Do You Give Your Spouse YOUR Stamp Of Approval?: #29 Save Your Marriage Podcast
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

how to validate your spouse and save your marriagePeople are quirky.  We all have strange and interesting habits and interests.  No two people are alike.

Yet all of us crave one thing:  validation and approval.  We did it in high school (“I am SO different, along with everyone else”) and we do it through adulthood.

In fact, one of the aphrodisiacs of a relationship is feeling validated, approved, and accepted by the other person.

Does YOUR spouse feel validated and accepted?

In this week’s save your marriage podcast, discover how this can make or break a relationship.  Hear the 6 traps that may keep your spouse from feeling validated — and what to do about it!

Why Your Balance Book Marriage Will Fail: #28 Save The Marriage Podcast
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

save your marriage without a balance bookYou can say it many ways:  “keeping score,” “tit-for-tat,” “keeping a ledger,” “looking for the balance book.”  If you run your marriage that way, you are headed for trouble.

Problem is, it is perfectly human to make this mistake.  And in the midst of a marriage crisis, more likely.

Are you asking, “why am I putting in more than my spouse?” you are playing the ledger game. If you have pronounced to yourself, your spouse, or your friends, “I will not do anything more until he or she does,” you are playing with a balance book.

Unfortunately, I can tell you the outcome:  marriage failure.  More marriages die from a “Cold War” than from a “Hot War.”

But there is another option.  Listen to this week’s Save The Marriage Podcast to discover the secret to a “ledger-free” marriage.

Have you played the game?  Let me know how, and how you are changing it in the comments area below.

“Die, Cupid, Die”: Valentine’s Day and Saving Your Marriage
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

“Die, Cupid, Die!”,  Dave cried out.  He was frustrated.  The biggest sticking point in their marriage?  His wife was proclaiming, “There is no chemistry here.  I don’t have those feelings for you.”

Let me be clear:  Dave was not in disagreement.  He said he wasn’t feeling “all gushy,” either.  But his solution and his wife’s solution were a radical departure from each other.

Dave wanted to work on the marriage, rebuild their connection, and respark the flame.  His wife, “Sue,” wanted to divorce.

Sue reasoned that “If you don’t feel THAT way, there is nothing you can do.  You either feel it or you don’t.  If you don’t, then you need to get out.”

What happened to that feeling?  Why did it disappear?  And can it come back?

Dave was working hard to save his marriage.  Sue was working hard to end her marriage.  Neither seemed too interested in the questions I was pondering.

Ponder with me for a few moments.

Why are we so preoccupied with those feelings of attraction?  Is it built into our DNA?  Or is it a rather recent issue?

My answer:  both.  We are wired for this attraction.  It is certainly a wonderful method of making sure there are future generations!  We know that the drive to have sex is rooted very deeply in our brains, at the most primitive level.  This is the reason that we see such reckless behavior that is motivated by sexual attraction and desire.  People put their lives, their health, the jobs, their relationships, and anything else, on the line in pursuit of that desire.

But romance and how important it has become, that is a rather recent phenomenon.  Families have been a part of human existence from the beginning.  Living together, in a unit, was a method of survival.  Relationships that started as sexual attraction developed into units of preservation — nurturing and protecting children and adults.

The emphasis on romance as the basis of the marital relationship, though, is much more recent.  Once survival was less the issue, other goals came into view.  Feeling connected, relating in loving ways, and sharing of lives became more important.

When a family is focused on surviving, getting nourishment, staying warm, and avoiding predators, there is little room for a couple to have long “relationship talks” about “how we are doing.”  The focus is survival.  Maslow’s hierarchy of needs verifies this.  We have to have our basic needs met before we can be bothered with higher levels of relating and meaning.

For many of us, those basic levels of survival have been met.  This allows for another, higher,  level of relating.  But higher levels of relating are often corrupted and cheapened by humans.  We humans tend to overshoot potentials and often strip the deeper meaning for a “quick fix.”

Let’s take an example:  self-esteem.  Originally, self-esteem was the notion of feeling good about doing good.  In other words, self-esteem was feeling positive about taking positive action.  Along the way, we forgot the second half.  Self-esteem became “feeling good about one’s self.”  Over time, this became more and more divorced from actions.  It was just about having a feeling.  This is, you will note, a very short step from being narcissistic — feeling good about yourself (regardless of your actions/inactions), and seeing yourself as being superior to others (a rather simplified definition, but let’s go with that).

Research has shown that self-esteem (as culture now defines it) has nothing to do with life success, higher earnings, or any other positive life indicator.  In fact, research has demonstrated that juvenile delinquents have a higher-than-average level of self-esteem.  I would take that to mean that there may actually be a negative association, not a positive one.

Human nature:  take an idea with potential, go overboard, and destroy the positive in the process.  Dumb it down and make it nearly worthless.

Which brings us to the notion of romance.

Recent times have brought more and more of an emphasis on the importance of the feeling.  The feelings associated with romance have long been there (tied back into that whole “sexual attraction” wiring).

My very wise Grandmother several times remarked, “Chemistry is not a big deal in marriage. . . unless it isn’t there.”  In other words, that feeling of attraction, when it is in a good place in a marriage, is not the measuring stick of how a marriage is going.  But if it is not there, it can be painful.

Let’s add some fuel to the fire and corrupt what should be a healthy, nurturing aspect to a marriage.  We live in a culture that inundates us with messages:  romantic movies where the romance is always there, books with the same premise, songs that emphasize this one facet of love, the marketing of Valentine’s day as the penultimate expression of romance (with flowers, jewelry, dark dinners, and “lubricated” fun at the end).  Unfortunately, as is usually the case when merchants and marketers get their grips on it, reality vanishes and fantasy is substituted.

Reality:  a couple that is overwhelmed with a house, children, bills, work (including 24/7 connection to email, messaging, and phone calls), and guilt over the undone things (eating well, exercising, reading, etc., etc., etc.).

Should it be any surprise that the typical couple loses touch with that romantic side of life?  Is it a mystery that a couple might stop feeling that “gushy” feeling of attraction?  Absolutely not.  It is dangerous and counterproductive, but rather expected, unfortunately.

As one woman so poignantly told me, “I thought we had just placed our marriage on pause.  After the kids and work, we would get back to us.  But instead, he thought it meant we were done.”

Relationships don’t go on pause.  Marriages cannot be set aside, expecting the relationship to be alright when both decide to return.  It is like not exercising a muscle for years, then being surprised to one day notice the muscle has atrophied and is weak.  Relationships are either growing or they are atrophying.  There is no pause.

At the same time, thanks to the cultural messages we all receive, the over-emphasis on romance and romantic feelings causes people to believe that if the feelings are absent, the marriage is over.

Can a marriage survive without those feelings of connection?  As those family units of long-ago demonstrated, survival is possible.  But thriving is not.

The real question is, can those feelings return to a marriage that has been allowed to decline?  Absolutely (and probably easier than most imagine).

My colleague, Dr. Bob Huizenga, notes that when one spouse requests more romance or more sexiness, it comes from a place of neediness — of the one making the request.  Men are often urged to be more romantic.  Women are often urged to be more sexy.  But the one doing the urging is doing so from a place of neediness, ” I NEED  you to be more romantic/sexy.”  It is not about a shift in the relationship, but an attempt to get a “hit” of something.  Kind of like a drug.  In fact, very much like a drug.

Another colleague of mine, Dr. Bob Grant, talks about the difference between adrenaline-connection and endorphin-attraction (you can hear my interview with Bob Grant HERE).

Adrenaline-connection is the type of attraction experienced at the beginning of a relationship.  It is the gushy, butterflies-in-the-stomach, “I can’t stand to be apart” feeling that happens in the early stages of the relationship.  And it is the feeling that Hollywood has sold us as the indicator of 1) a TRUE relationship, 2) an ever-present feature of a good relationship.

Unfortunately, sustaining that level of connection is impossible.  Our neural system develops a tolerance for the adrenaline (just like a drug), and the feelings subside.  This can feel like a disaster, if someone does not expect this.  Sometimes, people take this as a sign that the relationship was not meant to be.  Yet, it is a normal stage of development.

Adrenaline-connection is all about “what am I getting out of this?”  It is a desire for ME to feel that gushy feeling.  It is a desire for ME to get that hit of adrenaline/dopamine.

Endorphin-connection is the connection of a maturing relationship.  It is based in acting lovingly toward a spouse.  It is based in “What can I put INTO this relationship?  How can I show love?”  It is not about neediness, but expressing love and commitment.  From that, the feelings of connection grow and mature.

Do you see the shift?  Instead of going after that maturing, endorphin-based connection, we elevate the adrenaline-based connection that is unsustainable.  We built an entire holiday and industry on that idea.

Saint Valentine, the saint whose day we celebrate, was imprisoned for an act of civil disobedience.  He continued to marry couples, in spite of an injunction against marriages.  The king had decreed that weddings were illegal, as he wanted young men to be unencumbered by families, so they could go fight his wars.  Valentine believed in love and commitment.  He continued to marry couples.  And he paid the price.

His sainthood was about committed love — not just a simple romantic notion.

So how do you respond to Valentine’s Day, if you are trying to save your marriage?

First, don’t get suckered into the cultural messaging.  Marriages do not perish or revive around a moment of romance.  While I am all for building feelings of connection and love (from which those romantic feelings will emerge), I do not believe you can jump-start a hurting relationship by making a grand romantic (or “sexy”) gesture.

Second, you don’t have to ignore the holiday, either.  Your spouse is noticing.  So, you want to do something that expresses your love and commitment.  A simple arrangement of flowers with a note of appreciation for the love you have shared over the years can be a way of demonstrating love, honoring the holiday, and building some connection.

Third, never fall for the “romantic getaway,” “big relationship talk,” or “romantic gesture” as the way to win him/her back over.  It works in the movies, but they do have a script to follow!  It does NOT (or will rarely) work in real life.

Fourth, change the equation in your head:  look for how to put love into the relationship, not how to make things romantic, hoping it will bring love back.  The endorphin-connection is created by loving acts.  It builds and strengthens as a couple acts in loving ways toward each other.

So, what happened with Sue and Dave?  In a unilateral move, Dave continued to focus on acting in loving ways.  He didn’t try to win Sue over.  He simply kept being loving, showing his commitment to the relationship.  At that point, Dave would tell you that he was acting on his commitment, not on an abundance of feelings of romance.

At first, Sue was resistant.  She simply did not trust Dave’s actions.  For awhile, Sue was constantly on-guard, trying to guess what was motivating Dave.  She simply could not understand the reason for his actions.

A funny thing happened to Dave, as he continued to stick with his plan:  he fell in love with his wife all over again.  He remember what first attracted him to her.  And that gave him the courage to stick it out.

One day, Sue began to feel some connection.  She smiled a bit more, was less snappy and defensive.  It became easier for Dave to keep on moving ahead.  Sue began to make some simple gestures.

As it turns out, their love had not died.  It was simply in hibernation.  Some warmth from both was all it took to bring it out of hibernation.

 

 

 

 

 

 

What About Trust?: Restoring And Rebuilding — #27
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

How to rebuild trust and save your marriage.It seems that every single day, and sometimes several times a day, I get an email asking a question about trust:  “How do I rebuild trust after doing something wrong?” and “How do I trust this person after what he/she did?”

Trust, it seems, is a bit more complicated than first glance would indicate.

I believe that trust is a gift.  Sometimes, it is a gift made to expensive, and other times it is a gift made too cheap.  But in the end, it is easier to maintain trust than restore trust.

But what do you do if the trust has been destroyed?  Can it be rebuilt?

In today’s podcast, I take a look at why trust trips us up, why some people have issues with trust, and how to go about rebuilding trust.

Take a listen and let me know what you think in the comments area below.

5 Rules For Apologizing: #26 Save The Marriage Podcast
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

How To Save Your Marriage and ApologizeApologies.  We all do it — but do we do it right?

I remember being held by the scruff of my neck, forced to apologize to my brother.  I was neither apologetic nor conciliatory.  I was, however, captive.  So I apologized.

It was a good idea.  It is just that my heart wasn’t in it.

And sometimes, even when we mean it, we mess it up, just because of how we do an apology.

In this week’s podcast, we take a look at apologies and how to offer one.  This is a good follow up to the podcast on forgiveness.

Let me propose 5 rules for giving an apology and why an apology is so important.

What rules would you add?  What points did I miss?  Please leave a comment below.

Frustrated and Ready To Give Up? Don’t!: #25, Save The Marriage Podcast
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

how to save your marriage when you are frustrated and want to give up.Just the other day, “Sue” wrote me to tell me she was ready to quit.  She told me that her husband had been involved in an emotional affair, and she discovered the emails.  When confronted, her husband told Sue that he did not love Sue and had been unhappy for years.

Sue decided to take matters in her own hands and save her marriage.  She changed herself and worked on improving the connection with her husband.  In fact, Sue went into “overdrive” in her efforts.  Several weeks in, she was exhausted, hurt and scared.  Her husband told her that he saw the efforts, but it was too late.

In her email, Sue told me she was ready to give up, but wanted to know what I thought.  She asked, “do I have a snowball’s chance in hell of saving this?”  Unfortunately, I don’t have a crystal ball.

But I do know this:  Sue was at a very normal, very predictable stage in the process of a marriage crisis.  In this audio, I will tell you the stages, and will also tell you one more thing:  sometimes people give up just before a breakthrough.  Sometimes, the resistance and frustration is highest just before a shift — but people either give up or try to force it.

Do you want to know the secret on what to do?  Take a listen to the audio.

Then let me know what you think in the comments area below!

Stop Trying To Convince!: Episode 24, Save The Marriage Podcast
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

save your marriage, no begging, pleading, convincingDo you find yourself trying to convince your spouse to work on the relationship?

Do you try logic and rational facts to “help” your spouse see your point?

Do you find yourself begging and pleading, trying to get your spouse to change his or her mind?

Do you notice that these strategies fail?  Do you notice that many times, when you try to convince, when you argue, beg and plead, that you actually lose ground?

Let’s talk about why this happens, why your spouse is resisting, and how you can do it differently.

Please listen to this week’s podcast and let me know what you think in the comments area below.

“Why Should I Forgive?” — Podcast #23, Save The Marriage
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

canyouforgiveorwillyoustaystucksaveyourmarriageIn last week’s article on New Year resolutions to save your marriage, I started with “forgive more.”  That struck a nerve.  Some people loved it. . . but many sent me letters asking, “why should I have to forgive?”  Ironically, my point was that forgiving frees the forgiver.

After the first couple of emails, I began to notice that perhaps I needed to clarify.  So, I tackle forgiveness in-depth for this week’s podcast.  In fact, I give you a 6 step process of how to forgive.  But of course, this is only helpful if you think you want to forgive.  I start the podcast by clarifying what I mean by forgiveness, and why I think it is so important.  (Hint:  not forgiving is like having a systemic infection that will eat away at the rest of your life.)

The catch is, as C.S. Lewis said, “Everyone thinks forgiveness is a lovely idea until he has something to forgive.”  When we have been injured, the idea of forgiving is not philosophical, and it can feel overwhelming.

Join me as we explore why to forgive and ways to forgive.

Let me know what you think in the comments below!

5 Resolutions To Save and Improve Your Marriage!
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

resolutions to help save your marriageWe sit on the cusp of a new year.  What will next year look like for you?  What will be different?  To what do you aspire?

Those are the questions that surround us as the calendar changes not just a month, but a year.  Many people are at least contemplating some resolutions — things we have resolved to do, for the new year.  Whether they last more than a few weeks or not, that depends on the resolver.  But what I like is the exercise of processing the potentials of change and renewal.

Many people are surprised to discover, given the fact that I ended up with three post-graduate degrees and taught in college and graduate school arenas, that I never liked school.  In fact, I rather disliked it.  This may partly be due to the fact that I have dyslexia, or it may have more to do with a little streak of non-conformity.  (My mother loves to tell the story of my elementary school teacher losing track of me in the classroom, finally discovering me in the back corner, encyclopedia in my lap, pursuing my own areas of interest.)

But what I did love was the recurring fact that school years and semesters ended.  No matter how much I succeeded or struggled, there came a point when I departed that class or grade and started afresh.

I think that is the psychology that is available to us at this time of year.  The old year is behind.  The new year is ahead.  There is a change for change and for something different.  Possibilities and potentials unfold before us.  It may only be a psychological trick, but I like that.  So, it is a time of goal-setting, of resolving, of potential change, and of hope.

What are the changes YOU wish to make?  How will the new year be different than the passing year?  How will your relationship be different?  Or more importantly, how will YOU be different in your relationship (after all, that is what you can control)?

Let me propose 5 resolutions for you to consider as potentials in the new year.

(By the way, if you want some specific steps you can take to shift your own life and your anxieties, please check out my Holiday podcast from last week.)

5 Resolutions To Improve Your Marriage In The New Year

1)  Forgive more often.

Forgiveness is something we know we should do.  But for most of us, it is a challenge.  We know we should, but sometimes, it just seems so unfair.  Why should we let that other person off the hook?  Why should we have to be the one to forgive?  Shouldn’t we hold onto those hurts in order to protect ourselves?

If you find yourself nodding in agreement with those questions above, you have fallen into the cultural trap about forgiveness.  You see, forgiveness is a misunderstood concept.  Forgiveness is also something that runs counter to our natural wiring.  Yet not forgiving keeps us stuck, frozen, and connected to the injury caused by some action of another.

Not long ago, I was teaching a workshop on forgiveness.  I asked a simple question at the beginning:  “What are the actions that are just simply unforgivable?”  People offered up a number of suggestions.  Many were rather heinous, and some were simply statements of recent hurts still on the surface.  I wrote them all on the whiteboard and left them to the side.

I then proposed that there are two “paradigms,” two mindsets, that we carry around about forgiveness.  One paradigm is that we need to hold people accountable, never forget so that they cannot injure us again, and seek justice for the transgressor.  This mindset is “I cannot forgive.”  But there is another mindset that understands a simple fact:  forgiveness is primarily for the person forgiving, not for the person forgiven.  Forgiving another person frees us up, lets us move forward, and allows us to heal.

Not forgiving keeps us captive to the injury, prevents any growth, and keeps the wound open and festering.

In that workshop, people began to tell stories of hurts and pains, and their need to forgive.  What was interesting is how the other participants encouraged the people sharing to NOT forgive.  I noted how easy it is for us to slip back into mindset #1.  Our natural wiring is for self-preservation.  It is not for growth.  It is for survival.  And from a simple survival perspective, seeing everything as a threat and anyone that injures you (accidental or maliciously) as an enemy is protective.  But protective in a way that keeps your growth stunted and keeps you living in a very small space.

So back to mindset #2, forgiveness is so that YOU can move on; so that YOU do not continue to drag around the injury.  Long ago, I heard the analogy that not forgiving is like being hit by a sharp rock, picking up that sharp rock, gripping it so tightly that you continually cut your own hand, and shaking it at the back of the person who threw the rock.  They walk away while you continue to injure yourself.

The first step in forgiveness is acknowledging that you want to forgive because it will free you.  The second step is to begin to see the other person in another light, as one that may not have truly intended to injure you.  Let me repeat that:  someone’s actions may not have been intended to hurt you in the way that you were hurt.

I have a core belief, and I simply invite you to adopt it:  “People do the best they can, where they are.  They do things for THEMSELVES, and not against YOU.”

In other words, with rare exceptions, it is not the aim of people to injure others.  In the act of protecting or defending themselves (or some image of themselves), they may cause injury, but that is not the primary purpose of actions.

I am certainly not perfect in seeing others in this light, but that is my intention.  And when I do view people from this perspective, it is easier to be empathetic — their actions may have injured me, but it was from a point of pain in them.  When we are feeling threatened or hurt, we all tend to lash out in ways that are hurtful, but it is from a point of self-preservation.

Years ago, I found a dog that had been hit by a car.  He was injured and clearly in pain.  I tried to gingerly wrap him up and take him to a veterinarian to get help.  But as gently as I tried to be, the dog felt more pain.  The dog’s response was to grab my arm with his teeth — it bit me out of it’s own pain.  In fact, the entire trip to the vet, that dog never let go of my arm.  I had teeth marks for several days.  But I also knew that the dog meant me no harm.  It was simply responding to the pain of the injuries.

People are like that.  Your spouse is like that.  You are like that.  I am like that.  We hurt others as we protect ourselves.  So when we decide to forgive the actions of another, we take on a more empathetic view of the other person.  But we are also making a choice to not be held hostage by hurts and pains.  We decide to no longer form an identity within ourselves from the hurts and pains.

Notice that I used the word “decide” a few times in that last paragraph.  Forgiveness is based on a decision.  It is based in a shift in mindset.  And it is based in opting to move forward.

[One note about what I am NOT saying:  I am not saying that another person’s actions mean nothing and should be disregarded.  I am not saying you should not feel hurt.  And I am not saying you have to reconnect with anyone that “does you wrong.”  Your hurt and your pain, that is part of being alive.  We humans have the unique capacity of not only suffering an injury, but constantly wondering about the meaning of that injury and the psychology of the other person.  Pain is unavoidable.  But when we keep the incident and injury alive in our thoughts, we prolong and deepen the pain.  The pain is real.  How long you hold on to the pain, that is optional.  You will naturally feel hurt, but you can also choose to move through the pain and into healing (that really is what forgiving is about).  Also, this is not about “forgive and forget.”  There are times when you can choose to forgive so that you can move forward AND decide that the person is not a person with whom you can relate any longer.]

In the new year, resolve to forgive more.  Resolve to see others (and yourself) as doing the best they can, given where they are.  And resolve to understand that forgiving is about YOU deciding to not carry the pain with YOU.

2)  Be lovingly direct.

Many of us are not raised to be direct.  We are raised to hint around at what we want, then are disappointed when what we want never arrives.  Often, we find ourselves stuck between being indirect and being demanding.

When we are indirect, we are trying to get the other person to do what we want, but without having to claim or request it.  When we are demanding, we are trying to get what we want by giving the person no choice.  In either case, we are being controlling and focused on only getting what we want.

But there is another possibility:  being lovingly direct.  Being direct is about being clear about what you want.  Being loving is understanding that you may not get what you want, just because you make a request.

Let’s just take one fairly typical marriage scenario.  Let’s assume that you are feeling a bit neglected, and therefore a bit unloved.  You could: A)  be indirect and hint around at wanting attention, then hurt that your spouse did not pick up your subtle hints, B) demand attention and then be unsatisfied when your spouse either goes through the emotions but is not happy about it, or your spouse pulls even further away because of the pressure, or C) make a loving request that you would like to carve out some time to connect and ask about how that might work for your spouse.

Just guessing, I suspect that option C will be more likely to get you the results you would want.  But I also know that this requires taking some responsibility.  You see, if you use approach A or B, and you don’t get what you want, you may take this as proof that your spouse does not love you, is uncaring, is unwilling to connect, or any other number of beliefs.  Then, not getting attention only serves to deepen beliefs you may already hold.  Your spouse may have unwittingly stepped into a trap.  The sad part:  there may have been potential for doing things differently, of getting what you both most deeply desire:  connection.

Resolve this year to not be indirect and to not be demanding.  Instead, resolve to be lovingly direct.

3)  Work on your personal boundaries.

First, a quick definition of a boundary:  What you will not let others do to you.  Boundaries form the expectations we have on how we will be treated by the world.  Think for a moment about the people in your life that almost emit an understanding to others about being respectful.  You would never imagine being disrespectful, not because the person tells you how to treat him or her, but because you just get a feeling, an understanding.  That person is clear about personal boundaries.

So why would your personal boundaries be a part of your resolutions about marriage?  Because most people do not adequately set their personal boundaries, but when a personal boundary is violated, we tend to respond in rather defensive/attacking ways.  In other words, when we do not monitor our boundaries, we tend to react to others in ways that violate the other person’s boundaries.  This creates an atmosphere that is toxic and hurtful.

Boundaries teach others how we want to be treated.  If we do not teach others on how to treat us, we cannot blame others for not treating us in the way we want to be treated.  It is up to each of us to create the necessary boundaries.  It is not up to others to guess on our boundaries.

Let’s take a common boundary issue in marriage.  Because of proximity, a couple is bound to have disagreements.  Often, these disagreements lead to arguments.  Sometimes, an argument fuels yelling.  I am of the opinion that yelling, or being yelled at, crosses boundaries.  (Let me assure you that this does not mean I have never raised my voice.  But I do recognize this is aggressive behavior and not particularly useful to a loving relationship.)

Notice that I used the term “raising your voice” in that last paragraph.  The reason for this is because when people make it clear they do not want to be yelled at, the conversation often degenerates into an argument about whether it was yelling or not.  Somehow, “raising your voice” is less threatening and more clearly noted.

So, letting someone know that they are “raising their voice” at you is the starting point.  Requesting they NOT raise their voice (in a clear, calm voice) is next.  If the yelling continues, I suggest you end the discussion until things are calmer (which is NOT an excuse to avoid any discussions you don’t want to have — only that waiting for a bit more calmness can be helpful).  This can be applied to many other boundary violations, of which you will become more aware as you clarify your boundaries.  (I devote an entire chapter in my Save The Marriage System.)

Resolve to create and clarify your own personal boundaries.  Also resolve to respect the boundaries of your spouse and others.  It will lead to much more loving and respectful interactions throughout your life.

4)  Give attention freely.

It is funny, but the one thing we have, of which we cannot run out, is love and attention.  We will eventually run out of time, and we can always run out of money.  But love is both free and infinite.  We can always love more people.  And love is often best shown in attention.

But how many times do we withhold love and attention?  Sometimes, we do it in the midst of a busy schedule.  And I get that.  Which is why the resolution is not “always be loving and attentive.”

Instead, this resolution is aimed at the fact that we often choose to not “show up” when we are with people.  By that, I mean that our body is there, but our attention is not.  We can be physically present but emotionally absent.  There are several reasons why this can be true.

For example, we may be distracted by the device in our hands (smart phone, tablet, e-reader, magazine, newspaper, remote control, etc., etc.)  But instead of admitting that we cannot pay attention to both, we pretend to be listening.  We let some other object get the bulk of our attention, when the living, breathing person beside us deserves it more.  Resolve to not let inanimate objects keep your attention diverted from the people who love you.

Perhaps even more important, resentment and anger can block attention.  Sometimes, instead of addressing an issue with someone, we choose to be a bit passive-aggressive.  We simply cut off connection and attention.  This is deeply wounding, and really does nothing to address the original issue.  Can you think back to a time when you were angry with someone, so that when you were around them, you just refused to truly listen and interact?  Or perhaps you became antagonistic and obstinate?  It likely did little to change the real issue, but did likely increase the disconnection and chasm between you.

Resolve, this year, to freely give attention.  Resolve to not be distracted by inanimate objects or derailed by old hurts and resentments.  Resolve to love more freely, recognizing you have an endless pool of love.

5)  Focus on partnership.

We have that natural wiring, the wiring that is always tempting us to play “what about me?”  And it is certainly important to make sure you care for yourself.  But sometimes, in the midst of a struggle, we are tempted to abandon the relationship, the connection.  I believe that marriages are about being a WE, a sense of being partners, together, indivisible.  I also believe this only happens when you are truly yourself and understand being an individual.

It is my observation, though, that way to many of us tend to function in the ME sphere, and forget the WE sphere — especially when the WE is under stress.  Yet the path back to connection and relation is a return to the focus on being a WE.

For a moment, just consider whether you are truly playing as a part of a team, or if you have dropped back to defending your territory, your needs, your desires.  The defense of ME is the danger.  It is not a problem that you are aware of you.  But it is a problem when a person defends his or her space, to the detriment of the partnership that is formed in a marriage.

This year, resolve to being in a WE, of truly showing up with attention, of clearly noting your personal boundaries, and of forgiving.  I know I am.

Happy New Year!

Mastering the Holidays When Your Relationship Hurts: Save The Marriage Podcast #22
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

dontletrelationshipproblemsruinyourholidayThe Holidays are stressful.  Even under the best of times, we can find ourselves stressed and down.  But when a relationship is in trouble, the pressure can feel overwhelming.

But it doesn’t have to be.  Don’t lose the Holidays.  Take back the meaning of the holidays and discover your reserve of strength.

Regardless of what is happening in your world, this season of Holidays can be fulfilling and meaningful.

Join me for the Save The Marriage Podcast to learn how to recover your celebration and holiday.

Let me know in the comments area below how YOU are Holy-daying, in spite of life circumstances!