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Okay Chief, you described the ideal relationship. And I agree with that.
The problem is though, that a lot of posts/books/blogs/articles tell you about how a relationship should be. That is a good start. But achieving this with real life examples is what I am missing. I mean, do you need to be extremely smart to understand that communication is the no 1 key component in a relationship? I am not saying that your post is useless, please don't get me wrong; it actually sums everything up very well and i know that you are experienced and i am happy for you.
But I am missing an advice on how to achieve that? Let's take my example. I am 23, she is 22, we have been in a relationship for over a year. I am very social, outgoing and eager to communicate a lot, I love opening up myself nearly anybody, I care about my social status

On the other hand, i have a hard time keeping secrets and talk to much in general; not such a good listener.
She is the opposite: difficult to open up, she even avoids speaking with close people at some times - not sure why - she says she does not want to do that now. She is happy though that she met some new friends (that were just my friends before) and some of them are close friends with her now. She says that she is trying to be more social and more open because both me and her want it. A good part of her is that she would rather have less good friends while I would have more acquaintances than close friends.
But she still has a hard time talking about private issues. even with me.
Therefore the 1st key element (communication) in a healthy relationship is weak. It results in the 2nd key element (trust) being weak from my side. I can hardly trust anybody that is not open to me. She says trusts me though
Is there anything that can be done? Or I am just with a wrong woman and this relationship will not work out in long term? Advice, ideas?
I'm a firm believer in the concept that practice makes you better at skills, and that pickup and relationships are skillsets that overlap in many areas. Over the years, I've gotten to a point where I can confidently say that I can communicate with women pretty damn well. I also know how to be a persuasive guiding force that women like to be guided by.
Here's my prescription to you.
Good communication: Listening
There's one thing you said that really stands out to me as a sign that you haven't yet become a proficient communicator: you admitted to not being such a good listener. When I was developing my Conversational Framework (see my Guide to Outer Game posted as a sticky in the PUA Lounge), I discovered that the best way to converse with a woman you're interested in is to find out as much as you can about her. Naturally, practicing this conversational framework enhanced my listening skills, which I wholeheartedly believe to be one of the - if not THE - most important elements in communication as a whole. If you're talking more than you're listening, you're not communicating like a man and a woman should be communicating; you're just lecturing! Develop your listening skills and you'll begin to see many more doors of opportunity that you haven't been able to see before that you and your partner can walk through together.
Leadership: Persuasive guidance
I think my girlfriend and I had a similar issue to the one you're describing. As a pickup artist, of course I was more social and had an army of acquaintances and very few close friends. My girlfriend is more of the type to keep a small number of very close friends while automatically ignoring facebook friend requests from people she didn't know well enough. She also had a hard time opening up to me since she takes a while to open up to any new person in her life in general. If we had disagreements about anything, I'd oftentimes find myself trying to open up an honest discussion while she oftentimes said things like "I don't want to talk about this." This sort of "stonewalling," as relationship researchers put it, wasn't going to fly in my book. I knew that I had to open her up, but not abruptly by force. The lessons I learned in pickup taught me better - that everything is an escalation. I patiently and slowly opened myself up to her more and more while putting my
listening skills to good use and eventually she opened herself up to me. I made both my expectations and my caring patience very clear. "I don't want to talk about this" eventually turned into "I don't want to talk about this right now," which turned into "Let's talk about it later," which turned into "I think (insert more direct communication here)." As a pickup artist I already had the skills to lead women, and I used those skills to lead my girlfriend into a better position of cooperation to make communication between us an efficient tool of bonding and, essentially, team-building. If you think that this is an area you need to brush up on, maybe you should consider going back to practicing pickup material related to influence and leadership.