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jesParticipant
Dear Michele, I am 20 years into my relationship and my husband and I still have these confrontations sometimes. Often, there is something else underlying the accusations that may fly out in a heated moment. Sometimes, the accusations really donât mean anything beyond a frustrated mood, but others, the things we say that we donât like about our partners are symptomatic of something else. If you can get to that, then you can have a real conversation, rather than being caught up in a cycle of accusing and defending. Conscious confrontations are necessary. That kind of tension strengthens the real relationship, in the same way that a high intensity workout strengthens your body. Unconscious confrontations will tear it apart if you let it.
What you have just said in your post seemed very calm and well-thought-out. You could approach him with that same tone and have a conversation about what was said. Approach it with understanding and compassion for the relationship, not from wanting something from the each other. Finding that center point where each of you can express what you are feeling and not expecting either of you to bow to the other, is where understanding happens.
jes
jesParticipantDear Anonymous,
I think it is very good that you are self-reflecting instead of blaming. Already this is sign of making progress toward understanding and healing yourself. In my experience, there is something behind the anger â often it is grief, in which case, the anger has served as a sort of protection. You can only peel it off when you see what is behind it. It seems like you already know that at some level.
Your CBT techniques for anxiety should serve you for becoming mindful of your anger, rather than identifying with and reacting from it. Following the breathing techniques suggested will also help. What happens is that you begin to develop a sort of stimulus barrier between you and those things that might trigger you. That kind of barrier gives you a space to process whatâs coming in before you unconsciously react to it. Instead of an immediate response, you say to yourself, âokay, hereâs that feeling againâ and you can choose not to react. If you keep track of this kind of thing, youâll see your patterns.
You are very good at seeing that âanxiety creeps inâ. Something in you can see that it is an autonomous factor in you, and not really you. Again, you can work with that particular feeling when you feel it coming on â recognize that it starts trouble in your life and donât buy into it in the moment. Anxiety is often unfinished inner business that needs careful tending. If we project that outward and look for security externally, we canât really get to anxietyâs meaning in our lives. It will always attach itself to the next thing to worry about.
You are right, pretentiously exuding love is corny. When you really feel it, it exudes from you. You donât do it. When you find your center and trust who you are, you wonât have to exude anything â you will shine on your own.
jes
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