Friday, November 15, 2019
The bad habit all husbands and wives need to avoid
The bad habit all husbands and wives need to avoid The bad habit all husbands and wives need to avoid Marriage is supposed to be a partnership, with both people functioning as a cohesive unit, working in tandem towards the same goals and sharing the same opinions. Unfortunately, it doesnât always work that way.Couples are human and, as humans, prone to error, disagreement, and dissenting points of view. As a result, couples will say or do things that undermine each other.Follow Ladders on Flipboard!Follow Laddersâ magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and more!Chances are you do, too. Whether itâs correcting someone in a conversation, sharing personal information with an outside, or saying âyesâ when the other parent says no, couples undermine each other all the time. Done regularly, it can chip away at the foundation of a relationship and lead to resentment or worse. So, how can you avoid falling into this very common trap? Communication is key. As is having a constant understanding of how your partner might feel abo ut your actions. Here are a few common scenarios where partners undermine one another and the what they can do to avoid it in the future.How to avoid undermining your spouse when disciplining the kidsThis is one of the most common areas in which undermining occurs. Parents will work against each other because they havenât agreed upon the rules up front. As a result, what will happen is one parent becomes the de-facto bad guy constantly enforcing the rules, while the other is the fun, chill parent, always letting the kids do what they want.âThis dynamic creates negative feelings not only for both parents but also for their children,â says Jan Carey, a licensed clinical social worker. âIn some families, the conflict isnât addressed effectively and each parent ends up parenting in their own opposing style dishing up parenting in their own way inadvertently creating a âsplitâ where the child does what they want.âIn order to keep that divide from happening, Carey sugg ests creating a list of five rules and talk opening about what theyâre hoping for each rule to achieve. This agreement will help prevent one parent constantly undermining the other. âShould the couple disagree on the rules they need to continue to discuss them and it may take several conversations where they discuss why itâs important and identify if the reason they feel strongly about it is related to their own childhood and then explain how. This will provide the depth necessary for the partner to understand the context of why their partner is so intensely organized around the rule.How to not undermine your spouse when dealing with your in-lawsWhen one partner comes from a very close-knit family, there can be friction as they work to please both their spouse and their family as well. What tends to happen in such a situation is that the familyâs needs may end up coming before their partnerâs. Plans are made without consulting the spouse, a family memberâs feelings ar e taken into consideration over the spouse, or the partner will resist standing up to the family when their spouse feels wronged.âCouples who come from an enmeshed family have great challenges in trying to please both themselves and their extended family because there is still a felt obligation to please everyone, despite having grown up and moved away from their family of origin,â says Carey. âMany couples get stuck in trying to meet their own coupleâs needs if their needs challenge their family of originâs needs.âTo avoid this, couples need to be upfront about where the lines are when it comes to their needs versus the needs of the extended family. âJust being aware that one person in the relationship is oriented more naturally to taking care of their extended family than the other partner allows the couple to make space for that difference,â says Carey. âSetting priorities as a family will allow a couple to make decisions together with less angst and more harmon y.âHow to not undermine your spouse when talking with friendsItâs not uncommon for couples to talk openly with their friends when their partner isnât around. However, that openness can end up, even inadvertently, undermining or embarrassing your spouse. For example, if you talk to your friends about a sexual issue you and your spouse are having, how do you expect that he or she will feel the next time youâre all together? Even if you are going to your friend seeking advice or comfort, revealing personal information can harm your spouseâs ego.Carey says that couples should be up front about what topics are off limits when it comes to peers and make sure that they honor that agreement at all times. However, she notes, if one partner is bothered enough by something (such as a sexual issue) that theyâre feeling the need to bring it up to their friends, the other partner should take that into consideration. âThe best course of action involves taking the risk of talking to your spouse directly about your frustration in order to motivate them to do something differently,â she says. âTaking the problem on directly allows you to keep things private because itâs being handled.âHow to not undermine your spouse when dealing with family financesFinancial matters are one of the most common stressors in a marriage and one the ways couples undermine each other regularly, making large purchases without consulting the other or even just spending on things like lunches out of small, unnecessary items that they canât afford. Many of these approaches to money are shaped in childhood and can have long-lasting impact. For example, if someone grew up without a lot of money, they may now feel the need to overcompensate and buy expensive things to give the illusion of security. This can be very undermining for the spouse who is trying to keep the finances together.Carey suggests that couples meet regularly, even if itâs only once a month to discuss the fi nances and understand where the household stands money-wise. Itâs important to approach money as a team and work towards financial goals, as opposed to one partner always feel as though theyâre cleaning up the otherâs money messes.âDiscussing larger purchase decisions before actually buying anything can avoid one partner from feeling like they are sacrificing or doing without and can enable both partners to negotiate purchases that are important to each person,â says Carey. âTalking about money where both people have a voice can minimize the anxiety which money often creates.âHow to not undermine your spouse when discussing sexItâs quite normal for the frequency of sex to fluctuate in a marriage. There are a number of outside influences that can impact a coupleâs desire or ability to connect sexually, from work to kids to just day-to-day stress. But even little distractions, such as social media, can get in the way of sex and make one partner begin to feel undermin ed and like everything else around them is more important than being intimate.Carey proposes that couples make a weekly date night, but to try and engage in activities that are outside of their comfort zone. Things like taking a dancing class or a painting class can reignite the same feelings of newness and discovery that you first had when you were dating and can put intimacy back on the table. She also suggested not making sex, the actual act itself, the ultimate endgame. âIf you enter sex with the idea that the moment will take you both where you need to go and that you touch each other not just to please, but to please yourself too, you suddenly have the kind of sex that dreams are made of,â she says.This article originally appeared on Fatherly.You might also enjoy⦠New neuroscience reveals 4 rituals that will make you happy Strangers know your social class in the first seven words you say, study finds 10 lessons from Benjamin Franklinâs daily schedule that will double your productivity The worst mistakes you can make in an interview, according to 12 CEOs 10 habits of mentally strong people
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.