A Better Relationship in One Week: Day One
Family, Relationships, anxiety, self esteem, self help, the self-defined life
“Tell me, Doc. How can I keep doing what I’m already doing, but get a DIFFERENT RESULT?”
In relationship counseling, each person comes in essentially asking, “How can I keep doing what I’m already doing–but get a different response from by chosen other?”
After thirty years of “practicing” psychology, I don’t know specifically what actions will work to improve a particular relationship. I do know which behaviors more or less guarantee failure.
Think of it as if you are standing in a clearing in a forest. Narrow trails sprout from the edges of the clearning into the trees. I don’t know which of the trails will end up where you want to be, but I do know which trails will lead you to a dead end or worse.
The first of these is the trail that reads: I can improve this relationship and my pleasure in this relationship by CONVINCING THE OTHER TO CHANGE.
Who’s in charge? Don’t you want to be in charge?
I’ve had thirty years of marriage, too. And, like any good spouse, I have applied this YOU CHANGE approach daily, even giving hour by hour suggestions. And, yet, the man goes on being himself. What’s up with that?
Where do I turn. Then, there’s the mirror. Eek! Me? I have to change me?
But that’s hard.
Challenge One: Take charge of what goes on inside your chest cavity. Your feelings. That bundle of energy or hope or whatever it is that determines the expression on our faces, the energy and optimism or lack of joy with which we approach each and every situation.
mysteryshrink @ May 19, 2008