Healthy Conflict

I know, right?  What a yucky topic: conflict.  You might be saying, “I don’t like conflict!”  Not many people do.  It’s just uncomfortable and many folks are straight-up conflict avoidant.  Besides, how could conflict be healthy?  Isn’t conflict bad, and aren’t we all supposed to want to achieve a state of no conflict?  Well, truth is, there really is such a thing as healthy conflict, and that’s the topic for today.  Ready to tackle this one?  Here we go.

We all know that none of us are perfect.  Narcissists especially, (and the rest of us most of the time too), would love to have you believe they are perfect, but it simply isn’t true.  It is inevitable, then, that we are all going to get our feelings hurt from time to time, by our imperfect friends, coworkers, significant others, etc.  It’s gonna happen.  We’re going to hurt them sometimes, too, no matter how hard we try not to.  We have a unique opportunity to gather information during this kind of event though, and can use the information to either perpetuate the hurt and further damage our relationship, or actually help our relationship.  That’s right, I said that we can use the inevitable hurts in our relationships to make them better and stronger.  This is achieved through the process of healthy conflict.

To demonstrate healthy conflict, I am going to take you through the process in a very typical scenario.  I’m also going to point out along the way how each person has the opportunity to change hurtful, damaging conflict into healthy conflict.  Let’s take a look at our example couple, John and Anna.

In the first step of healthy conflict, one person says “ouch.”  This is a necessity in any healthy relationship.  If there is going to be true intimacy and safety in a healthy relationship, each member must know that their feelings are important to the other person and will be heard, especially when those differences or imperfections jump up and bite us in the proverbial rear end.  So we’ll begin with Anna, who softly and humbly says “ouch” to John: “John, that behavior you did really hurt my feelings.”  John now has the opportunity to grow, learn, understand, and change. This is John’s first opportunity to encourage healthy conflict.  He can say, “I want to understand your feelings, tell me more, your feelings are valid, I’m sorry, I will not do this behavior again,” and then John does everything in his power to never do it again. If John does receive this humbly, the conflict ends here.  Increased safety in the relationship ensues, Anna feels heard and validated, and John grows.   This is the healthiest scenario, both people have done their part.  Wouldn’t that be nice?  This is possible…however, it pretty rarely goes down that way, right?

It is, after all, extremely difficult and against our natural ego-filled, prideful state (especially for the shame-filled and counterdependent among us) to have the humility to say “I’m sorry” or “I screwed up.”  That is paramount to admitting our worst fear:  that the person we hurt will now think we really are the bad person we always believed down deep we were. So instead of humbly saying “I’m sorry”, we instead say “you need to change how you feel about this” or some other version of “this is your problem, not mine.”  It is very minimizing of the other person’s feelings and completely valid world view, and usually comes out extremely defensive.  This kind of response usually causes major damage to the relationship, and hurts the other person’s feelings and triggers their pain even further.  They now will likely feel unheard, not understood, like the other person doesn’t care about their feelings, and abandoned.  John has just missed his first chance to help heal the situation, and instead has potentially made it MUCH worse.  Anna likely feels abandoned and withdraws love and acceptance, John fulfills his lying ‘self truth’ that he is “not worthy of being loved.”

So then what happens?  Anna at this point has her first opportunity to have an effect on the dance they are doing. Now this is truly difficult because Anna has made herself vulnerable by saying “ouch”, and in response she has gotten an arrogant and minimizing response.  Not exactly a safe situation.  And now she is supposed to change her natural response?  What is her natural response? It is going to be right in line with John’s worst fear of course…thinking he is a piece of crap and not worthy of being loved. Am I right?  After all, John just treated Anna extremely poorly and pridefully…he IS a piece of crap, right?  Anna feels justified in thinking as much.  While it is true that John did just react with his issues and did not handle it well at all, there is another choice to be made here for Anna, too. Not gonna lie, it’s not easy and it’s going to take some extreme self-control and having your own issues settled down quite a bit. The name of this intervention is GRACE AND DIFFERENTIATION.

Not for the feint of heart, Anna will have to stare her fears of being abandoned and unheard square in the face in order to pull it off.  And not only for a minute.  She is going to have to hold this discomfort likely for some time, like days.  What does this “grace and differentiation” intervention look like?  I’m glad you asked.  It is understanding John when he gets angry, knowing he has issues biting him in the rear and giving him grace because your issues bite you sometimes, too.  Not taking it personally when he cuts off, (and if he is reactive like this, he will).  Not chasing him down and insisting we talk about this right now, and letting it percolate, if necessary.  (Read my blog about “The Myth of Urgency” here) Holding her ground that she is allowed to feel and think differently than he does, while allowing him to think and feel differently than she does.  Now here’s the big one, folks….You Don’t Have To Agree.  Oh, we get caught up on this, don’t we?  The fear is that if the other person doesn’t agree with us, then they might not love us.  It is enmeshed, it is relationally unsafe, and it is unrealistic!  But we get caught in this power struggle hell all the time until we let go of the notion that the other person has to agree with us.

So Anna can keep herself safe, stay non-reactive, hold her own opinion about the situation, give John space to come back toward her or not (that’s the hard part where she has to risk and really feel her abandonment), and keep…oh, this one is hard…loving and accepting him for where he is.  If John continues to act the same way time after time, every time Anna says “ouch”, their relationship will suffer tremendously and it will eventually end.  And vice versa.  If Anna were to react with the attitude of “get over it” every time John says “ouch”…same thing.  Most people really don’t expect their partner to be perfect when it comes down to it, but they do need to see genuine sorrow at, and a turning away from, the behaviors that hurt them.  They need their partners to have humility, and grow.

There is a major pitfall to avoid, and it needs to be addressed.  Sometimes, people will take on too much and become a doormat.  This is equally unbalanced with being too prideful.  I am not suggesting this over-correction, or co-dependency.  What I am suggesting is an acceptance by both people that they each have a different view, both are valid, and they don’t have to agree.  They do, however, have to learn where their partner’s pains are and be sensitive to them, if they want their partner to stay in relationship with them.  If we play that out, it looks like this:  John says “I understand this behavior hurts you, but I’m going to keep doing it anyway because in my world view, I’m right.” and Anna will go on her way, eventually.  She does not agree that the behavior is OK with her, and she doesn’t have to agree.  Is the behavior in question a deal breaker for either person?  Then they will likely not have a relationship for long.  That’s OK, and they can each go on their way agreeing that neither is going to change.

The alternative is that John, in this case, says “I understand that this hurts you, how can we do this differently, with me understanding your pain, and you understanding what I need, too?”  Now there is a mutual humility.  All of you Anna’s out there, wouldn’t you respond favorably to THAT?  Anna agrees.  That is a safe relationship.  Anna can realize John’s reasons for his behavior and any fears that may drive it so as to not take his behavior personally, and John can work on becoming softer and more careful with Anna’s feelings.  John grows in sensitivity, and Anna grows in grace.  Now the relationship is doing it’s job:  refining them both.
If your partner can’t quite do the humility thing, yet, you can change the dynamic anyway.  And if they refuse to find some humility, you can have the strength to eventually locate the door to the relationship as well.  If you are the one that can’t do the humility thing yet, I pray that you can soon.  All of your relationships will suffer and ultimately likely end if you cannot find some.  Humility is the life blood of good relationships.  If you want to be able to pull off the grace and differentiation intervention, you are going to need help getting your own issues under control.  I can help you with that.  Email me at neisenmanftca@gmail.com  Let’s get started.
Thanks for reading!

Nancy Eisenman, MSW is an individual, marital, and family therapist. She specializes in couples and marriage counseling, individual counseling, group and family counseling. Nancy serves the surrounding areas of Carmel, Westfield, Zionsville, Fishers, and Noblesville. E-Counseling available for residents of Indiana.

©2014, Nancy Eisenman

©2013, Nancy Eisenman

Nancy Eisenman, MSW, LCSW is a therapist at Peace Counseling Group, serving the greater Indianapolis area. Surrounding communities include Carmel, Westfield, Fishers, Geist, Noblesville, Brownsburg, and Avon. For more information, please use the contact form or call Nancy directly at 317.605.7015.

Address: 9640 Commerce Drive
Suite 413 Carmel, IN 46032

Phone:  317.605.7015

Peace Counseling Group

Contact Me

©  2017 Peace Counseling Group. All rights reserved.

The Myth Of Urgency

I’m glad you stopped by The Waiting Room today because we are going to chat about a topic that can give you some amazing freedom to relax during conflict!  Fix a cup of your favorite warm beverage and join me for a few quiet moments during a busy day.

If you have read many of my posts, you will find that I am a student of the concept of differentiation.  Differentiation can be described as an ability to control or minimize over-reactivity in the presence of real or perceived relational closeness or distancing.  (See other posts to describe differentiation more fully here and here).  It is not so much a difficult idea to grasp as much as it is a difficult idea to put into practice in life and relationships!

The big deal here is that if one is to be differentiated, they must be able to control their reactivity long enough to catch themselves from taking the bait of over-reacting.  Wow, I cannot tell you how difficult that is.  Invariably, in order to do so with any kind of success, you must have a very good understanding of your particular set of wounds, and a good deal of healing and grieving under your belt as well, because your partner is so adept at finding your buttons and pushing them quite vigorously!

So say something happens that makes you very angry.  My last post discussed how Anger = Ouch.  It’s pretty safe to say that when most folks feel angry or ouch, they have an almost reflex-like reaction to protect and/or counter-attack.  Makes sense, right?  Our dear old lizard brain survivalist mode kicks into effect and LOOK OUT!  Fight or flight is pretty automatic.  If we’re used to fighting about the same thing over and over for years, we may be able to control a raging outburst, but the temper and the pain and the resentment still stews inside.

What I am going to suggest today is going to give you and me a bit of permission to pause.  Yep.  I’m talking about stopping that whole fight or flight mess that gets us into SO much trouble, and giving ourselves some time to think and reflect before reacting.  Sound easy?  Perhaps not.  What would it be like for you to be able to stop just before an argument starts, and keep it from turning into a bloodbath?  Ooo.  That is worth the price of admission right there, isn’t it?

So here’s what it looks like.  Your partner says something that ticks you off.  Now, immediately there is a choice to make.  Do I go with the lizard and fight back?  Or perhaps run away and retreat?  Maybe you’re battle savvy with your particular lunkheaded partner, you’ve got some walls and some scars already from fighting them, and you simply give a laser-like glare and let some good-sized resentment build.  Stop.  Intervene with yourself and your thoughts right here.  There is a myth being believed right in this moment that is going to leave you completely unsatisfied with the outcome of this fight, whatever it is.  This is the myth of urgency.

It is actually not urgent that you defend yourself right that moment.  It is not crucial that you crush the other person right then, or run away immediately.  You can be just fine in that moment without doing either one.  Let that one soak in for a second.  I can be just fine in this moment without reacting immediately.  The ability to hold still in this moment will allow you to react with thoughtfulness, calmness, and after thinking first!

Can you see how much better your reaction will always be if you really think before reacting?  You can also take that time to take stock of and honor your own feelings.  Your response can be planned and on your own terms, instead of your partners terms and under the influence of your wounds.  You can actually take a moment in that time as well to consider the other persons true intentions (which, by the way, are almost never about wanting to hurt you), and also remember their wounds and care for their feelings.  Beautiful.

I cannot tell you how many millions of times I have fallen into the trap of the myth of urgency.  I would have to admit that I tend to be a bit on the stubborn side sometimes when needing to learn difficult lessons.  I have finally figured out, though, that I do not have to react in that very moment.  It does not mean I’ve given up my right to discuss it later or choose a course of action later.  It does mean I am claiming my right to get ahold of my reactivity before engaging with my partner, and this can only mean a cleaner and clearer picture of the situation and a less volatile encounter.

So I’m not suggesting that this is easy or that anyone can do it without practice.  I’m only saying that it is possible, and the skill is beyond worth learning.  Remember that freedom I was talking about?  It comes from humbly seeking to heal ourselves and get a handle on our reactivity.  I’m going to make a pretty bold statement here:  Differentiation is the cure for anxiety.  It allows us to relax from the pull of over-reactivity.

Pre-requisites for learning this skill are some teachability, some motivation, trust, and most of all…humility.  We can start from the beginning or wherever you are on your journey, just bring an open heart.  Come on in, let’s get to work.

Nancy Eisenman, MSW is an individual, marital, and family therapist. She specializes in couples and marriage counseling, individual counseling, group and family counseling. Nancy serves the surrounding areas of Carmel, Westfield, Zionsville, Fishers, and Noblesville. E-Counseling available for residents of Indiana.

©2014, Nancy Eisenman

©2013, Nancy Eisenman

Nancy Eisenman, MSW, LCSW is a therapist at Peace Counseling Group, serving the greater Indianapolis area. Surrounding communities include Carmel, Westfield, Fishers, Geist, Noblesville, Brownsburg, and Avon. For more information, please use the contact form or call Nancy directly at 317.605.7015.

Address: 9640 Commerce Drive
Suite 413 Carmel, IN 46032

Phone:  317.605.7015

Peace Counseling Group

Contact Me

©  2017 Peace Counseling Group. All rights reserved.

Anger = “Ouch”

It’s probably no surprise that the number one reason people give for picking up the phone and calling for a therapy appointment is “We just can’t communicate.”  Even if the reason is something else: infidelity, addiction, anxiety, or relationship issues with friends and family, most folks will trace the problem back and identify it as beginning with a lack of communication.  That’s exactly the topic I want to address today.

I have come to find that pretty much everyone that walks into our office is actually quite eloquent in communicating.  Go figure!  They are able to state how they feel or what they think with relative ease most of the time.  So why then these overwhelming reports of people who lack this ability?  I think the problem is less about the ability, or lack thereof, in communicating and more a problem of listening non-reactively and translating.

We are all the walking wounded.  We were hurt, and didn’t get enough love, affection, attention, and/or gentle nurturing as kids.  Little kids are voraciously needy creatures, and no two parents can give enough, and perfectly, to allow their kids to emerge into adulthood unscathed.  Just doesn’t happen.  It’s not about bad-mouthing parents.  We all do the best we can with what we’ve got, and parents are walking wounded from their own childhoods.  Everyone gets wounded.  So since we are wounded, we all have ouchies in our hearts that get poked from time to time, and we will invariably choose to be in a relationship with someone who is uniquely suited to hurt us and NOT meet our needs. That’s the law of attraction, backwards as it is.  So we live with those who hurt us most.  When something hurts, we react.  Anger.  We have to protect ourselves.  That’s not so hard to understand.

Not so surprisingly then, we think that people mean exactly what they say when they’re angry.  Not so much.  We actually want our partners, friends, and family to read between the lines and know how we feel underneath our words. The angry teenager inside us that comes out to protect our wounds says mean and hurtful things to get the other person to back away from our wounds.  We all do it, until we learn that we are doing it, and then we get better but STILL do it sometimes.  It OK, no shame in admitting it.  We speak out of defensiveness, and then wonder why our loved ones can’t hear the real problem and understand how we feel.  ”He just doesn’t listen.”  ”She can’t hear me.”  Nevermind that when we speak in this defensive way, we are hurting the other person in THEIR worst wound, causing their defensiveness to be stirred.  Now we’re doing our dance of anger.

I want to suggest an alternative course of action, a different translation if you will, when you hear your partner become angry or defensive.  What if you began to learn to hear what they are really saying underneath?  When your partner gets angry, what if you translate that in your head to “My partner is saying ‘ouch’.”  Isn’t that what they are really saying?  Look at it closely.  For example, Mary angrily says,  ”Bob, you didn’t pick up your socks for the 26th day in a row!”  What she is really saying is, “I feel like you you don’t appreciate the hard work I do to keep the house clean.”  What her anger is really saying is “Ouch, I am not appreciated!!!”  Instead of hearing “ouch” and responding with compassion to the real hurt feeling underneath the anger, Bob hears, “You are a bad spouse and you forget all of my needs, you piece of crap!”  Ouch!!!  Now Bob responds with defense of his own…and says, “I work outside the home all day, and picking up socks is your job!”  Bob is backing Mary off from his wound, and counter-attacking Mary with “You’re a bad wife because you don’t appreciate all of the things I do to contribute and only focus on my short-comings.”  Ouch!!!  And so the anger dance is underway.

What would happen if one or the other, or both of them, could hear their partner saying “ouch” instead of an attack?  Softness, vulnerability, and humility would begin to grow along with learning and growing to be a safer partner in a relationship.  Hmm.  That sounds pretty good, right?  So why don’t people do it?  First and foremost, pride.  Pretty straightforward and simple.  If I admit that you are saying ouch, then I have to admit I’ve done something wrong, and then, even worse, change.  Change is hard.  Having the humility to admit you’ve hurt someone is even harder, as is taking responsibility for one’s actions. I also have to put my feelings and wounds aside while we concentrate on yours.  We also fear, “when will I get heard?”

See all of the things that have to be dealt with before one of you can stop the dance of anger before it really gets going?  See how easy it is to blame the whole thing on “We can’t communicate!” instead of working on yourself?  There is nothing simple or straightforward about dealing with this pride, and ultimately overcoming it.  Getting to a place where you can hear what the person is actually saying instead of the surface conflict of the moment takes practice and a willingness to face your own fears, heal some of your own wounds, and get your over-reactivity under control.  Not easy.  It is worth it though, and it will permeate every relationship you have when you get there.  Think about pointing the finger at the mug in the mirror instead of your partner.  I need to learn to listen better and react less.  I need to be safer for my partner.  I need to learn where my partner is wounded so I can understand their pain.  You are the only one you can control anyway.

That’s what I have today.  If you need help translating or understanding yourself, healing yourself, or getting a handle on your reactivity, haul your own carcass into a great therapist’s office.  Do it for you and no one else.  Thanks for reading!

Nancy Eisenman, MSW is an individual, marital, and family therapist. She specializes in couples and marriage counseling, individual counseling, group and family counseling. Nancy serves the surrounding areas of Carmel, Westfield, Zionsville, Fishers, and Noblesville. E-Counseling available for residents of Indiana.

©2014, Nancy Eisenman

©2013, Nancy Eisenman

Nancy Eisenman, MSW, LCSW is a therapist at Peace Counseling Group, serving the greater Indianapolis area. Surrounding communities include Carmel, Westfield, Fishers, Geist, Noblesville, Brownsburg, and Avon. For more information, please use the contact form or call Nancy directly at 317.605.7015.

Address: 9640 Commerce Drive
Suite 413 Carmel, IN 46032

Phone:  317.605.7015

Peace Counseling Group

Contact Me

©  2017 Peace Counseling Group. All rights reserved.

The One Question Codependency Test

I am all about keeping things as simple as possible. What I have come to find is that, in the world of understanding human behavior and explaining it, it can become quite complex in a BIG hurry! People are simply complex organisms. The more I learn, the more I have found that meanings are hidden, causes may not be anywhere near the effect, and paradoxes are more the norm than the straight forward answer. So when I find something that helps make a concept easier, I love it! Today, what I have for you is a one question “test” to see if you or I are about to be, or have been, codependent. The reasons why this is an effective test are numerous and complex, but I’ll try to give a little glimpse. See what you think.

Before we get to the test itself, first let’s briefly define codependency. Codependency is summed up well with 4 characteristics: other-centeredness, needy, insecure, and passive. Those who struggle with codependency have a hard time saying “no”, even if saying “yes” means that they will be spread too thin, or they really want to say “no.” They tend to be martyr-like. They give-to-a-fault so others will accept them or think they are wonderful. They almost always put themselves and their needs last. I KNOW you know someone like this, you may be like this, and even if you aren’t a lot of the time, there are times when you can be. It’s extremely common.

OK, so, back to my test. How can I check myself to see if my current, past, or pending behavior is codependent? I have a question that will help determine this quickly. Actually, it’s two variants of the same question, depending on if you are trying to decide if what you are about to do is codependent, or if you have already done the deed. Here we go, ready?

  • “If I do this, will I resent someone?”   OR
  • “Do I resent someone, now that I have done this?”

Codependency, (and counterdependency too, for that matter) are about some sort of relational FUSION or enmeshment. Resentment is an excellent feeling to test, to take your “fusion temperature.” Now, this next sentence is going to sting a bit, if you really want to look a little deeper…ready? Testing your level of resentment is essentially testing the level of control and manipulation you are trying to inflict on the person you are resenting because of the fusion. This is a tough concept to grasp, because is takes a very deep level of humility to look at oneself with that clear of a laser scope. And, you may have never considered looking at it from that angle before. If you resent someone after you have done something for them, and they have not appreciated you enough, thought well of you enough, repaid you enough, or otherwise completed the unspoken trade you initiated with your behavior…there’s resentment.

So what you have given or done has not been about you giving freely or acting completely autonomously, it has been about getting something from the other person in return….translation: attempting to manipulate or control a behavior from the other person. When we are fused or enmeshed, we need to do this in order to get a wound deep in our hearts soothed. Maybe the wound looks like this voice in your head: “I don’t feel very good about myself, so YOU make me feel better about myself by telling me how great and selfless and giving I am.” Sorry. I know that is a big glimpse in an unflattering mirror. Can we be that real, though? In the quiet stillness in the depths of your mind, when you are all alone in a dark room with no one around, think about it. No one will judge you there, you can be completely vulnerable and honest with yourself.

Think about what you wanted the person you resent to give you, and then consider why you need it so much. Then, and here’s the big one, give it to yourself. Acceptance? Accept yourself, warts and all. Praise? Praise yourself for a job well done. Love? Love yourself. Know you are worthy of it. What is it you need to give yourself to feel better? Think about how invasive and hurtful it is to try to manipulate or control someone else into giving it to you. I know it stings to see it that way; but in order to change how we feel inside, we have to take a deep, hard look and call it what it is.

This manner of relating keeps you tied to others, needing them for you to feel OK, and it keeps you in a panic for how you’re going to keep the salve coming from them. You’ll trade your self to get it. I would encourage you to move through this current behavior and heal the wound so you don’t need the salve anymore.  Give what you’re longing for to yourself. Love and accept yourself. Become safe for the other person by not invading and controlling to get that need met. Find peace from the struggle of getting others to fill you up or soothe you. No trades; no manipulation; no control; no invasion; no anxiety about where the next fix of love, acceptance, or praise is coming from. Then you will be able to give, truly give, without resentment.

That’s what I have for you today. If you enjoy my blog, please feel free to forward the link or sign up for the mailing list that notifies recipients of when a new blog is posted. Any questions may be directed to neisenmanftca@gmail.com. Thank you for your support! My readers ROCK!

Nancy Eisenman, MSW is an individual, marital, and family therapist. She specializes in couples and marriage counseling, individual counseling, group and family counseling. Nancy serves the surrounding areas of Carmel, Westfield, Zionsville, Fishers, and Noblesville. E-Counseling available for residents of Indiana.

©2014, Nancy Eisenman

©2013, Nancy Eisenman

Nancy Eisenman, MSW, LCSW is a therapist at Peace Counseling Group, serving the greater Indianapolis area. Surrounding communities include Carmel, Westfield, Fishers, Geist, Noblesville, Brownsburg, and Avon. For more information, please use the contact form or call Nancy directly at 317.605.7015.

Address: 9640 Commerce Drive
Suite 413 Carmel, IN 46032

Phone:  317.605.7015

Peace Counseling Group

Contact Me

©  2017 Peace Counseling Group. All rights reserved.

Shut The Frau Up!

Pardon the play on words, but it really is the perfect title for this post!  I promise by the end, you will understand why I chose it.

I was thinking this week about the “voices” we humans hear in our heads.  No, this is not a schizophrenic or delusional thing I am talking about here!  I am talking about the very normal, everyday thoughts that go through our heads.  Have you ever noticed that you “talk” to yourself almost non-stop?  What do the voices in your head say to you?

  • “I look really pretty today.”
  • “Wow, that was a stupid thing I just did.”
  • “She is so much skinnier than I am.”
  • “No one loves me.”
  • “I did a really good job on that project.”
  • “I am a terrible father.”
  • “I forgot to pay that bill.”
  • “I’m an idiot.”

Pretty much non-stop chatter in there, right?  One time long ago, I had a therapist explain it to me like this…”we all have numerous ‘people’ and ‘personalities’ in our head, so to speak, it’s just a matter of which one steps up to the mic to be heard.”  When it’s time to pay bills, the responsible financial analyst steps up.  When in an argument, the angry teenager inside may come out to protect.  When looking in the mirror, there may be more than a few choices as to who steps up to put their two-cents in.

And have you ever noticed that they don’t always agree?  What if I can’t decide between breaking up with my boyfriend or trying to work it out?  One part of me talks me into it, and another part of me talks me out of it.  One part tells me I look great in my new jeans, and another part tells me I couldn’t look good in ANY jeans.  One part of me knows that I am worthy of being loved well, and another part tells me that no one could ever love me.  Catch my meaning?

So in my own recovery work, I have been thinking a lot about the voice in my head that tells me very mean, negative things.  It is a very shaming voice, and this part of me absolutely excels at finding every single flaw about me, big or small.  In order to name it, pay attention to it, and realize it when “she” steps up to the mic, I have given “her” a name…Frau Hitler.  (I am German, and “frau” means “wife”, so it seems quite fitting.)  She is just straight-up mean and nasty.  I was telling a friend of mine about this idea, and she said, “when you talk about her, the picture of her that I imagine she would look like is Edna Mode from the movie, The Incredibles.”  Hysterical!  I assured her that the Frau is not like the cute and funny spitfire fashion designer portrayed in Edna.  She is actually a shaming bully on steroids.  She is the voice of damaged self-image and shame; and at times, it can seem as though she is screaming into a bullhorn!

I know this is a very common problem, in fact I think everyone has a Frau Hitler of some kind and to some degree running around in their head.  Some more than others, and some folks give their particular “frau” more mic time than others.  I have often wondered the best way to deal with this issue of damaged self-image and negative self-talk (shame), as a therapist-in-training.  Warm and fuzzy audio tapes in the ears?  Pasting affirmations to every mirror?  Hypnosis?  I mean seriously, what is the best way to build a positive self image?

Intuitive thinking would say “well, just start talking to yourself nicely.”  Ya, like that’s super easy…right?  I’ll just conjure up someone in my head who thinks I’m beautiful and lovable and the best thing since sliced bread and let HER/HIM have the mic…after all, she can take on this powerhouse that has ruled my thoughts about myself since I can remember…piece of cake.  Um, no.  Doesn’t work that way.  Why?  Because it feels like a lie.  We can conjure it up, but we won’t believe it.

So instead, how about we take the back way in…the paradox, the counter-intuitive?  Shut the Frau up!  Commandeer her bullhorn immediately!  You’ve heard the phrase, “If you can’t say anything nice, don’t say anything at all.”  EXACTLY.  Just do it in your own head!  Let her take a nice, long vacation in Siberia, like for the rest of your life.  Then, when that’s done, find out why she was created in the first place, and grieve the pain that made her.  Work through it, feel it, process it, sit in it.  Realize that she came from a lie:  a lie you heard when you were little.  Who insinuated, or straight-out TOLD you, that you were not good enough in some way?  That person, or those people, became the voice of your Frau.  When you stop listening to the lies and deal with the pain, the truth will begin to come into your thoughts naturally and start to heal you.

Who gets the most mic time in your head?  My hope for you is that you can see the beautiful creature you are.  Inside and out.  To give the mic only to those parts of you that love, care for, and nurture you; and to take it away from any part that doesn’t.  It may feel like doing so will give you permission to make mistakes or become arrogant, but that too is a lie.  Keep hold of your conscience, let go of the shame.  Learning to give this love and grace to yourself will help you see the world completely differently, create a peace in your mind that you’ve been dreaming of, and help you love others easily.

There you go.  Now, affectionately and with all the love in my heart…..shut the Frau up!

Nancy Eisenman, MSW is an individual, marital, and family therapist. She specializes in couples and marriage counseling, individual counseling, group and family counseling. Nancy serves the surrounding areas of Carmel, Westfield, Zionsville, Fishers, and Noblesville. E-Counseling available for residents of Indiana.

©2014, Nancy Eisenman

©2012, Nancy Eisenman

Nancy Eisenman, MSW, LCSW is a therapist at Peace Counseling Group, serving the greater Indianapolis area. Surrounding communities include Carmel, Westfield, Fishers, Geist, Noblesville, Brownsburg, and Avon. For more information, please use the contact form or call Nancy directly at 317.605.7015.

Address: 9640 Commerce Drive
Suite 413 Carmel, IN 46032

Phone:  317.605.7015

Peace Counseling Group

Contact Me

©  2017 Peace Counseling Group. All rights reserved.

Death By Comparison

I’ve been thinking lately about things that are capable of stealing and killing joy in our lives.  Everyone wants more joy in their life, right?  I know I do.  Life is pretty darn hard, and joy breathes a welcome respite into the difficult journey.  I wanted to talk today about one persistent, internal, covert, and completely changeable behavior that can rob you of all kinds of joy.  Comparison.

I was thinking about something as simple as one’s salary, for example.  Perhaps someone has an income that is sufficient for their basic life necessities, they can make ends meet, and they have “enough.”  They feel rather content, feeling blessed that they have a place to sleep, clothes to wear, and food to eat.  Then what happens?  They find out that Joe who works down the hall doing the exact same job makes $2000 more/yr.  All of a sudden, they’re no longer happy with their job or salary, and anger and resentment builds.  Immediately gone is the joy, the outlook of blessing, the gratitude of having enough.  All of a sudden, what they make is $2000/yr not enough.  Likewise, someone who makes $200,000/yr can feel they are having a hard time financially, while someone who makes $20,000/yr feels blessed because they have enough to eat and a place to sleep.  Comparison to the norms of the world, and what you think you should have, can steal your joy in a heartbeat.

What about relationships?  The same thing is true when people look at the lives of others and say “I wish I had…” or “at least you have…”  What happens when we compare what others have to what we have?  Usually one of two things: 1) our joy is gone because we don’t have as much as someone else, and we pine for more; or 2) we become judgmental or condescending, finding ourselves “better than” because we have more.  Both are joy destroyers.

There are more options than just 1) and 2) however.  For example 3) we can look at someone else who has more, and be joyful with them in their blessings, 4) not worry about comparing, and still feel thankful for what we have, 5) see that someone else has less than we do and share, etc.  If we chose these options, how might our joy increase?

The adverb that comes to mind is “exponentially.”  What joy there is in gratitude!  A heart filled with gratitude has no room for anger and depression.  Endlessly comparing what we have to what others have is a recipe for despair and a life driven by hunger and greed and feelings of wanting.

You’ve heard the sayings: “the grass is greener,” and ”keeping up with the Joneses,” for example.  You never really know what is going on in the lives of others, the hardships and obstacles and pains they face.  When it comes down to it, they are on a different path, a journey to grow them in the places they need growing.  It is not your journey.  Learn what you can exactly where you are.  The Bible goes so far as to encourage us to “Consider it pure joy…when you have troubles of many kinds.”  (James 1:2)  Say what?  Yep.  Embrace the truth.  You are not a victim.  Your troubles are there to teach you.  Your circumstances are a classroom to learn, and you can change how you feel without changing any circumstance.  Accept the challenge with joy!

Nancy Eisenman, MSW, LSW is an individual, marital, and family therapist. She specializes in couples and marriage counseling, individual counseling, group and family counseling. Nancy serves the surrounding areas of Carmel, Westfield, Zionsville, Fishers, and Noblesville. E-Counseling available for residents of Indiana.

©2012, Nancy Eisenman

Nancy Eisenman, MSW, LCSW is a therapist at Peace Counseling Group, serving the greater Indianapolis area. Surrounding communities include Carmel, Westfield, Fishers, Geist, Noblesville, Brownsburg, and Avon. For more information, please use the contact form or call Nancy directly at 317.605.7015.

Address: 9640 Commerce Drive
Suite 413 Carmel, IN 46032

Phone:  317.605.7015

Peace Counseling Group

Contact Me

©  2017 Peace Counseling Group. All rights reserved.