The Four Relationship Killers
As a marriage and family therapist for over 40 years, I've seen a lot of couples. And over and over, the demise of marriages and relationships in general, is not over money, children, or health but crummy communication styles. We were not taught in school or at home about how to communicate so we resort to a freewheeling and unconscious style, unaware of the consequences of how our message is received.
Here are four relationship killers of love, connection, openness, and intimacy and suggestions about how to cut them off at the pass. These concepts apply to any relationship -- your partner, children, parents, friends, business associates, and acquaintances.
The First Relationship Killer
1. We "you" the other person. That means we tell the other person about themselves -- what they should do, how they should be, and how they were; all under the guise of being helpful. When we "you" another person we're out of own back yard. We give unsolicited advice and make negative observations. A likely knee-jerk reaction is to: blame, resort to sarcasm or criticism, tease, and attack. The potential result is, that if we aren't ready for or don't want feedback, it immediately inspires defensiveness and falls on deaf ears. These "you-ing" strategies are guaranteed to create separation and alienation. The recipient feels hurt, misunderstood, and angry. No constructive communication ensues and the receiver walls him or herself off against the pain and insult.
The most important thing to remember is to "talk about yourself." This is our true domain. Our job is to share what we feel, think, want, and need. Doing so brings closeness, as we reveal information about ourselves. It can be scary and definitely takes some practice to figure out what is really going on inside. We have become very used to being in other people's business. But it's not too difficult if we pause for a minute when we're about to "you" someone. In that moment we must ask ourselves "What's true for me about the specific topic at hand?"
For example, instead of saying "You're late. Obviously you don't value my time." Say "I was worried when you didn't arrive at 5:00pm, especially since we agreed to text or call when we're held up. I'd appreciate it if you would do that in the future so I don't feel so anxious."
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