinion and is not responsible for the professional and/or personal opinions of the contractor/individual therapist