A Psycholgist on the Loose
Archive for September, 2008
I’m A Big Wennie, Too
Sep 8th
Lest there be any question, I did not intend to put down the struggling wife mentioned yesterday. Never. Some people have better “front offices” than the rest of us.
They hold in their anxiety, and thus they come across cool
instead of HYSTERICAL like the rest of us. But the husband in the example was no more functional than the wife, just using means other than obvious “relationship dependence” to calm himself down. Who knows, maybe he had someone on the side (or gets someone) using relationship dependence in spades.
“Relationship dependence” is when we need
a particular response from a particular other person to CALM DOWN, START THINKING AND GET BACK IN CHARGE of our lives.
And what’s particularly interesting and self-destructive about this method of calming ourselves down is that it DRIVES OTHER PEOPLE CRAZY. It drives AWAY the person we want to keep close. ![]()
How nuts is that?
RELATIONSHIP DEPENDENCE
Sep 7th
A supreme and successful effort to manage . . . RELATIONSHIP DEPENDENCE.
I was seeing a couple, both of whom were university professors. (All descriptions are disguised and combined to not apply to actual persons. I have enough wacky people in my family to use anyway.)
The husband was frustrated with the marriage and had moved into his own apartment. Things were improving with therapy as each learned more about their reactivity and anxiety management, but the husband was not ready to re-commit. The wife had a research report tour scheduled which would take her on the road for two months and require her to make presentations to large groups, a process that was hard for her.
In the last session before she was to leave, she asked her husband to promise
that their marriage was going to work out. Though she made it very clear he could cure her current anxiety by saying what she wanted to hear, he held his ground that he was still unsure. He was particularly worried that if they got back together she would end up leaning on him again for her sense of self. Prior to separating the wife had suffered panic attacks if left alone and all night bouts of anger insisting that her husband was not caring enough.
She upped the ante saying she couldn’t go on the trip,
couldn’t fulfill her obligations unless he said they were going to make it as a couple. He did not give in.
The wife headed out on the tour. During the second week, while she was in New York, the husband called at around eleven to ask how she was doing. The first few minutes was enjoyable for both. The husband said “Goodnight,” as was pleasantly signing off when the wife shouted, “Stop!”
He did. She started crying and saying he’d ruined her tour, that he’d never loved her, and that she was going out to find some man who did. He pleaded to continue the discussion the next day. She refused continuing to list his crimes and her own faults. After several more attempts to close the conversation, the husband hung up.
The wife called him back with more emotional blasting.
After ten minues, he hung up. She called again. He hung up. She called again. He’d taken the phone off the hook.
The wife threw herself on the bed hysterical, more because she’d made such an absolute mess of things than anything else. The urge to hear from her husband was almost unbearable. She “felt” out of control and absolutely hopeless.
THEN, she remembered a word or two about taking the energy she was using to TRY AND GET A RESPONSE from another person . . .
And using that energy to MANAGE her OWN anxiety. ![]()
Instead of rolling around on the bed, feeling worse and worse, ABSOLUTELY CONVINCED SHE COULD NOT FEEL BETTER, until she got the feedback she wanted from her husband–SHE DECIDED TO TAKE CHARGE. ![]()
As she told me: “What did I have to lose,” I asked myself. “I got up, got dressed and went out on the sidewalk and started walking. I was in Times Square, so there were plenty of interesting people. Even though every cell in my body (okay, that’s my phrase) wanted to either try to contact my husband or wallow in continuing misery, I started LOOKING at the interesting people. I looked at the marquees. I told myself I was going to walk and walk and walk until I WAS IN CHARGE OF MYSELF.
And I did.”
When her husband called, she apologized for dumping her anxiety into the phone call. He heard, for the first time, that she understood what it meant to be responsible for self.
Self Focus over Other Focus
Sep 6th
Oh yeah, I’m great giving this speech, and I can, on a good day, actually pull it off until some jerk (oops, that gives me away) pulls out in front of me, or someone criticizes me
(or I think they did), or asks me to do something when I’m feeling overwhelmed (can’t they read my mind?), or ruffles my world in a hundred other ways. Then I hand over my power.
I can’t do it, if YOU don’t change.
“You MAKE ME feel . . .”
I claim.
I’ve studied this stuff and I’m still pitiful. Not everywhere. I’m cool on a mental health unit where I’m clearly “in charge.” But at home, with the guy, I’m ready to jump on the “You’re making me feel . . .” victim train at any moment.
I’m being honest here about how hard it is to focus on self as in control of feelings and actions. I’ve taught classes in which at the end of two years an intern will describe how a husband’s depression is completely the wife’s fault. How, if she’d just CHANGE, he’d be a fulfilled man. Ouch.
Then there’s the old stand-by that’s tossed around psych units, the claim, and sometimes STRONGLY HELD BELIEF that all one’s current feelings and life situations are BECAUSE PARENTS–favored a sibling, got a divorce, punished too frequently, worked too much of the time, used money to buy affection, over-protected us . . . or
We are in a bad relationship, in a dead end job, under-functioning, and unhappy because PARENTS–paid too much attention to everything we did, didn’t get a divorce but made us suffer their bad relationship, were too lenient, didn’t support the family, was too cheap to provide for us, did not protect us enough . . .
Sheesh. I’m exhausted just thinking about giving up all these excuses.
Tomorrow: The Early Morning Walk Incident, how one wife (a long ago client) got her “bleep” together while all was falling apart at three in the morning and changed her husband’s opinion of her and her opinion of herself.
In Charge of Who and What?
Sep 4th
In Hustle and Flow, the lead characters are a pimp (Terrance Howard) who desperately wants to escape his “nobodiness” by becoming a rapper. His partner in crime is a young prostitute he picked up working truckstops on her own.
He won’t let her work in the strip bar like the others because she’s too clumsy. In her view, she has nothing to give the world or the people she cares about. She is nothing. Terrance Howard, as he gets in touch with hope, grabs her at one point and forces her behind the wheel of his car. Forces her to say she is “in charge” of her life. The words barely come out. Then she says them again and again, louder and louder, “I’m in charge! I’m in charge! I’m in charge!” until she has a sense of what he means. Hope. When her leader ends up in prison she takes his demo and hits the marketing trail where she converts her “talents” to the skills of a publicist.
Who’s Life Is It, Anyway?
Sep 3rd
Two phrases from two older movies will be the theme for a few days.
“I’M IN CHARGE!”
from Hustle and Flow. (Think of both of these guys inside your head trying to be in charge.)
and “I COULDN’T HELP MYSELF!” from a whole bunch of others.
Not to mention, these are the people who spend their lives in prisons — real and fabricated.
It’s about who’s deciding what goes on inside your chest cavity. Who decides your level of motivation. Who’s in charge.
Back later.
Strategy
Sep 2nd
Usually, when someone first comes into my office, what they’re wanting to know is: “How can I keep doing what I’m already doing, and get a DIFFERENT RESULT?
People are fairly predictable, so why aren’t we using that to improve our lives? We are each one predictable in how we manage anxiety. Do you try to take control? Try to get the other to change? Do you withdraw?
Sink in defeat? Have a cheesecake? Gossip?
Oh, all these options are grim. And we’ve CHOSEN to create a world for ourselves that is lovely and joyful.
We have decided to be like our grandfather who died with a great big smile on his face instead of meeting death screaming and crying like the other passengers in his car.
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