I’m The One! (or How to Stop Fighting)

A couple of months ago, I went to a therapist training seminar for Imago Relationship Therapy.  This is the theory proposed by Harville Hendrix in his books “Getting the Love You Want”, “Keeping the Love You Find,” “Receiving Love,” and “Giving the Love They Need”.  They are good reads…I totally recommend them.  I had the pleasure of hearing lectures from Dr. Hendrix himself for one of the days of the seminar.  He said something that resonated with me, and I thought I’d share.

Dr. Hendrix was discussing how in the womb we are connected, to our mothers and the universe.  Then that connection is severed.  We are born without any psychological walls into an imperfect world.  We then learn, from our first experiences in this world, to disconnect with others….that everyone is here to serve us!  We cry and we’re changed, cuddled, fed, burped, or whatever.  Our every need is met by someone else, and for the most part, pretty promptly!  We learn to see others as objects to meet our needs.  We learn to be self-centered.  We learn that it’s our world, and everyone else just lives in it…to serve us!  We learn to objectify people instead of connect with them.

Through adolescence, we start to take care of ourselves some, but as little as we can get away with, usually.  Eventually, we may learn to take pretty good care of our physical needs.  Some of us even become very other-centered in our actions; but, are we really selfless?  Even being other-centered many times has selfish motives underneath: we want to be loved, accepted, looked-up to, good enough for God, etc.  Many people stay quite openly self-centered throughout their lives, too.  We see others as objects, there to meet our needs.

This happens in particular in our marriages.  We find someone who matches the (usually worst) characteristics of our primary caregivers growing up, someone who will be specifically ill-equipped to meet our deepest needs, and then we try to squeeze blood from the proverbial turnip.  Deep down, we really haven’t given up the idea that the other person’s mission in life should be to meet our needs.  That’s why we get married, right?  “Now we’re together, so start coughing-up the need-meeting!”  We also believe that after 20-30-40-50 some years on this planet, that we have the absolute truth, and best way to live, figured out.  How I see the world is the right way to see it!

Dr. Hendrix described this attitude like this, he said married couples see each other as if  “You and I are one, and I’m the one!”  Isn’t it the truth!  After all, I know who my lover is down deep, how he/she should act, how they should meet my needs, how they feel about me, and the best way for us to live together….”WHY CAN’T HE/SHE JUST SEE THAT I’M RIGHT?!!”  Come on, you’ve said that one, at least in your head, admit it.  “If he would just do this for me…”  “If she would just…then I would be happy, and our lives would be great.”  Right?  Now let me ask you this…what would happen if you were to say…”If I would just…”?  Think about that one for a minute.  (You are the only one you can control anyway.)

Have you ever answered a question about how your spouse thinks or feels and been dead wrong?  That’s because we project what we believe onto our spouses, sure that we are right, and they look at us like we have no idea who they are.  We all do it, until we learn otherwise.  Being able to realize that there are TWO people in the relationship, each with different world views, and developing a healthy curiosity about our spouse’s world/reality is the first step out of fighting hell.  Fighting is really about going to war over which one of your world-views is going to win out as “the way we do things in our family.”  I’m the one, so we do things how I want, and we meet MY needs!  Get with the program, lover!  We are all still two-years-old when we act like this.  If you are not collaborative with your spouse, and instead attempt to annihilate their world-view to conform to yours, you will succeed in living in fighting hell until you kill your marriage/relationship.

Being able to accept that the other person has a different world view than you do is essential, as is defending it as valid.  (Yes, defend THEIR world view as valid!  Try that one on for size.)  You probably don’t know them as well as you think.  Find out.  Be curious about them.  Avoid negativity like the plague.  Invite them to share how they REALLY think with you.  Be open.  Be vulnerable. It’s not easy.  Digging in our defenses will not create changes in our relationships.  It will pour cement over things the way they are.  It’s a paradox.  Acceptance and curiosity will invite collaboration, safety, love, connection, AND changes.  Sounds good, doesn’t it?  It is.  Give it a try.

I could go on and on about this (I already have)…but I’ll stop here for today.  Try being curious next time you’re about to fight with your lover.  See what their world view is all about.  After they pick their jaw up’n off the ground, you will have a MUCH more productive chat!  They may even be curious about your point of view.  Wouldn’t that be something!  Who’s going to be the one to drop their defenses and be vulnerable first?  Can you say, “I’m the one?”

Thanks for stopping by.  Have a great week!

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.

©2011, Nancy Eisenman

 

A couple of months ago, I went to a therapist training seminar for Imago Relationship Therapy.  This is the theory proposed by Harville Hendrix in his books “Getting the Love You Want”, “Keeping the Love You Find,” “Receiving Love,” and “Giving the Love They Need”.  They are good reads…I totally recommend them.  I had the pleasure of hearing lectures from Dr. Hendrix himself for one of the days of the seminar.  He said something that resonated with me, and I thought I’d share.

Dr. Hendrix was discussing how in the womb we are connected, to our mothers and the universe.  Then that connection is severed.  We are born without any psychological walls into an imperfect world.  We then learn, from our first experiences in this world, to disconnect with others….that everyone is here to serve us!  We cry and we’re changed, cuddled, fed, burped, or whatever.  Our every need is met by someone else, and for the most part, pretty promptly!  We learn to see others as objects to meet our needs.  We learn to be self-centered.  We learn that it’s our world, and everyone else just lives in it…to serve us!  We learn to objectify people instead of connect with them.

Through adolescence, we start to take care of ourselves some, but as little as we can get away with, usually.  Eventually, we may learn to take pretty good care of our physical needs.  Some of us even become very other-centered in our actions; but, are we really selfless?  Even being other-centered many times has selfish motives underneath: we want to be loved, accepted, looked-up to, good enough for God, etc.  Many people stay quite openly self-centered throughout their lives, too.  We see others as objects, there to meet our needs.

This happens in particular in our marriages.  We find someone who matches the (usually worst) characteristics of our primary caregivers growing up, someone who will be specifically ill-equipped to meet our deepest needs, and then we try to squeeze blood from the proverbial turnip.  Deep down, we really haven’t given up the idea that the other person’s mission in life should be to meet our needs.  That’s why we get married, right?  “Now we’re together, so start coughing-up the need-meeting!”  We also believe that after 20-30-40-50 some years on this planet, that we have the absolute truth, and best way to live, figured out.  How I see the world is the right way to see it!

Dr. Hendrix described this attitude like this, he said married couples see each other as if  “You and I are one, and I’m the one!”  Isn’t it the truth!  After all, I know who my lover is down deep, how he/she should act, how they should meet my needs, how they feel about me, and the best way for us to live together….”WHY CAN’T HE/SHE JUST SEE THAT I’M RIGHT?!!”  Come on, you’ve said that one, at least in your head, admit it.  “If he would just do this for me…”  “If she would just…then I would be happy, and our lives would be great.”  Right?  Now let me ask you this…what would happen if you were to say…”If I would just…”?  Think about that one for a minute.  (You are the only one you can control anyway.)

Have you ever answered a question about how your spouse thinks or feels and been dead wrong?  That’s because we project what we believe onto our spouses, sure that we are right, and they look at us like we have no idea who they are.  We all do it, until we learn otherwise.  Being able to realize that there are TWO people in the relationship, each with different world views, and developing a healthy curiosity about our spouse’s world/reality is the first step out of fighting hell.  Fighting is really about going to war over which one of your world-views is going to win out as “the way we do things in our family.”  I’m the one, so we do things how I want, and we meet MY needs!  Get with the program, lover!  We are all still two-years-old when we act like this.  If you are not collaborative with your spouse, and instead attempt to annihilate their world-view to conform to yours, you will succeed in living in fighting hell until you kill your marriage/relationship.

Being able to accept that the other person has a different world view than you do is essential, as is defending it as valid.  (Yes, defend THEIR world view as valid!  Try that one on for size.)  You probably don’t know them as well as you think.  Find out.  Be curious about them.  Avoid negativity like the plague.  Invite them to share how they REALLY think with you.  Be open.  Be vulnerable. It’s not easy.  Digging in our defenses will not create changes in our relationships.  It will pour cement over things the way they are.  It’s a paradox.  Acceptance and curiosity will invite collaboration, safety, love, connection, AND changes.  Sounds good, doesn’t it?  It is.  Give it a try.

I could go on and on about this (I already have)…but I’ll stop here for today.  Try being curious next time you’re about to fight with your lover.  See what their world view is all about.  After they pick their jaw up’n off the ground, you will have a MUCH more productive chat!  They may even be curious about your point of view.  Wouldn’t that be something!  Who’s going to be the one to drop their defenses and be vulnerable first?  Can you say, “I’m the one?”

Thanks for stopping by.  Have a great week!

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.

©2011, 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.

I Have You Under My Control

I had a client ask me one time, “Where does peace come from?” You see, I have a mug in my office that has a saying on it about peace, and I think it captures the feeling that most everyone that comes to therapy is looking for…it reads: “Peace. It does not mean to be in a place where there is no noise, trouble, or hard work. It means to be in the midst of those things and still be calm in your heart.”

We’re not so naïve as to think that there won’t be trouble or hard work in our lives. We know there will be. We don’t expect to always feel amazing and filled with joy, for our marriages to always be perfect, or to never have problems. Yet when these things happen to us, why do we let our peace be stolen?

If we believe a myth that our peace comes from our circumstances, we are precariously perched for pain and disappointment indeed. We are susceptible to all kinds of misery and joy, that is the nature of the human condition, but we will not be truly peaceful while we are doing either one if we believe that our peace is dependent on what is happening to us. Even when good things are happening in our lives, if we believe our contentment comes from what is going on externally, it will still elude us because we will still be trying to control how long the good stuff lasts, the same as we try to control how long the bad stuff lasts. We try to manage others and our environment instead of ourselves.

When my client asked me where peace comes from, my answer had several facets. I believe peace comes from letting go of the myth that I have more control than I actually do. I think peace comes from relinquishing the expectation that others can make me feel… feel bad or good or angry or sad or jealous or anxious. They can hold up the mirror to attachments or beliefs that I have that aren’t serving me very well, but the truth is that no one can make me feel anything without my cooperation.

I believe that peace cannot live inside me if I am overly focused on things I cannot change or things that may or may not happen. I believe that the acquisition of peace is a by-product of letting go of unhealthy attachments and beliefs. It comes after walking the valley of the shadow of death through my own deepest darkest places to the beautiful light at the other end of the tunnel. As Robert Frost would say, it is the road less traveled, and it truly does make all the difference.

I think of peace as the hallmark, the prize that one receives in their feelings when they are emotionally fit. Like being physically fit, working through emotional issues requires showing up, working out, practice, study, dedication, repetition, focus, motivation, and stamina. By the way, it also takes a truck-load of courage.

This process isn’t for the feint at heart. Many people go to a great deal of time, effort, and expense to AVOID working through this stuff. (That’s what addictions are, for example.) My question to you is, how bad do you want it? Real peace…is it worth the work, the time, the effort, all of it? I’ve taken many people on the walk to peace…well, sometimes it’s more like an army crawl through the mud, but we make it. I continue to walk it out myself every day and will continue to grow in this way for the rest of my life. That’s why I named my practice Peace Counseling Group. Would you like to join me and the others who have gone before you? It’s up to you, the quality of your relationships and how you feel for the rest of your life depends on you.

I hope you will join me, and those who work with me, on this amazing journey. Whomever shows up hungry will leave full of new ways to think about relationships and life. I want the best for all of our clients, life-long changes, not just bandaids. My colleagues and I are ready to go when you are.

Sincerely,

Nancy Eisenman, MSW, LCSW

Owner, Peace Counseling Group

If you have any further questions regarding our paradigm or our policies, please feel free to contact us via the contact page or call 317-605-7015. You may also check the FAQ page on this website.

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.

Beware The Timeless Lizard

Imago Relationship Therapy (IRT)  is based on the work of Harville Hendrix PhD., author of Getting The Love You Want, Keeping the Love You Find, and Giving the Love That Heals.  For a simple definition of Imago Theory, try www.therapy4couples.com/imago-theory.html

I really find imago theory to be quite fascinating. It delves into and explains parts of the brain that we are not conscious of and how those parts of the brain can cause behaviors or exert control over us that we may not even be aware of:  Why did he yell at me? Why did that situation make me break down and cry? Why did my friend, a seemingly sane person, chase their spouse around the room and punch a whole in the wall?  The list really could go on and on.

So today, let’s talk about the brain for just a minute.  It is totally complex and far from completely understood, and I’m far from an expert for sure, but let’s touch on a couple of the basics.  There are actually three parts of the brain. The most primitive part is your hindbrain, which is your cerebellum, pons, and medulla oblongata. This is also known as your “lizard brain”, which stems from evolutionary terminology. This is the part of your brain that houses “fight or flight”, for example, and the basic instinctual stuff that keeps you alive: food, breathing and heart beat, body growth, and reproduction.  It does it’s work subconsciously, and you may be surprised to know that it is also the most powerful, influential part of your brain!

The midbrain does its job automatically without our conscious thought as well.  It is the second most powerful/influential part of your brain!  (Did you notice that the two most powerful and influential parts of your brain do things that you are not even consciously aware of?)  Among other things, the midbrain processes emotions and memories.  I think the most interesting part about the mid-brain is that it is “timeless.”  It can experience a memory or an emotion that happened years ago as though it were happening right this minute.  This has tremendous implications for all of us.  Think about it this way…do you remember how I’ve talked before about how people in relationships with us can hurt us the same way we were hurt when we were kids, and how if those wounds go unhealed, we will still be reactive to them?  This is why.  Our midbrain experiences those same pains and wounds as if they were happening the same moment as when we were kids.  That’s what causes our over-reactions.  Since the midbrain’s activities are subconscious, it also shows that we cannot control the emotions that arise for us.  Keep that in mind as we move on…

The fore-brain is the part we all know and love the best…conscious thought.  You guessed it, it is the weakest part of your brain!  Explains a lot, doesn’t it?  What kind of match is made with your fore-brain versus Lizard and Timeless?  Not much.  It can be taught, however, and it can have some influential power over the first two.  It can make that which is unconscious, conscious, and it has SOME say-so over what, for example, comes out of our mouths.  It takes a lifetime to begin to learn this art of influence over the other two brain areas, however.  Since the other two are subconscious, many folks are just simply unaware that they are under their power, even though they are affected by them every moment of every day.

Now, doesn’t that make it easier to understand how seemingly sane folks can act so crazy sometimes?  They are under the influence of the brawn of their brain:  Timeless and the Lizard.  Gotta be aware of the existence of that reptilian fella and his helper.  We can use this knowledge to give us a new perspective on behavior, an enhanced understanding and awareness, of both our own and others’ behaviors.  That’s what I like about imago theory.  It accounts for all parts of the brain, and helps me understand things which look so unrational on the surface.  It also helps me stop my own reptile-induced craziness (overreactions)!  Lizards aren’t that bright, but they are powerful and can do serious damage!  If I am aware of the timeless reptile, I can understand where my feelings are coming from and why they are so powerful. It also illuminates work yet to be done, and gives my conscious fore-brain a fighting chance to regain some semblance of control!  And if not, I at least know why I was temporarily out of control.  I was “under the influence.”

How’d you like that topic?  I find this stuff pretty fascinating.  I gotta give credit to one of my textbooks for helping me out (Rosemary Farmer’s, 2009, ”Neuroscience and Social Work Practice: The Missing Link”) and also a recent training I attended given by Dr. Bernard Baca, PhD. LCSW.  You may visit his website at www.indiana-imago.com  Off to do some more studying!  Thanks for stopping by.

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.

©2010, 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.

Defending Boundaries With Finesse

Thanks for stopping by today!  I apologize that I have not been blogging more often lately…grad school is proving demanding of my extra time.  I appreciate you coming again to read my latest post.

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about boundaries, and more to the point, how to have good ones without cutting off from others or being overly aggressive.  It struck me the other day when I was talking with a friend, and she was describing the need to “fiercely defend her boundaries”. I wondered how massive the attack must have been to require such a fierce defense. Turns out, the thing that was threatening my friend’s boundaries would have been, for most people (metaphorically), a baby kitten!  There was a bit of an overreaction going on, with my friend feeling like a T-Rex was threatening her gates.

Now don’t get me wrong, I am all for having good boundaries. They are absolutely necessary in a world full of sinners like us. I wonder though, if we can learn something about ourselves from our boundaries….the ones we find it necessary to have.  For example, do you have a boundary with your spouse about leaving their clothes on the floor? What is it about that, that makes you so reactive?

Boundaries are for guarding places that are painful to us, even the simple ones like needing someone to pick up after themselves. So when someone causes you to be “fierce” (or even reactive) can you see the pain underneath that is causing your ferocity, and the need for that boundary?  Heal the pain underneath and your walls won’t have to be nearly as strong, nor your reactions nearly as fierce.  Your walls will be more permeable, and love and intimacy can flow through them more easily.

We can learn to have good boundaries without being fierce about it. Strong, but not aggressive. Immovable without reactivity. Stand up for how we feel without needing to squish the other person like a bug. It takes finesse. It can be learned in your head pretty quickly, but being able to put it into practice regularly takes time, practice, and healing… mastering it in your heart. It’s learning to see others not as T-rexes, but as hurting kids in adult bodies. I love this thing my co-worker Jerry says, “You can say almost anything to anyone, if you’re moving toward them when you say it”. That doesn’t mean you should lean in to someone’s grill while you’re telling them to back off, I’m not talking about physical proximity; but instead to see them lovingly, as a “+”, as though inviting them toward your acceptance…into your understanding of their needs and pains.  Give them a safe place to exist while explaining what’s going on.

Aggressiveness, reactivity, and the need to be fierce are all things that push others away. It may seem like that’s the goal when someone is invading our boundaries.  ”Get the heck away from me!”  Right?  Get the other person to back out of your space and never want to come in again, lest they meet your sturdy defenses!  I think a better, (paradoxical) and more effective overall approach is to move toward them by keeping my own reactivity in check, and seeing them as someone who is hurting, too. A kitten, not a t-Rex.

Look deeper than your boundaries to the underlying pain.  See others as little kids who are in just as much pain as you are. Nurture them instead of snapping at them.  That’s what will eventually stop them from continuing to infringe on your boundaries more in the future.  After all, meeting someone’s strong defenses most of the time just tells the other person that your boundaries call for heavier artillery.  Less need for defenses invites peace and cooperation.  Knowing yourself, where you end and everyone/everything else begins, is the key.  Not easy, but you can do it!

See you again soon.

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.

©2010, 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.