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7 Simple Ways to Wreck a Good Relationship Or to
Save One
Read Jed’s new book, Mr. Mean: Saving Your Relationship from the Irritable
Male Syndrome on Scribd at: http://tinyurl.com/MrMeanBook or get a “hard
copy” by going to http://www.menalive.com/mrmean.htm
Jed Diamond, Ph.D. has been a marriage and family counselor for the last 44
years. He is the author of 8 books, including Looking for Love in All the Wrong
Places, Male Menopause, and The Irritable Male Syndrome. He offers
counseling to men, women, and couples in his office in California or by phone
with people throughout the U.S. and around the world. To receive a Free E-book
on Men’s Health and a free subscription to Jed’s e-newsletter go to
www.MenAlive.com. If you are looking for an expert counselor to help with
relationship issues, write Jed@MenAlive.com.
When we look at the divorce rate, the number of relationships that fall apart
before people get married, and people who stay together even though miserable,
we might conclude that people go out of their way to wreck their relationships. It
can be helpful to look at the ways we often harm each other without even trying.
When I queried Google with the question, “What makes a good relationship” I
got 69,900,000 responses. Things like a good sex life, compatibility, mutual
respect, agreement about money matters, and good communication were
common. But in the 44 years I have been a marriage and family counselor I
have found that the core quality for having a good relationship is simpler and
more basic.
I’ve found that having a strong emotional bond is the key to a joyful love life.
Dr. Sue Johnson is an expert in helping couples achieve and maintain a joyful
relationship throughout their lives. In her book, Hold Me Tight: Seven
Conversations for a Lifetime of Love, she says she learned that “romantic love
was all about attachment and emotional bonding. It was all about our wired-in
need to have someone to depend on, a loved one who can offer reliable
emotional connection and comfort.”
According to Dr. Johnson, you must “recognize and admit that you are
emotionally attached to and dependent on your partner in much the same way
that a child is on a parent for nurturing, soothing, and protection.” She says that
adult attachments may be more reciprocal and less centered on physical contact,
but the nature of the emotional bond is the same.
Everyone assumes that good communication is the key for creating good
relationships, but my experience tells me, “it ain’t necessarily so.” Imagine this.
Your loved one lives in another city and you want to tell them how important they
are to you. So you pick up the phone and begin to communicate your love.
However, after minutes of getting no response, you realize your error. Although
you are communicating your heart out, you never actually dialed the number and
made the connection.
Don’t even think about trying to communicate until you connect. According to
Patricia Love and Steven Stosny, authors of How to Improve Your Marriage
Without Talking About It, “It’s not about communication. It’s about connection.”
Relationship disconnection is the biggest factor in the soaring divorce rate.
Some 80 percent of divorcees say they “grew apart.” Couples don’t become
disconnected because they have poor communication. They have poor
communication because they are disconnected.
Although both men and women can be moved by fear, women are more
vulnerable to fear and react more strongly (We’ll see in a moment that men are
more vulnerable to shame). Research shows that baby girls, from the day they
are born, are more sensitive to isolation and lack of contact.
Since it is the female that carries the egg, males are the ones who have to
compete with each other in order to be chosen by the female. Sexual
competition is a replay of fertilization itself. Numerous males, like small,
hyperactive sperm, compete among themselves for access to females.
Males often remember, with a great deal of shame, walking across a room
and asking the “cute” girl to dance, only to be turned down and having to walk
back to his seat feeling that all eyes are on him and people are saying to
themselves, “loser, loser, loser.” This is the essence of male shame. We are
always in competition with other males to be chosen by a female who can trigger
our feelings of insufficiency and inadequacy with a casual shake of her head.
And our shame deepens as others witness our retreat.
Can you imagine how you would feel if you were forced to compete your
whole life and had hundreds and hundreds of small and large rejections, many of
them crushing? Women, of course, have their own issues to deal with, but see if
you can let yourself feel the shame that haunts men.
“Shame,” says author Merle Fossum, “is feeling alone in the pit of
unworthiness. “Shame is not just a low reading on the thermometer of self
esteem. Shame is something like cancer—it grows on its own momentum.” Both
shame and guilt are ways in which people experience feeling bad. Yet the two
are quite different. Guilt involves feeling bad about what we do or fail to do.
Shame is feeling bad about who we are, about our very being. The shame that
men experience is a kind of soul murder, undermining the foundations of our
masculine selves.
5. Ignore the reality that women’s fear triggers men’s shame and men’s
shame triggers women’s fear.
Here’s an experience many people have had which can serve to introduce us
to this critically important topic. A man and his wife are in the car together on
their way to visit family for the holidays. As he drives around a curve, the wife
suddenly puts her hand on the dashboard to brace herself. He gives her a
hostile look, clenches his jaw, and turns back to the road. Within minutes they
get into a fight about some inconsequential issue that neither can remember.
What happened?
Both are a bit on edge as the drive begins since it is holiday time and they
are visiting family. When the man drives through the curve the wheels hit the
divider bumps briefly, the woman is startled, and she feels a jolt of fear. She
braces herself--a reflexive attempt to protect herself. The man does not realize
she is afraid. Instead, he interprets her reaction as a judgment on his driving and
his ability to protect her from harm. He has a jolt of shame. In an attempt to
protect himself from feeling inadequate he gets angry. His anger triggers more
fear in his wife, which triggers more shame in him.
What most people don’t realize is that men have a strong need to protect
and serve and they base a great deal of their sense of self-esteem and pride on
their ability to make their partner happy. When a woman wants to talk to a man
about things that are bothering her about the relationship, she is seeking to
overcome her fears of disconnection. However, he interprets her unhappiness
as a judgment of his competence as a male provider and protector.
The man will often think to himself, “Here we go again. She wants to tell me
what I’m doing wrong. I feel like a failure. I can’t do anything right and nothing I
do can please this woman.” Rarely, does a woman say, “Honey, we need to talk!
It’s just been way too long since I told you how wonderful you are. You satisfy
me in ways I’ve longed for all my life. You’re the best.”
7. If a woman can’t talk about what’s wrong there’s nothing she can do.
Here are 5 practices I recommend women avoid if you want to wreck a good
relationship.
It may not be evident at the moment, but one of men’s strongest desires is to
protect and serve the person he loves. When you’re afraid, he judges himself as
a poor protector. His shame levels goes up and he usually gets more irritable
and angry. One of the best ways to lower your fear level is remind yourself that
It only takes one committed person to save a relationship. Most women are
afraid that if they can’t get the man to change, all is lost. You will learn many
ways in this book that you can do to save yourself and rescue your relationship.
You can also set a “check in” date for you to commit to making things better no
matter what he does. I do this with all my clients and just knowing that you have
six months, a year, or whatever time you are willing to commit to, allows you to
relax a little and decrease your fear. What other ways might you lower your fear
level?
I think you get the idea. Again this isn’t meant to blame you or to cause you
to become ashamed. You have been doing the best you can. But noticing ways
you have been shaming him and stopping yourself can go a long way towards
healing. What are some of the things you’ve said or done that could cause your
man’s shame to increase? Being aware is the first step to making positive
change.
When we become locked into the Fear/Shame spiral, we get locked into
negative perceptions. “He’s mean, he’s inconsiderate, he’s angry all the time,
he’s withdrawn, he doesn’t love me, he’s sick.” Most women I talk with want to
help get the “mean” out of their man. They want to “de-mean” him, but end up
“demeaning” him. Focus your attention on the ways he has been, or you would
like him to be, wonderful.
Most women really don’t want “Mr. Nice.” They want a whole man, not a
perfect man. They want a man they can love and who loves them. I’ve learned
over the years that what you focus on, increases. If you want Mr. Wonderful,
look for all the ways—small ones and large ones--in which your man is
wonderful. Keep a journal of all the good stuff and read it when you are feeling
afraid.
It’s relatively easy to be your best when you are getting the best from your
partner. It’s a lot more difficult when you are getting a lot irritability, anger,
judgment, silence. Here’s an exercise that can help. Write down the things that
are best about you as a person. Then write what’s best about you as a partner.
Most women wouldn’t write that they are their best when they are fearful, angry,
nagging, blaming, shaming, etc. They are at their best when they are honest,
compassionate, courageous, accepting, and optimistic. When times are tough
and you’re tempted to respond with fear or shame, read what’s best about you as
a person and a partner and let that deeper truth guide your response.
For year’s my wife and I have used a “love letter” process that we learned
from John Gray. When you’re feeling a lot of negative emotions in your life, write
a letter to the person who seems to be triggering them. You’re not going to give
it to the person so use whatever language best conveys your feelings.
“Dear_________”. Then write down any hurt and pain you are feeling. Next,
write down any anger or irritation you feel. Go on to write things that trigger your
anxiety and fear. Continue with the things that cause you to feel guilt and
shame. Finally, write about your love and understanding.
Most of us either deny our feelings or we get stuck on one level or another.
We get locked up in our hurts or our anger. This allows you to express the whole
range of your emotions in a safe way. People tell me they always feel better
after writing one.
Let me close by saying that I’m not suggesting that talking with your partner
will always trigger shame or that you should never talk. I am saying that there
are a lot of ways we can heal, even when our partner does not want to “talk
about it.” You’ll find as you act on these practices more and talk less, the
emotional climate will thaw out and you’ll be able to talk without triggering more
fear and shame.