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Relationships: Taking Care of Yourself in the Moment
By
Margaret Paul, Ph.D.
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Maria consulted with me
because she was frustrated about the distance she felt in
her relationship with her husband, Carl. He wanted to be
close to her, but she didn’t feel close to him.
“I think the problem is that he often talks to me in a
judgmental or condescending way. He sounds like a parent
rather than a partner. I just hate being spoken to like
that.”
“How do you respond when he speaks to you like that?”
I asked.
“I withdraw and feel badly. Then later I sometimes try
to talk with him about it, but he doesn’t know what
I’m talking about. He thinks I’m too sensitive and
that I just want to blame him.”
How often have you had the experience of not knowing what
to say in conflict? Later, after thinking about it, you
think of all the things you wish you would have said. Then
you go back to your partner to try to deal with the issue,
only to discover that it’s too late - your partner
doesn’t understand what you are talking about.
“Maria, imagine that the part of you that hates being
spoken to like Carl speaks to you is a small child. Would
you let him speak to a child like that?”
“No. Actually, I don’t let him speak to our children
like that. He speaks to them with kindness and caring
because he knows that I will say something if he is mean
to them.”
“So you stand up for your children in the moment, but
you don’t stand up for yourself, for the child within
you, in the moment?”
“Yeah. I just never know what to say.”
“What do you say to him later?
“I tell him I didn’t like his tone of voice. But he
isn’t aware of it.”
“Right. He will be aware of it only if you say it in the
moment. Most people are not aware of their tone of voice.
When you tell him about it later, he really doesn’t know
what you are talking about. You need to be responding in
the moment for him to hear his own voice. You need to be
saying something like, ‘ Carl, I hate it when you speak
to me in that judgmental, parental voice. I don’t feel
like being with you when you talk to me like that.’ You
have a much better chance of him understanding what you
are saying when he can hear his own voice in the moment.
And you will feel much better when you speak up for
yourself in the moment. You will not feel so much like
withdrawing when you are not abandoning yourself in the
face of his judgmental tone.”
While Maria certainly didn’t like Carl’s tone of
voice, her distance from him was more due to her
self-abandonment than to his behavior. As long as she was
being a victim and not taking care of herself in the
moment, she was feeling badly. It’s easy to blame Carl
and think that her feelings are his fault, but her
feelings were really the result of not taking loving care
of herself around Carl.
Marie started to speak up, not blaming Carl but just
letting him know her truth. To her great surprise and
delight, he finally began to understand what she was
saying. He was actually a caring person and just didn’t
realize that he was being parental and judgmental. The
more Marie responded in the moment and spoke her truth,
the better things got between them. Carl wasn’t perfect,
but Marie found that when she spoke up instead of
withdrew, they were able to deal with the issue in the
moment. She also discovered that the more she took care of
herself in the moment instead of being a victim – with
Carl and with her friends and family - the more respect
Carl had for her. Some of his judgment toward her was
coming from his frustration over her not speaking up for
herself with her family and friends!
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About
The Author Margaret
Paul, Ph.D. is the best-selling author and
co-author of eight books, including
"Do I Have To Give Up Me To Be Loved
By You?" and “Healing Your
Aloneness.” She is the co-creator of the
powerful Inner Bonding healing process.
Learn Inner Bonding now! Visit her web
site for a FREE Inner Bonding course: http://www.innerbonding.com
or margaret@innerbonding.com.
Phone Sessions Available. |
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