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Actual for You - Relationship Work: Problem of Partner Assumptions
Easy Way To Your Dream Car: Secured Car Loan deliberately trying to hurt my feelings.
Getting a car of your choice is not at all a difficult task today. If you own money, you can visit your nearest car dealer and pick your car anytime. And if you lack money, you can get financial support from the reliable sources around you. Secured car loan is one of such reliable sources. It helps car aspirant financially and offer sound solution.Getting a secured car loan needs a dedicated research on the loan market. Before selecting any particular lender, you should research properly applying your own mind. If you research on the World Wide Web, try to compare the loan quotations with the help of loan calculators, comparison tools etc. You should go through each loan terms properly. Make sure you have understood everything very well and are not having any query. In this way you can easily select the best lender with the best offer.Secured car loan demands collateral to be placed as security for the loaned amount. A borrower can place his home, jewellery or any other valuable asset as security. He can even place his all new car as security. By determining the value of collateral, the lender approves the loaned amount and determines the repayment scheme. Here, the loaned amount ranges from 5,000 to 1,00000 pounds. And the repayment duration varies from 5 to 12 years. Both the loaned amount and repayment term is quite comfortable for a borrower to purchase the dream car of his own.Bad credit score is no bar for anyone to get secured car loan. This loan is open for Of course some of us have been in a relationship at one time or another when one or more of these assumptions (except the last) can be proven to be quite accurate. When I found that I was married to someone who in fact cared nothing about my feelings and said so frequently, I finally got the message and got out of there. If any of the above assumptions are proven accurate, you should waste no time in getting away from what is essentially an abusive relationship. In most cases however, I have discovered that these assumptions are not accurate at all, but are simply leftover subconscious programs about relationship that descend from the hell on earth that was our family of origin. If your dad was carelessly unfaithful to your mother before running off with the secretary, fears of your husband's infidelity could readily become a major problem in the marriage, even if your husband is totally faithful. This is why my work with emotional clearing, described on our website at www.alchemyinstitute.com/withhyp.htm is critical. Sometimes it is only by providing such a client with the internal experience of yelling at her faithless father with all of her rage, then firing him and replacing him in her inner world with a faithful and lovi Avoid Bankruptcy – Check Out The Top 6 Ways It Will Screw Up Your Life According to no less an authority on romance than Walt Disney, one need only call upon the powers of a fairy godmother and seek out a handsome prince or beautiful princess in order to find the ideal relationship and live happily ever after. Unfortunately, this idea that one need do nothing to prepare oneself for love except search for the pretty face of ones ideal soul mate is not a very effective strategy for finding true love in the real world.If you think filing bankruptcy is an easy way to walk away from all of your bad debt problems, you are making a big mistake. It seriously impacts every aspect of your life; you should weigh your options carefully and avoid bankruptcy at all costs.Although it may be the only alternative for a few, bankruptcy is going to damage a lot more than just your credit report. Check out this list of the top 6 ways bankruptcy is going to screw up your life and decide for yourself it is really worth it.You won’t qualify for any type of credit for at least 18 to 24 months, and when you do, you will most likely pay the highest amount of fees and interest rates possible because you are now in the high risk category. This is going to cost you thousands of dollars over the next 7 to 10 years. If you plan on making any large purchases such as a car or home in the near future you should choose to avoid bankruptcy.You’re going to have a rough time buying and contracting services in the future too. If you need to switch phone companies, install a new cable line in your home, purchase a club shopping card or even get a new cell phone plan in the next few years, you’re gonna run into problems. They will run a credit check and find your bankruptcy and make you pay a big deposit before they’ll even consider providing services for you. Sure, you can put down a payment, but it may be easier in the long run to avoid bankruptcy.If you are planning of filing chapter 7 bankruptcy, you wi Regardless of the millions of single folks who are pursuing this strategy through singles groups, bars, and the latest high tech singles websites, the percentage of single people and of those whose relationships are deeply unfulfilling continues to remain at an all time high. Yet most people I've spoken to in the singles community are certain that simply persisting in their search will eventually bring their perfect and beautiful soul mate to them. In my opinion this is the equivalent to claiming that: "Why should I learn how to operate a computer to make it in the computer business. I don't need to. Soon I'll find the perfect computer for me and then …move over Bill Gates!!" In sharp contrast, those seekers I have worked with as clients and students who have dedicated their lives to preparing themselves for real love have very often found this love and kept it for years. In the first two articles in this series we spoke of the importance of partner selection and how to be effective at partner selection in your search for love. In this article I will be giving some ideas on how you can become the loving partner that can keep the love you want. Then when your search for a special mate brings a partner, you can experience years of marital bliss. Much of my work with couples and families is based on my own experiences, but among the many experts on relationship whom I have studied, I believe the work of John Gottman, based upon ten plus years of scientific observation and research at his Seattle clinic offers the richest resources in my experience for making relationships work. If you want your relationship to work, read his book, 7 Keys to Effective Marriage. Everything I have to add about relationship skills is in my opinion but a postscript to this opus. Dr. Phil's recent book on the subject is also solid gold. In my work with couples, I have found that daily acknowledgement of each other is a critical part of the glue that holds relationships together. This acknowledgement can be purely verbal, but is far more effective when combined with physical affection. Here are some examples of the kind of acknowledgement I am referring to. "Thanks so much for doing the dishes again tonight. You are so sensitive to my needs." (She puts her arms around him from behind at the kitchen sink) "It feels so good to know I have someone in my life that really cares." (Delivered with a warm hug) "I hear that you are really angry about that. Thanks so much for sharing your feelings so clearly." (Delivered with a warm smile) "I love the way you hug me." Most couples I see in therapy are very busy doing the opposite of acknowledgement, finding every opportunity to criticize each other, perhaps in the hope that sufficient criticism and shaming can force the other person to change into the prince charming of their fantasies. Do these statements sound similar to ones you have used? And have they really been effective in changing your partner's ways…or your own? "You've got to stop leaving your clothes everywhere. Were you raised in a barn?" "I can't believe you worked late again…and on our anniversary. You obviously don't care about me at all." "You're spending too much again. Who do you think I am, Donald Trump?" John Gottman describes criticism as one of the four horsemen who destroy marriages with brutal efficiency. I find this is especially true when there is a shortage of acknowledgement in the relationship. If acknowledgement is used frequently in the relationship, it seems that criticism when it emerges is far less damaging. Gottman suggests that instead of criticizing our partner, slurring their character with derogatory remarks like "you lazy bum", Gottman suggests that we complain instead. Simply state what is going on that I don't like and need to see changed. I believe we can do even better by presenting our complaint as a problem that needs to be solved for both of us, and one which we can solve by working on it together. I call this approach not complaining, but problem solving. It is unnecessary and indeed inflammatory to blame someone or cast insult upon them when we want them to help us solve a problem. To get the flavor of this important distinction, look at the following statements, one a criticism, and the second a problem to be solved. Criticism: "Where did you learn to be such a slob? Can't you learn to pick up after yourself?" Problem: "When I come home after a long and difficult day, I find it very difficult to deal with messes in the living room. It makes my head hurt. How can we make the house a little neater for me when I get home?" Criticism: "I saw you looking at that waitress with the tight dress tonight. What the hell were you thinking? Are you plotting to be unfaithful to me again? How could you be so insensitive to my feelings? You're just an animal!" Problem: "I was very upset at the way you looked at that waitress. It made me feel very jealous and insecure, especially after that affair last year. Should I be worried that you'll do something with her?... What can we do about my feelings?" Criticism: "So I guess you don't believe in discipline. You let your daughter get away with this behavior now, she'll be a heroin addict by the time she's 16! Get some backbone!" Problem: "I'm worried that if we don't send a stronger message to your daughter that she might continue her drug use. I'm worried she might even become a heroin addict. What do you think?... Here are some ideas I have about this…" Criticism: "You can't keep spending on this frivolous crap. We don't have the money for every little trinket you want. You're not Paris Hilton." Problem: "I'm worried about all these charges on our credit card. We just don't have the money to keep up this kind of spending. What should we do?" Notice that each of these two approaches to problems is based upon a number of critical but often unspoken assumptions about the other person and the relationship. In the first case these toxic assumptions, very common in dysfunctional relationships include the following:
Of course some of us have been in a relationship at one time or another when one or more of these assumptions (except the last) can be proven to be quite accurate. When I found that I was married to someone who in fact cared nothing about my feelings and said so frequently, I finally got the message and got out of there. If any of the above assumptions are proven accurate, you should waste no time in getting away from what is essentially an abusive relationship. In most cases however, I have discovered that these assumptions are not accurate at all, but are simply leftover subconscious programs about relationship that descend from the hell on earth that was our family of origin. If your dad was carelessly unfaithful to your mother before running off with the secretary, fears of your husband's infidelity could readily become a major problem in the marriage, even if your husband is totally faithful. This is why my work with emotional clearing, described on our website at www.alchemyinstitute.com/withhyp.htm is critical. Sometimes it is only by providing such a client with the internal experience of yelling at her faithless father with all of her rage, then firing him and replacing him in her inner world with a faithful and lovi Automakers Balk At New Fuel Bill- Compromise Expected n experience years of marital bliss.Automakers described as ‘unattainable’ the revised fuel economy proposal unveiled last Friday by a Senate committee chairman. The new bill, when approved, would force the automakers to significantly increase the fuel economy standards to a fleetwide average of 28.5 miles per gallon by 2015 and 35 mpg by the year 2020, with four percent increases every year after that.The bill, as proposed by U.S. Sen. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii, the chair of the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, and Alaska's Ted Stevens, the committee's ranking Republican, is expected to entertain amendments to respond to the automakers’ clamor. The bill will now be facing a vote in committee on whether to deliver the same to the full Senate.Sen. Inouye said that many senate staffs had worked for 10 days to reach a compromise bill that automakers could accept. "None of us here want to put our domestic automakers out of business," Inouye said. "You will find most of your concerns have been addressed."Automakers said last Friday that the proposal was about as bad as they could have imagined. Since the proposal of the bill, criticism has never come to a halt. The EBC brake pads also may not be successful in stopping the ridicule from spilling over."Basically, it is unattainable up until 2020 and unattainable afterward," said Gloria Bergquist, a spokeswoman for the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, the trade group that represents the General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co., Dai Much of my work with couples and families is based on my own experiences, but among the many experts on relationship whom I have studied, I believe the work of John Gottman, based upon ten plus years of scientific observation and research at his Seattle clinic offers the richest resources in my experience for making relationships work. If you want your relationship to work, read his book, 7 Keys to Effective Marriage. Everything I have to add about relationship skills is in my opinion but a postscript to this opus. Dr. Phil's recent book on the subject is also solid gold. In my work with couples, I have found that daily acknowledgement of each other is a critical part of the glue that holds relationships together. This acknowledgement can be purely verbal, but is far more effective when combined with physical affection. Here are some examples of the kind of acknowledgement I am referring to. "Thanks so much for doing the dishes again tonight. You are so sensitive to my needs." (She puts her arms around him from behind at the kitchen sink) "It feels so good to know I have someone in my life that really cares." (Delivered with a warm hug) "I hear that you are really angry about that. Thanks so much for sharing your feelings so clearly." (Delivered with a warm smile) "I love the way you hug me." Most couples I see in therapy are very busy doing the opposite of acknowledgement, finding every opportunity to criticize each other, perhaps in the hope that sufficient criticism and shaming can force the other person to change into the prince charming of their fantasies. Do these statements sound similar to ones you have used? And have they really been effective in changing your partner's ways…or your own? "You've got to stop leaving your clothes everywhere. Were you raised in a barn?" "I can't believe you worked late again…and on our anniversary. You obviously don't care about me at all." "You're spending too much again. Who do you think I am, Donald Trump?" John Gottman describes criticism as one of the four horsemen who destroy marriages with brutal efficiency. I find this is especially true when there is a shortage of acknowledgement in the relationship. If acknowledgement is used frequently in the relationship, it seems that criticism when it emerges is far less damaging. Gottman suggests that instead of criticizing our partner, slurring their character with derogatory remarks like "you lazy bum", Gottman suggests that we complain instead. Simply state what is going on that I don't like and need to see changed. I believe we can do even better by presenting our complaint as a problem that needs to be solved for both of us, and one which we can solve by working on it together. I call this approach not complaining, but problem solving. It is unnecessary and indeed inflammatory to blame someone or cast insult upon them when we want them to help us solve a problem. To get the flavor of this important distinction, look at the following statements, one a criticism, and the second a problem to be solved. Criticism: "Where did you learn to be such a slob? Can't you learn to pick up after yourself?" Problem: "When I come home after a long and difficult day, I find it very difficult to deal with messes in the living room. It makes my head hurt. How can we make the house a little neater for me when I get home?" Criticism: "I saw you looking at that waitress with the tight dress tonight. What the hell were you thinking? Are you plotting to be unfaithful to me again? How could you be so insensitive to my feelings? You're just an animal!" Problem: "I was very upset at the way you looked at that waitress. It made me feel very jealous and insecure, especially after that affair last year. Should I be worried that you'll do something with her?... What can we do about my feelings?" Criticism: "So I guess you don't believe in discipline. You let your daughter get away with this behavior now, she'll be a heroin addict by the time she's 16! Get some backbone!" Problem: "I'm worried that if we don't send a stronger message to your daughter that she might continue her drug use. I'm worried she might even become a heroin addict. What do you think?... Here are some ideas I have about this…" Criticism: "You can't keep spending on this frivolous crap. We don't have the money for every little trinket you want. You're not Paris Hilton." Problem: "I'm worried about all these charges on our credit card. We just don't have the money to keep up this kind of spending. What should we do?" Notice that each of these two approaches to problems is based upon a number of critical but often unspoken assumptions about the other person and the relationship. In the first case these toxic assumptions, very common in dysfunctional relationships include the following:
Of course some of us have been in a relationship at one time or another when one or more of these assumptions (except the last) can be proven to be quite accurate. When I found that I was married to someone who in fact cared nothing about my feelings and said so frequently, I finally got the message and got out of there. If any of the above assumptions are proven accurate, you should waste no time in getting away from what is essentially an abusive relationship. In most cases however, I have discovered that these assumptions are not accurate at all, but are simply leftover subconscious programs about relationship that descend from the hell on earth that was our family of origin. If your dad was carelessly unfaithful to your mother before running off with the secretary, fears of your husband's infidelity could readily become a major problem in the marriage, even if your husband is totally faithful. This is why my work with emotional clearing, described on our website at www.alchemyinstitute.com/withhyp.htm is critical. Sometimes it is only by providing such a client with the internal experience of yelling at her faithless father with all of her rage, then firing him and replacing him in her inner world with a faithful and lovi Advertising a Poker Affiliate Program Offline similar to ones you have used? And have they really been effective in changing your partner's ways…or your own?Many poker affiliate programs offer the opportunity to promote their services offline with the use of flyers and such. If you move in the right crowd, promoting a poker room this way can earn you quite a bit of money.Even though poker attracts people from all ages, the typical online player is a young male. If you are a student, in the military or involved in a team-sport, you are surrounded by potential poker players. Most probably, a few of them are already involved in online gambling, but if you handle your cards right, you can make them join a new one, thus making you a commission when they play.If you have a lot of friends somewhat interested in poker, why not suggest a weekly game? But, instead of meeting at someone’s house, find an online poker room offering private tables and/or private tournaments.Many will object to the idea, stating it’s not the same thing. They are right, it’s not, but there are upsides you should point out.You do not nee to shuffle the cards.After a night of poker, quite a bit of time has been spent just waiting for the cards to be dealt. Online poker doesn’t require shuffling, and the process of dealing the cards are done in a fast manner.No more discussion of rulesIn many home games, there are added rules. For people not used to them, they can be very surprising and sometimes extremely costly. With an online poker room, standard rules apply, and there is no room for discussion.Much more pokerW "You've got to stop leaving your clothes everywhere. Were you raised in a barn?" "I can't believe you worked late again…and on our anniversary. You obviously don't care about me at all." "You're spending too much again. Who do you think I am, Donald Trump?" John Gottman describes criticism as one of the four horsemen who destroy marriages with brutal efficiency. I find this is especially true when there is a shortage of acknowledgement in the relationship. If acknowledgement is used frequently in the relationship, it seems that criticism when it emerges is far less damaging. Gottman suggests that instead of criticizing our partner, slurring their character with derogatory remarks like "you lazy bum", Gottman suggests that we complain instead. Simply state what is going on that I don't like and need to see changed. I believe we can do even better by presenting our complaint as a problem that needs to be solved for both of us, and one which we can solve by working on it together. I call this approach not complaining, but problem solving. It is unnecessary and indeed inflammatory to blame someone or cast insult upon them when we want them to help us solve a problem. To get the flavor of this important distinction, look at the following statements, one a criticism, and the second a problem to be solved. Criticism: "Where did you learn to be such a slob? Can't you learn to pick up after yourself?" Problem: "When I come home after a long and difficult day, I find it very difficult to deal with messes in the living room. It makes my head hurt. How can we make the house a little neater for me when I get home?" Criticism: "I saw you looking at that waitress with the tight dress tonight. What the hell were you thinking? Are you plotting to be unfaithful to me again? How could you be so insensitive to my feelings? You're just an animal!" Problem: "I was very upset at the way you looked at that waitress. It made me feel very jealous and insecure, especially after that affair last year. Should I be worried that you'll do something with her?... What can we do about my feelings?" Criticism: "So I guess you don't believe in discipline. You let your daughter get away with this behavior now, she'll be a heroin addict by the time she's 16! Get some backbone!" Problem: "I'm worried that if we don't send a stronger message to your daughter that she might continue her drug use. I'm worried she might even become a heroin addict. What do you think?... Here are some ideas I have about this…" Criticism: "You can't keep spending on this frivolous crap. We don't have the money for every little trinket you want. You're not Paris Hilton." Problem: "I'm worried about all these charges on our credit card. We just don't have the money to keep up this kind of spending. What should we do?" Notice that each of these two approaches to problems is based upon a number of critical but often unspoken assumptions about the other person and the relationship. In the first case these toxic assumptions, very common in dysfunctional relationships include the following:
Of course some of us have been in a relationship at one time or another when one or more of these assumptions (except the last) can be proven to be quite accurate. When I found that I was married to someone who in fact cared nothing about my feelings and said so frequently, I finally got the message and got out of there. If any of the above assumptions are proven accurate, you should waste no time in getting away from what is essentially an abusive relationship. In most cases however, I have discovered that these assumptions are not accurate at all, but are simply leftover subconscious programs about relationship that descend from the hell on earth that was our family of origin. If your dad was carelessly unfaithful to your mother before running off with the secretary, fears of your husband's infidelity could readily become a major problem in the marriage, even if your husband is totally faithful. This is why my work with emotional clearing, described on our website at www.alchemyinstitute.com/withhyp.htm is critical. Sometimes it is only by providing such a client with the internal experience of yelling at her faithless father with all of her rage, then firing him and replacing him in her inner world with a faithful and lovi Stealing Cars And Other Ways To Make Extra Money s in the living room. It makes my head hurt. How can we make the house a little neater for me when I get home?"I was looking for ways to make extra money, but didn't want the usual jobs. Being just twenty one at the time, I was willing to try almost anything. So when my brother's towing business got a contract to repossess cars, I was ready to be a "repo man." Soon I was prowling in the night with my brother, looking for and legally "stealing" cars.He could only pay for each car we took, so we had a lot of motivation to find them and get them. At various times we were chased by a crowd, had the window of the tow truck pulled out, and had a guns pulled on us. It was fun at the time, but the following are some less dangerous ways to make extra money.Selling Things To Make Extra MoneyCamping at a desert hot spring one winter, my wife and I met a man who sold used stuffed animals on the side of the highway. He buys the stuffed animals at thrift stores. At first, he even got the stores to give him the animals, with the agreement that he would return with the money or the animals the next week.Some small towns sell a vendor's permit cheaply ($18/year, for example). Otherwise he just set up his stand until he was chased out of the county. He was never fined, and claims he sold $4,000 worth his first month. Perhaps he was exaggerating, but because of him we sold used stuffed animals in our flea market stands with some success.Walking sticks were a better seller. One summer I sold over a thousand dollars worth alongside our other items. I made them quickly, addin Criticism: "I saw you looking at that waitress with the tight dress tonight. What the hell were you thinking? Are you plotting to be unfaithful to me again? How could you be so insensitive to my feelings? You're just an animal!" Problem: "I was very upset at the way you looked at that waitress. It made me feel very jealous and insecure, especially after that affair last year. Should I be worried that you'll do something with her?... What can we do about my feelings?" Criticism: "So I guess you don't believe in discipline. You let your daughter get away with this behavior now, she'll be a heroin addict by the time she's 16! Get some backbone!" Problem: "I'm worried that if we don't send a stronger message to your daughter that she might continue her drug use. I'm worried she might even become a heroin addict. What do you think?... Here are some ideas I have about this…" Criticism: "You can't keep spending on this frivolous crap. We don't have the money for every little trinket you want. You're not Paris Hilton." Problem: "I'm worried about all these charges on our credit card. We just don't have the money to keep up this kind of spending. What should we do?" Notice that each of these two approaches to problems is based upon a number of critical but often unspoken assumptions about the other person and the relationship. In the first case these toxic assumptions, very common in dysfunctional relationships include the following:
Of course some of us have been in a relationship at one time or another when one or more of these assumptions (except the last) can be proven to be quite accurate. When I found that I was married to someone who in fact cared nothing about my feelings and said so frequently, I finally got the message and got out of there. If any of the above assumptions are proven accurate, you should waste no time in getting away from what is essentially an abusive relationship. In most cases however, I have discovered that these assumptions are not accurate at all, but are simply leftover subconscious programs about relationship that descend from the hell on earth that was our family of origin. If your dad was carelessly unfaithful to your mother before running off with the secretary, fears of your husband's infidelity could readily become a major problem in the marriage, even if your husband is totally faithful. This is why my work with emotional clearing, described on our website at www.alchemyinstitute.com/withhyp.htm is critical. Sometimes it is only by providing such a client with the internal experience of yelling at her faithless father with all of her rage, then firing him and replacing him in her inner world with a faithful and lovi Used Car Loans - A Luxury You Can Afford deliberately trying to hurt my feelings.
You dream of owning a car but find impossible to purchase it. If that is the state you find yourself in then used car loans can help you own a car. Having a car is now not the privilege of the elitist any more. With the help of used car loans it has become an option that everyone can avail.Used car loans as the name suggests are loans offered to people who want to buy second hand or used cars but cannot afford it. The reason may vary from person to person but the prime reason being that people find it too expensive and financially unaffordable.Getting used car loans now days is no longer a difficult task. All you need to do is to go online and search for a lender or organization that provide used car loans. Before applying for a loan, you should know where you stand as far as your finances are concerned because you have to be prepared for repayment of the loan after a certain time period. Find out answers to the following questions:-• Which car do you want to buy?• What is the cost of that car?• How will it affect you financially?After you have got answers to all your questions all you need to do is go online and fill in loan application form with your details. After that, the lenders or the organization will refer back to you with a loan decision. An important factor that the borrowers are always concerned about is the price of the car. If you are also the one who looks out for the price then you should know what blue book is? Formally, it is k Of course some of us have been in a relationship at one time or another when one or more of these assumptions (except the last) can be proven to be quite accurate. When I found that I was married to someone who in fact cared nothing about my feelings and said so frequently, I finally got the message and got out of there. If any of the above assumptions are proven accurate, you should waste no time in getting away from what is essentially an abusive relationship. In most cases however, I have discovered that these assumptions are not accurate at all, but are simply leftover subconscious programs about relationship that descend from the hell on earth that was our family of origin. If your dad was carelessly unfaithful to your mother before running off with the secretary, fears of your husband's infidelity could readily become a major problem in the marriage, even if your husband is totally faithful. This is why my work with emotional clearing, described on our website at www.alchemyinstitute.com/withhyp.htm is critical. Sometimes it is only by providing such a client with the internal experience of yelling at her faithless father with all of her rage, then firing him and replacing him in her inner world with a faithful and loving new father can she be psychologically prepared to trust a man's faithfulness to her. Take a few minutes to reexamine the hidden assumptions listed above. Listen deeply in your inner mind for any similar assumptions that you have been carrying about your partner or about love partners in general. Check them out with your partner, your mutual friends, and perhaps a wise counselor who knows you both. Are these assumptions ruling your relationship problems? If so, are they accurate? If they are accurate, demand that your partner change and be prepared to leave the relationship, because they probably won't. If not, if in fact these assumptions fit your childhood or maybe a previous marriage and are not true of your present partner, start making an effort to change these assumptions. Here a skilled hypnotherapist may be an essential part of your recovery. In addition, in a relationship that is moving toward health, I find it valuable for both partners to make the following new assumptions, which I call "agreements" because they are beliefs we consciously choose to accept. I encourage my clients to repeat them to themselves before confronting ones partner with any serious complaint. This will make communication and solution of the problem much easier.
To the extent that we accept these new agreements we will switch from being a criticizer to becoming a problem solver and our relationship will become far more functional. Now reread the examples of criticism vs. problem solving above. Can you detect the underlying assumptions behind each communication? Are you ready to examine your own assumptions about your partner and to accept some new agreements? By the way, this process works for all family crises, including relationships between parents and children. One client reported to me that her "outrageously ill behaved daughter" had entered her room demanding a new computer for high school. Her first reaction was to yell at her daughter that we couldn't afford it and how could you be so selfish and demanding. In family therapy I pointed out to both of them that her daughter's need for a new computer was probably legitimate. She wasn't after all demanding more money for crack cocaine. Soon she could see her daughter's need for a computer as a problem to be solved, rather than a personal attack on the family's finances (watch those hidden assumptions) Then she was able to work out an effective compromise with her daughter's help. One of the best ways to foster this new way of relating is through frequent daily acknowledgement outside the times of conflict. The more I reassure my partner and family in everyday conversation (DON'T wait until you are in crisis mode, or acknowledgement can feel like a set up for criticism) that I love her for all these wonderful reasons, the easier it will be for her to remember that I am not her father or her abusive ex-husband when I bring up the tough issues between us. Good luck in making your relationship more successful with these tools.
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