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Containing Our Emotions: When It’s Helpful To Hold Back

I usually write abmad-36365_640out allowing our feelings to be felt, to be talked about, and to be shown. Today, I’ve been thinking about the opposite: containing them – and how to know when to do what!
Containing our emotions means to hold back how we’re feeling from someone else.  It’s what we do when we know something’s going on inside of us because we have strong emotions about something, but we choose not to let it show on the outside.  We deliberately decide not to say anything.  We choose to stay quiet.  We limit what our face expresses by refraining from rolling our eyes or frowning.  We still our body and do not shrug our shoulders, cross our arms, or tap our feet.

Why would we want to do this?  We do it to create safety for another person.  Let’s say your spouse comes home with a scowl on his face.  You’ve known him for a long time, you’re certain he is angry about something and you hope to God it’s not you!  In the past, you may have had an emotional reaction to seeing him like this.  Maybe it made you curious and you went into interrogation-mode.  Maybe you felt frustrated with a long-standing pattern of him scowling and it made you want to roll your eyes in a “there-he-goes-again” sort of way.  Maybe you felt scared that he was angry with you and you tried to assuage him by making a joke or offering him something to eat. Maybe your fear of his look made you want to get away: go upstairs, call a friend, do something with the kids – anything! – just to avoid him.

To hold back your emotions means that you keep whatever you’re feeling from showing on the outside.  In this case, the wife wouldn’t question her spouse, mock him with or without words, offer him food (or a drink!), or run away from him.  Instead, she would notice (with her mind) what she feels and what she has the impulse to do.  She would make a mental note of what’s going on inside of her without talking out loud.  A mini-light bulb goes off inside her head: “Oh, I’m feeling ______ when he comes home like that!”  Then she makes a deliberate decision to keep the feeling from showing with words, a look on her face, a move of her body, or an action she takes.

Containing our emotions from our married partner is an important tool that great relationships have.  It’s a valuable tool that comes in handy in some situations, but not all.  Just as a hammer is great for putting a nail in the wall but not for screwing in a screw, this is a relationship tool that works great when it’s needed.

How do we know when containment is what’s needed?  Containment is needed when we want to create a space for our spouse to open up about him/herself, to work something through, or to get out what’s going on with him/her.  It can work especially well when our spouse is hurting or ashamed.  At those times, questioning is the last thing most people want. When you contain your feelings (because you see your spouse has a difficult feeling that needs to be worked out), you are doing something important for your partner.  Rather than add your feelings to what your spouse is already going through, you keep things separate.  Your emotions stay separate from his.  This separation gives your spouse the space and time to experience, work though, or talk about what the scowl is about.  It creates in your home and your relationship a safety for each spouse to have whatever feeling they have without having to worry about their partner’s reaction to it.  It’s hard enough to feel hurt, lonely, discouraged, or hopeless without having to deal with your partner’s feelings about your feelings.  It gets complicated, quick!  And those kinds of complications set the stage for arguments and feeling misunderstood.

You can ask to talk about your own reactions or feelings at a later time, after your spouse has worked it through or calmed down.  But, for now, respect that your spouse is allowed to have his/her feelings.  Sit and listen if your partner will talk or give him/her space if that’s what he/she wants: all with the intention of making your relationship a safe place for you both to turn when you need love and comfort.

To learn more or to schedule an appointment, call us at  908-246-3074 or email getsupport@couplestherapycenterofnj.com.

 

Stopping Triangulation: How to Avoid the Pitfalls of Involving a Third Person in Your Problems

people-154111_640Most of my clients have some kind of challenge in their relationships with others. The struggle may be with a spouse, a friend, a family member, a co-worker, a child, a neighbor, or a landlord. No matter who the struggle is with, we often discuss what someone else said or did and how my client felt hurt or angry about it during our sessions. When we dig deeper, many times I find that a big part of the problem is triangulation. Triangulation is when a third person gets involved in a conflict. It might feel good temporarily, but it will hurt you in the long run.

Think of an imaginary triangle of three people. An issue may come up between two of them: maybe something one person said or did that upset the other. Triangulation occurs when one of the two individuals involved in the issue ‘invites’ a third person into the debate or argument. By ‘invite’ I mean talks to the third person about the individual they have the issue with or talks about the issue itself. The original issue has little or nothing to do with the third person! The problem here is when we use this as a way to vent our feelings.

This is what talking behind someone’s back is all about. Let’s say it starts when you take issue with what someone said. You then ‘invite’ a third person in by talking about it with them INSTEAD of talking directly to the person you had the issue with.

This feels good temporarily because it gives you a chance to vent your feelings and feel understood by someone else. And putting someone else down is a means of getting revenge.

Triangulation, however, is NOT helpful in the long run. It complicates the original problem because now another person’s thoughts and feelings are involved. More importantly, it denies us the means to solving the issue. The best way of solving an issue is talking directly to the person who hurt or angered us. So, what do you do instead?

First, realize who the issue is really with. Identify which two people the original debate, hurt or anger is between.

Second, don’t ‘invite’ a third person into the discussion (in other words, don’t triangulate). It is OK, and quite beneficial, if you do choose to talk to a very specific 3rd person: that person being your therapist. It is a therapist’s job to help you figure out your personal relationships. Talking to your therapist is different from triangulation because the therapist’s intention is to help you decide how you’re going to resolve the issue. Your therapist will offer you tools and ideas for solving the problem and your therapist will encourage you to talk directly to the person involved in order to get it worked through.

Are you not in therapy, but you can see how you triangulate? Sorting this out is one of the many benefits of being in a supportive therapy relationship. We are here to help you find solutions to your problems.

Call us at  908-246-3074 or email getsupport@couplestherapycenterofnj.com to find out how we can work with you to find tools and ideas that will help you productively work through the issues in your relationships.

What Does It Mean To Love Your Spouse?

In my therapy practice I often hear married couples say, “We’ve fallen out of love” or “I’m not sure I love her/him anymore.”  These statements are made with great sadness and a clear sense of hopelessness.  The couples, who feel that the romantic love is gone from their relationships, begin to doubt the value of their marriages and question their choice of partners. This sense of doubt is strengthened by the messages society sends about our partner being our soul mate, “other half” or someone who completes us.

In reality, it is normal to experience different feelings for our partners as a marriage progresses.  Feelings of caring can seem to fade; at times we may dislike or even hate someone we love.  Although these feelings are upsetting and confusing, they are completely normal. In order to better understand them, it helps to clarify the definition of love.  In spite of the impression conveyed by Hollywood and fairytales, love is not a feeling.  “Falling in love” is not love, nor is needing someone or having someone need you.  Love is not sacrificing yourself, being a martyr for someone else, always doing things for others or spending money on others.

What is love, then?  Love is caring deeply about another person’s growth.  According to M. Scott Peck, M.D., love is “the will to extend one’s self for the purpose of nurturing one’s own or another’s spiritual growth.”  Love is an action you take – something that you do- to nurture yourself or someone else.  When a person is treated lovingly, they feel validated and cared for.  Love grows from this nurturance.  People do not grow when they are criticized, blamed or shamed.  They grow when they are loved.

When we think about what it means to love our spouse, it helps to consider another question.  How do we love someone?  We love them through our actions: doing something with the purpose of nurturing his or her growth.  The action might be temporarily putting aside the things that occupy us and focusing completely on our spouse so they feel attended to.  The action might be to truly listen when they speak; hear their words, look at them, and respect their view, even when it differs from your own.  The action might be spending time together, whether you are doing something your spouse enjoys or something you both enjoy.  The action might simply be spending quiet time together while feeling connected, such as taking a walk, cuddling, sitting on a park bench next to one another, or spending time in spiritual worship.

In couples groups and private sessions, we teach partners a new way to act with love using the Imago dialogue.  During the dialogue, each partner has time to talk while the other partner simply listens.  The listener then confirms what she/he heard and offers a statement of understanding.  The Imago dialogue is a form of love as a willful action.  Its purpose is to nurture one another by attending to them lovingly.

Loving our spouse helps him/her grow toward the best he/she can be.  As they grow, they are more likely to love us back in this same way.  Love is action.  Ultimately, the action of loving our spouse brings growth, intimacy and joy for both partners.

To schedule an appointment to learn more about how feeling gratitude for your partner can greatly improve your relationship, call 908-246-3074 or email getsupport@couplestherapycenterofnj.com.

Defining Imago: What is it and how can it improve your relationship?

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Do you ever wonder if you married the wrong person?  Are you sometimes frustrated that you can’t seem to discuss anything important without it escalating into an argument?  Do you wonder why your partner changed from the person you fell in love with?  Do you rarely have fun and laugh together anymore?  Do you feel that, except for the children, your marriage was a mistake?  If you answered yes to any of these questions, know that you are not alone.

You can probably recall the beginning of your relationship when you were in love.  You may have noticed  the  relationship “just felt right” or you may have seen your new spouse as “the only one for me.”  When these initial feelings subside, as they do in all marriages, it leaves us wondering what happened.  In place of the fondness, we might feel angry, lonely, hurt, or sad.  People react to this tremendous change any number of ways.

Some become angry, pleading, demanding or quiet.  Others spend more time doing things without their spouse because they feel better elsewhere.   We may view our spouse as our adversary and words become weapons.  Resentments build.  Some couples consider divorce.  Welcome to the Power Struggle.  This is a normal stage of marriage, but it certainly doesn’t feel normal.  In fact, it feels awful.

All of us want love and attention.  When we received these things from our spouse early in the relationship it felt wonderful.  Now we find ourselves feeling hurt and angry.  In response, we do what we used to do as children to get love and attention: yell, scream, withdraw, and pout.  The power struggle is a cry for connection.  It occurs, in part, because we are doing what we know how to do in order to get love and attention.  Ironically, doing these things gets us the opposite of what we want.  Although we long for connection, we are unconsciously sabotaging ourselves from getting it.

As adults, we need to find new ways to get the love, attention, and connection we desire.  Imago Relationship Therapy helps us accomplish this by teaching couples to use language as a tool of connection and by helping couples reconnect in fun and meaningful ways.

Dr. Harville Hendrix and Dr. Helen LaKelly Hunt created Imago out of their therapeutic work with couples and work on their own relationship. Their book, Getting The Love You Want, details this process and is a New York Times bestseller.

Imago therapy teaches couples to choose words with the intention of connecting with their spouse.  “Connection,” in this case, means talking openly about ourselves with our partner and listening when they talk openly about themselves.  The marriage is a safe place.  It is safe because both partners seek to understand each other in an environment free of blame, shame, and criticism.  We feel connected to our spouse, we have their attention, and we feel loved.

In my work with couples, I help them create a loving and connected relationship by:

  • Defining their ideal relationship
  • Getting into the habit of appreciating one another and noticing what’s going well
  • Choosing words with the purpose of increasing connection
  • Learning to truly listen to their partner and step into his/her shoes
  • Finding the caring and empathy they had for one another when they first got together
  • Making time for fun and sexual connection so spending time together is pleasurable
  • Approaching and resolving conflict as a team working for the benefit of the marriage.

Couples can awaken the love and closeness they used to feel for one another.  As Cindy Ricardo, a wise, fellow Imago therapist wrote, “Imago: Create the relationship of your dreams.”

To schedule an appointment to learn more about how feeling gratitude for your partner can greatly improve your relationship, call 908-246-3074 or email getsupport@couplestherapycenterofnj.com