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how to save your marriage

If You Save Your Marriage, Will It Only Happen Again?
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

After a long conversation with “Nancy,” I thought she was ready to work to save her marriage.  But I noticed she was hesitant.  I had no idea why.  I just knew she was not quite ready to take action.  I asked, “Nancy, do you want to save your marriage?”

Nancy claimed she did, but she was afraid.  Which means that Nancy is like everyone else that is wanting to work on their marriage.  It is a scary undertaking!

And finally, Nancy told me her fear:  “What if I work on saving my marriage, and I DO save my marriage, and then our relationship gets into trouble again?”save your marriage

As strongly as I could, I told Nancy this, “If you save your marriage, if you truly transform yourself and your relationship, your marriage will NEVER be threatened again!”  (There are really 3 steps to saving your marriage.  You can find the steps in an article here.)

There are really two different ways to go about saving your relationship.

1)  You can use reverse psychology, “hypnosis,” or any other number of tricks to stop your spouse’s actions that are moving toward ending a relationship.  You can manipulate, force, cajole, or guilt a spouse into not taking action.  You can find some way of stopping your spouse by withholding finances, children, assets, etc., as a way of forcing NO action.

2)  You can truly change your relationship.  You can change yourself, improving your own life, while also transforming the relationship.

If you decide to take the “shortcut,” the “easy answer,” and do #1, you will find that this approach runs out of steam.  Eventually, a spouse figures out the manipulation, or a spouse refuses to be bullied.  At that point, your spouse will be even MORE invested in getting out — and for good reason!  Now, they not only feel the relationship is failing, but that they are being forced, manipulated, and tricked.  This only adds fuel to the fire.

IF, however, you take option #2 — you decide that the relationship you had did not work and must be transformed, and you decide that YOU need to make a change and grow to a new place, THEN you have solved the problems for good.  Your marriage will never be threatened because it is now an entirely different relationship.

Does that mean you will never have a disagreement, never get angry, and never have times of disconnection?  Absolutely not.  You will disagree, be angry, and feel disconnected at times.  The difference is that you will know how to move beyond those issues.  You will learn to reconnect.  You will know you can trust the bond between you.

Are you ready for that?  Join me in helping you do that with my system.  Click Here to grab it!

Save Your Marriage In 3 Simple Steps
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

“So, how DO you save your marriage?” asked the frustrated voice on the other end of the call.  “Eric” had been working to save his marriage for some time.  And it seemed that no matter where he looked, all he saw was conflicting advice:  “fix your communication,” “make her jealous,” “use reverse psychology,” and lots of other “gems” out there.  But it left Eric no closer to saving his marriage than when he started.  “Why is it so hard?,” wondered Eric.  I had to agree.  Since I created SaveTheMarriage.com, see all the information out there.  It is almost too much.  Pretty quickly, you get overwhelmed and feel like giving up.

But just for a moment, imagine that it is not a difficult process.  In fact, imagine for a moment that the process is actually quite simple.  Like many things, we tend to complicate things.  Often, unnecessarily.  In fact, almost always unnecessarily.

In my Save The Marriage System, I spend a good bit of time helping people to create a plan.  Once they have a plan, I suggest they use the “3 C’s” to stay on-target.

The 3 C’s of Working Your Plan To Save Your Marriage

C-alm

Staying calm is critical.  Fear is the enemy of effective efforts.  In fact, when acting from a point of fear, the process is almost doomed from the start.  But moving from a calm place changes everything.

But staying calm can be a challenge.  So I suggest you carefully follow a plan of self-care.  Eat well, exercise, and find a trusted person to share your pain.  Resist responding from hurt, fear, and anger. (I cover this in the Save The Marriage System.)

C-onstant

Equally important is to remain constant in your efforts.  This means that you are continuing your efforts on a regular basis.  In other words, reaching out to connect on a frequent (but not too frequent) basis.  Too frequent is a symptom of anxiety.  It is usually caused when someone is reaching out to connect out of fear — desperate to hear back and get reassurance from a spouse that is unwilling to respond or reassure.

(I teach how to reach out without the feel of desperation in the Save The Marriage System.)

C-onsistent

Finally, as you are calmly and constantly reaching out to connect, you want to make sure you are consistent.

Remember all of that conflicting advice?  Here is where it is truly dangerous.  If you keep shifting your approach, you will only end up confusing your spouse, all while trying to save your marriage.  Yep, in the effort to save your relationship, you create more confusion.

How?  By shifting from one approach to another.  One moment, you are working to connect.  The next, you are working to make your spouse jealous.  Or one moment, you are sending one way texts (a technique I teach in my Save Your Marriage System.)  Then you shift to attempting to get a response.  Or you write a “marriage path” letter, taking your share of the responsibility, and then start blaming your spouse (the letter is another part of the System.)

Those 3 C’s are about how you go about your plan — how to carry out your plan to save your marriage.

But what, exactly, are you doing?  Well, that is what is much more simple than people make it out to be.

So here are the 3 steps.

3 Steps To Save Your Marriage3 C’s Of Saving Your Marriage

C-onnect

The simple truth is that marriages become stressed and troubled by a lack of connection.  We humans are designed for connection.  And when we do not get the connection we need, we feel like we are starving for attention.

And the longer the disconnection goes on, the more a relationship suffers.  A feeling of distance becomes a feeling of disdain.  All from disconnection.

But the path back is simply rebuilding the connection.  In fact, the heart of reviving the relationship is just that:  reconnection.

Problem is, you are likely out of practice, perhaps a bit angry, and feeling hurt, yourself.  None of that leaves you wanting to reconnect.  Yet this is the way out of the mess.  Connection revives the marriage.  Continued disconnection starves and strangles the marriage.

It is about this point in my conversations when people say “what about me?  Why doesn’t my spouse have to reconnect with me?”

The answer I give is far more pragmatic than fair:  “You are the one that is with me, and who is working on saving the marriage.  So for right now, focus on reconnecting.  When you reconnect, your spouse will eventually follow.”

If you are working to save your marriage, at least for the time-being, you have to set aside your own wishes and hopes for connection coming your way.  Focus on providing connection.  Practically speaking, someone has to take action.  Take that on as your task.

C-hange Yourself

Just like Eric, on the other end of the line, you are somebody I do not know.  So whatever I say, please do not take it personally.  Instead, it is based on nearly 1/4 of a century of helping couples.  I know from experience what needs to happen, even if I don’t know you.

So, step 2 in saving your marriage is change yourself.  Grow and develop into a higher caliber person. . . regardless of where you are now.

Let’s be honest:  we all have places where we can improve and grow.  We all have places where we are not maximizing our potential, where we are not “showing up.”

Something happens to all of us when we “settle down.”  We stop growing and developing.  And as we do this, we begin to lose ground.  Eventually, if someone is not careful, the attractiveness that our spouse once saw, begins to wane.  We slowly move toward a state of stagnation.

It is at about this time that people start screaming, “but why should I have to keep trying to attract my spouse?  Why can’t my spouse just love me?”  Again, a good philosophical question.  But I am a practical man.  Practically speaking, if you are trying to save your marriage, you want to become more and more attractive to your spouse — not less.  Simple pragmatism.

Unfortunately, our philosophical side can kick and scream and demand that “it’s not fair.”  But then, for a moment, notice that the philosophical side is really just that child’s voice crying out about unfairness.  And as my parents used to tell me, “life’s not fair.”

So, back to the task.  In the process to save your marriage, you will want to change yourself.  Grow.  Develop.  Become more of what you know you need to become.  In the end, you will be more satisfied with life.  And the more satisfied you are, the better your chances of saving the marriage.  You become, in the process, more attractive to your spouse and to yourself.

Step 2 in saving your marriage is Change Yourself.

C-reate A New Path

Marriages fail because couples disconnected.  Marriages fail because individuals stop growing.  And finally, marriages fail because the individuals that make up the couple never knew where they were headed.

So the final step is to create a new path.  Imagine where your marriage could head, and what your marriage could be.  Don’t just ponder it for a moment, but really consider it.

I deeply believe we do a great disservice to couples when they marry.  We spend lots of money, time, effort, and energy into celebrating a short service — then we send the couple out into the world, congratulating them and wishing them the best. . . but without telling anyone of what they are trying to do.

At the point of marriage, two people are trying to form a team, a unit — a WE, as I describe it.  But if a couple does not know this is the goal, how are they ever going to get there?

“You and Me” is the start of a relationship.  But if a couple does not understand, and does not get to “WE,” then they will eventually drift into “You versus Me.”  Destruction of the relationship follows, for the simple reason that nobody knew better.

One of my central attempts in my material on how to save your marriage is how to build the relationship and how to become a WE.  It is a roadmap to becoming a team

Save your marriage by following these 3 steps.

That’s it.  That’s all you need to focus upon as you work to save your marriage.  Follow those 3 steps, and you can save your marriage, even if you are the only one that wants to work on it!

How To Save Your Marriage: Control, Boundaries & Standards — The Conversation Continues!
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

How To Save Your Marriage In my last post, I talked about controlling behavior. Evidently, this hit a nerve. I received a number of emails that asked me to explain what I meant by “controlling behavior.” Several emails asked me for specific examples, and others told me that they were not the controlling ones, but their spouse was. Clearly, controlling behavior is an issue in many marriages.

So, I wanted to follow-up in this post by looking at controlling behavior, boundaries, and personal standards. I wanted to clarify some of what I was saying in the last post on controlling behavior, then extended and expand on standards and boundaries.

I remember, a number of years back, when I first encountered this controlled/controlling behavior with a couple in my office. Every answer the man gave, he looked to his wife to see if it was okay. He crossed his legs, and she nudged him that he was not sitting well. His tie was flipped up, and she straightened it out. He told a story, and she corrected everything he said. Fairly quickly, I realized that this was a pattern that they both had established, that had at some point served them well, but was at the end of its capacity to lead them through this marriage. The man had realized that he had an opinion. The woman was tired of being responsible for everything.

This is just one example of controlling behavior, but at the extreme. Lots of controlling behavior takes place in less obvious ways. The underlying dynamic is, however, the same.

A marriage requires two ingredients for it to be successful and healthy. First, there must be a strong relationship. By strong relationship, I don’t mean that the couple always has to spend every waking moment together. But, they have a connection that sustains both of them and boundaries in place to protect the relationship when the connection falls.

A marriage also requires two individuals, each with a strong sense of self. I don’t mean a strong personality, an overwhelming personality, or big personality. In fact, these are often symptoms of a lack of self; it is someone trying to appear as if they have a sense of self, by projecting something bigger into the world.

What I mean by a strong sense of self is an awareness of the self. They are aware of how they are thinking, feeling, and acting in the world. Also, they have a sense of growing, of developing, and of becoming more and more of who they are. Whenever somebody tells me that they don’t have any room to grow, I know they are in trouble. We all have places of growth. The nature of life is to always be growing and developing. People with a strong sense of self are okay with this fact, and know they will continue to change over the years.

People with a strong sense of self also have a sense of direction, of a place they are headed in life.  In other words, they are not stagnant, but have a sense of direction and growth in their own lives.

Controlling behavior comes from a weak sense of self, in the midst of a weak relationship, where the connection is not trusted.  Also, controlling behavior is based in a place of shame and fear.  It is something we bring with us from the family in which we grew up.  Shame-based families create people who either control or let others control them.

As I said in my previous post, controlling behavior is always about fear: that you will not get what you need or want in life. This controlling behavior is on a continuum. The continuum stretches from allowing others to control us to controlling everyone else. Predictably, in the middle is the point of health.

Controlling behavior is about having it “my way,” and micromanaging those around us. We may micromanage our spouse, our children, our coworkers, and our life situation. In the process, we nullify the other person. We decide that we know what is best, and that the other person does not. Controlling behavior is based on the belief that the controller’s way is the better way, the correct way.  If that was not believed, on some level, it would not be controlled.

In fact, I would argue that people who control really do believe they do it for the best — of themselves and others.  They are not out to just be the one in charge, but truly believe they have the necessary answer and direction.  Unfortunately, it comes at a disregard for others.

Some people asked me to give specific examples of controlling behavior. I hesitate to do this, because this will become the yardstick. Some people will say, “see, I don’t do that, so I’m not being controlling.”  Controlling behavior comes in so many shades and types that just a few examples will not cover the spectrum.

However, there are some common places in a marriage where this happens. For example, often, controlling behavior arises around money. One person makes all of the financial decisions, decides how to pay the bills, decides how to invest the money, and decides how much somebody gets to spend on anything. Money is merely the means of control, not about the control. Control around money issues is rooted in the fear about money. It may be rooted in not having enough money, or in not trusting that the other person will make good, sound financial decisions. But whatever the cause, it’s based in fear.

Controlling behavior often shows itself in a marriage around the issue of sex:  when to have sex, how to have sex, when not to have sex, are all examples of controlling behavior around sex. Sometimes, sex is used as a reward for good behavior, and a punishment for “bad behavior.” In other words, if things don’t go the way one person wants, the other person is not going to have sex with them. This ends up controlling the sexual relationship between the couple.

Notice that sex and money are two primary places where couples can play out a sense of WE, or get stuck in a pattern of playing you/me.  In other words, controlling behavior can often be found in the very areas where they could most connect as a couple.

For another example, sometimes controlling behavior takes place around the issue of parenting. One person deems their way of parenting as the “correct way” and the other person does it incorrectly. This undermines the parenting of both parents, but particularly the parent with the “incorrect” way of parenting. Similarly, many couples find controlling behavior in the household duties. One person is convinced that they know the correct way of carrying out the duties of the household. This always leaves the other person as having the incorrect way.

Behind all of these areas, there is a common theme of criticism from the one who believes they have the right way. The method of chastising the other person is through criticism, or correcting, or doing it over.

This brings us to very important point: controlling behavior is based in shame. It is based in fearing how we will be perceived, about appearances. This is learned behavior, and it comes from families where there is perfectionism, blame, and reactivity. Unfortunately, when there is controlling behavior, the same traits are passed on to the next generation. People learn they have to do things perfectly, or they will be rejected. They learn that any shortcomings will not merely be mistakes, but will cause blame.  The way these two lessons are learned is through emotional reactivity. In other words, somebody gets upset, angry, or has some other strong emotional reaction. This is internalized, and the person feels that they have missed the mark, and are blamed for it.
This is why I said earlier that while it looks like the person who is controlling has a strong sense of self, controlling behavior actually comes from the very weak sense of self. While someone may act self-assured, beneath the surface, he or she is afraid of how the world will view and judge him or her. It’s about appearances. Correctness or wrongness, perfection or imperfection, are all fears from a weak sense of self.

Usually, the person who is controlling has also either lost a sense of boundaries or misunderstands them.

So, to clarify, let’s talk for a minute about standards and boundaries. A standard is what I expect of myself. A boundary is what I will not let happen to me.

Standards are something that only you can own. It is yours to keep. It is not something you can give to anyone else. You can try to teach it, but you can’t make somebody have your standard. I say this from a purely practical perspective, not philosophical. For example, I may hold as a standard that I will be honest with people around me. Whether I do that or not is irrelevant. That can be my standard. I can have a standard that I will be honest, but I cannot transfer that to anyone else.

For example, I may say that I’ll be honest with everyone else, and do that. I may never tell a lie, stretch the truth, or  misrepresent. That would be my standard. And I may have a boundary that if somebody lies to me, they cannot stay in my life. That would be a boundary. But I cannot enforce that somebody else has to be honest with everyone around them. That is impossible for me to monitor. So a standard is something that I hold for myself. A boundary is what I will not let happen to me.

I like to think of a boundary very much like a fence in my backyard. If I have a normal-sized fence, one that comes up to my waist, it just marks my space. People can cross the fence, but if they do, I can walk outside and tell them that they are on my property. They would know that, because I have a fence line. It doesn’t keep them out, but I can send them to the other side of the fence. The reason I like this analogy is because it points to the fact that boundaries are about what people do towards us. Not how they act in general, but how they move towards me. Usually, there is some aggressive side to a boundary violation. Somebody who crosses a fence to get into my property has chosen to come into my space that is clearly marked. It’s the same with personal boundaries.  Somebody has moved against us, towards us in an aggressive way.

This is important, because when this is confused, we can interact in controlling ways, thinking that we were just protecting our boundaries. For instance, I had someone who wrote me to tell me that her spouse was violating her boundary. In the middle of a conversation, he would walk away. When he walked away, it shut down the conversation. She felt like this was a boundary violation, and was trying to figure out how to enforce the boundaries of making him talk to her. If she had done this — forced him to talk, I would say that she had moved to controlling behavior. He was moving away from her, as is his right as a person. We all have the choice, helpful or unhelpful, to have a conversation or avoid a conversation.

My suggestion was for her to not try to force him to talk with her at that point, nor try to make it into a boundary issue.  Instead, I suggested that she let him leave. She might understand that at this point, he felt the need for space, and was perhaps overwhelmed with the conversation. In other words, trying to continue the conversation would not just be useless, but counterproductive. It would likely devolve into an argument or an angry discussion. Instead, I suggested that she follow-up with him a little while later, saying “hey, I need about 10 more minutes of your time to finish up that last conversation.” This would give him some time to cool off, and when said in a neutral tone, was an invitation to continue the conversation.

It might be said that the man, in this case, would also being  acting controlling by walking away and refusing to talk. I would guess that over the years, they had developed the pattern where this happened repeatedly. So, when the man controlled the situation by walking away, it was rewarded with the fact that the issue at the heart of the conversation was left to die.

This makes another important point. Controlling behavior is often unwittingly reinforced. When one person tries to control, and the other person lets them, it rewards the behavior. Since controlling behavior is based in fear, it is used to control things that make someone feel fearful, as a way of trying to feel more secure and less fearful. When this is reinforced, it makes it look like the fear was real and necessary. It makes it feel like it really was necessary to avoid the discussion, or the behavior. So unwittingly, it is reinforced for both people.

We live in a world of uncertainty, which can make us feel fearful.  Fear can often fuel behavior that is counter-productive to our lives, especially when we have not nurtured a sense of self and have not worked to monitor our own boundaries.
Whether you feel that you are controlling or being controlled, your task is to examine and claim your own standards (what you expect of yourself) and protect your boundaries (what you will not let someone do toward you).  The stronger your sense of self, the less the need to react around issues of control.

Oh, and let’s be clear:  life is an ongoing project, where mistakes are an opportunity to learn and grow.  Mistakes are NOT the same as failure, unless we allow ourselves to be captured there.

How To Save Your Marriage And Stop Being Controlling
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

Are you trying to save your marriage after hearing a spouse tell you that you are always controlling.  How can you save a marriage when a spouse has given up, due to your controlling behavior?  Hang in there, and we will explore that question.

I hear from people almost everyday, telling me that their spouse has just revealed how angry and hurt they are by the controlling behavior – many on the verge of divorce, because of this dynamic.

Many people tell me that they did not even realize that they were being controlling. However, in reflection, many are finally ready to admit that they, indeed, are controlling.  Sometimes, it comes at the stake of having to save a marriage that is on the verge of falling apart.

So what does cause controlling behavior? Why do some people seem to need to find a way of controlling others? Why is it that many people find themselves constantly seeking to have the outcome the way they wanted, eliminating anyone else’s outcome or opinion?

Controlling behavior has a central theme to it. In fact, there is one central cause to controlling behavior. The reason behind controlling behavior is very important to understand if you want to change that behavior. In fact, until you fully understand how much this one emotion affects you, you will be constantly working and striving to control the situations around you, even if that is a losing proposition.

(And I promise you, trying to control a spouse, a child, or almost any situation, is a recipe for failure. It is also a recipe for misery, not just yours, but everyone else around you.)

So what is that one emotion? The answer is very simple. In fact, it may seem too simple. Hear me out. I think you will agree that the one reason for controlling behavior is . . . FEAR. That’s the emotion. That’s the emotion that will get you to shift to being controlling, even when things are going well.

The interesting thing is that some people have elevated their controlling behavior to the point of trying to pass it off as an okay trait, even a positive attribute. I have heard many people say “I’m a control freak,” “I just like to have things my way,” or “I’m just that way.”  The way it is said betrays the fact that they are, deep down, rather proud of this fact.

Whenever we elevate a negative trait, we know we are headed for trouble. We have managed to justify our own behavior, and force it on other people.

Sure, we all want things our way, but sometimes, we get to the place where we can’t have it any other way. We won’t even allow others to have an opinion. And if they try to do something, and it is not up to our standards, we take over and tell them what to do, or even do it ourselves. When this behavior gets ingrained, then it has shifted to a dangerous level.

This often happens in a marriage. And unfortunately, when there is a marriage crisis, it’s even easier to become more and more controlling. This is because fear is getting activated on a regular basis.

You are fearful that something could happen, that you will lose this relationship, and so you control more and more.

Fear. That is what drives controlling behavior. Even if you are unaware of the fear and anxiety.  Even if you are aware of it.

The fear comes from two places.

One is the fear of being out of control. This is the fear of not being able to control your environment, a thing spinning in ways you don’t want them to, and of feeling and inability to move things in the direction you want.

The second is related. This is the feeling of fear that you will not get what you want and what you think you need. When we’re afraid that we are not going to get what we want, we can to try to control the situation, our attempt to get what we want.

That fear can cause problems in a relationship. Because in the midst of trying to get what we want, we are probably affecting what somebody else wants in a negative way. In other words, if I am trying to force the situation so they get what I want, you’re likely not going to get what you want.

But let’s be clear at this point: control is an illusion. It does not work. It is not effective. And it only creates resentment on the part of those around us.

So why do we do it? Because on the few times that it does actually work, at least short-term, it convinces us that we CAN control the situation.  We get positive reinforcement for something that doesn’t really work. Then, when it doesn’t work, we keep remembering the time that it did work, and decide we just need to try harder. When we do that, we just become more controlling.

Sound familiar? Is this a place where you sometimes find yourself? Can you relate to what I’m saying?

You see, built into the control is the belief that we are right. If you didn’t think you were right, you would not be trying to control things. Control can come from the best of intentions, and still destroy a relationship.

Over time, controlling behavior causes resentment on the part of the person who is being controlled. Over time, it also forces the person who is controlling to always be right and to always be responsible. In that set-up, both people lose.

In a marriage, when there is a controlling person, or controlling behavior, the other person has to allow him/herself to be controlled. The couple sets up a dynamic of control/controlling between them, and it begins to eat away at the relationship.

What often comes from these relationships is a parent-child relationship between spouses. And whenever there is a parent-child relationship, that child will eventually hit the teenage years. At that point, you suddenly have a rebellious spouse on your hands, even if they have benefited from the controlled/controlling relationship.

A controlled/controlling relationship is not about being a WE. It is a you/me relationship, where one person’s opinion is lost to the other. One’s opinions and actions are negated by the other. That is where the real harm is done.

An important point about controlling behavior is that it is based in one person’s standards. A standard is something that you expect of yourself.  It’s the standard of your expectation for how you will be in the world, how you will treat other people, how you will fulfill your duties, and how you will interact.

Unfortunately, we often expect others to have our same standard. This is not the case. The problem comes, not from our own standard, but when we try to place it on somebody else, and are upset when they do not fulfill our own standard. Practically speaking, it is not possible to give your standard to someone else.

Again, this is not a philosophical statement, but a practical statement. For example, you may have a standard that you will be honest with people around you. However, you cannot expect those people to be honest with you. To be clear, there may be consequences if someone is not honest with you, but you cannot force them to be honest.

This often happens with parents and children. Parents will place their standard on a child, but the child will do otherwise. Which is why I say this is not a philosophical statement. It would be nice to be able to make sure that our children follow our high standards. But it is not within our possibility. For example, with the standard of honesty, you may have consequences for someone if they are dishonest with you, but they may be lying to everybody else around them. There is nothing you can do to stop that. Practically speaking. Again, this is not philosophical.

Yet when we are in our controlling spot, it is often because we were trying to get our standard fulfilled by somebody else. For example, many couples fight about housekeeping. One or the other will perform a household duty that will not be to the standards of the other person. The person with the higher standard, and higher frustration, treats the other like a child. They try to teach them, coax them, coach them, or force them to do the duty correctly.

This is not, as it is often phrased between the couple, a question of doing it correctly or incorrectly, but a difference in standards. However, it is manifest in controlling behavior.

So what do you do about your controlling behavior? If your spouse is telling you that they can no longer tolerate the controlling behavior, how do you solve this issue?

I have some suggestions for you.

1.     Acknowledge what you are doing. Notice the times that you feel the need to take over. Notice the times when you either coach or coax someone to do something your way.

Acknowledge that fear is driving you. Then consider what this fear might be about evokes a fearful response for you? What feels at risk?

Then notice that the behavior is truly worthless. And usually ineffective. Couples have the same arguments over and over, throughout the years. Rebellious behavior is often the answer to the controlling behavior. In the end, at best, you get a stalemate. At worst you get conflict, anger, resentment, and finally disdain.

2.     Breathe. Seriously, breathe. Remember, controlling behavior is based in fear. Fear happens deep in your brain.

Threats are perceived long before you are consciously aware of them. Your unconscious brain detects the threat, and put you in fear mode. Breathing is a way of short-circuiting the process.

But you have to breathe correctly. You want to learn how to belly breathe, if you do not know how to do it already. If you don’t know how to do this, it’s easy.  Lie down on a bed, place a hand over your chest, and place a hand on your belly button.

Now begin to breathe, so that only the hand over your belly moves. The hand on your chest should be completely still. When you do this, it is relaxing breathing that tells your brain there is nothing to fear. So, when you feel yourself getting anxious and uptight, and feel the need to correct how something is happening, or force an outcome, belly breathe. Breathe slowly and consciously, and your brain calms down a bit.

3.     Be mindful of the interactions. Identify out where you become controlling. With whom do you become controlling? What circumstances trigger you to become controlling? Began to be mindful of those moments.

Watch yourself as you move into those circumstances. Observe your thinking, and what happens to your thinking.

Your goal is to recognize, more and more, when these moments occur. As you notice these moments, you’ll be more mindful of the response it elicits in you, and can decide on a more conscious reaction.

4.     Begin to develop your emotional awareness. For many of us, when we are fearful or anxious, we stop noticing our emotions and start acting on our emotions.

But you may find that if you just sit with your emotions — not react to your motions, but just sit with them, they are not dangerous, nothing will happen, and you can choose not to act or react to the emotion.

Emotional awareness is not about changing the emotion, but realizing the emotions as they are, and realizing that it does not require any particular action on your part. This is when you can decide to sit with your emotions, rather than react and respond to your emotions.

5.     Be open to other possibilities and potentials. Are there other ways of parenting a child? Are there other ways of loading the dishwasher? Are there other ways of dealing with the bills? Are there other ways of deciding what should be done and what should not be done on the weekends?

If you get away from the assumption that there is a wrong and a right, you are left with the possibility of other options. Things may not be done your way; that does not mean it’s the wrong way. Richard Carlson, the author of Don’t Sweat The Small Stuff, was famous for saying that you can either be happy or you can be right, but you can’t be both. Which do you want to be? Being open to possibilities leads to happiness. But only after you get for your anxiety and fear.

One final thought for you: don’t suddenly and without notice do the opposite of controlling. Don’t go from being controlling to suddenly giving up all control. That’s not fair either. As is often true, health is a place in between. It’s where both people are responsible, and make decisions, and share perspectives.

Imagine for a minute that you’re the trapeze catcher of a trapeze team. Your partner has for years released the trapeze bar and lept into your arms, waiting to catch your partner. The two of you have done it over and over and over. For years you have done this. So much so, the both of you know exactly how to do it, even with your eyes closed. In fact, with the flips that your partner is doing, your partner doesn’t even see your hands, but grabs them every time. Each time your partner jumps, you catch. Then one day, without any notice or warning, you just quit catching. Your partner is left flailing through the air, without a clue as to what has happened.

This is what happens when somebody goes from being very controlling to refusing to do anything, giving up all points of control. Both people are off-balance, and neither is going to land safely. Be clear about the places where you decide to give up control, and be clear about how to share that responsibility.

Controlling behavior comes from fear, but a fear that is unwarranted, and useless. The threat is not real, nor will catastrophe befall most of the issues around which people control.

Today is the day to give up your control, and come to a partnership. It’s time to start a WE and make a shift to a new partnership.

How’s Your Attitude?
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

How To Save Your Marriage, It is All In Your HeadNothing can stop a person with the right mental attitude from achieving his goal; nothing on earth can help a person with the wrong mental attitude.
–Thomas Jefferson

Is it time for an adjustment?  Are you needing to make a mental shift?

Today, as I am writing this, it is the 3rd day of overcast, dreary, rainy days.  I must admit, I have a bodily response to this kind of weather.  I find my mood dropping a bit.  Creativity is a bit more tough to come by.  I stare at the blank computer screen and  hope for some inspiration to write something that may be helpful to you.

Earlier this morning, I stood in my basement and had a long discussion with myself.  Do I work out or take a break?  My sabotaging mind began to tell me about how my shoulder is a little tweaked this morning.  “My legs are a little tired,” it said.  “Probably it won’t be a good workout.  Maybe I should just do a little, then take a rest,” my mind kept telling me.

“But today is a workout day.  Today will pass quickly, and if I don’t get busy now, I will not have the chance to get it done,” my mind answered.  Later, the phone will be ringing.  Emails will need an answer.  So, I do what I always do.  I decided to get busy.  And about 10 minutes into exercising, my sabotaging mind finally quieted down (not silent, but quieter), and I got sweaty.

At the end, I realized that my exercise time had been real quality.  I had really gone after it.  Not 100%, but mid 90%’s.

The next challenge is writing time.  My mind starts again:  “Perhaps another cup of coffee will get me going.”  “Maybe I should check email again,” my sabotaging mind says.  Then I remember the advice of an elderly professor when I was not writing my dissertation, but should have been:  “Put some glue in that seat, sit down, and write!”  So, I sit down and write.

Then the question I pose to myself this year comes back, “Am I showing up?”

Each person in my family always chooses a word to live into for the year.  We reveal the word on New Year’s Eve.  This year, I cheated.  I wanted two words, so I just hyphenated:  Show-Up.  That is my word.

When I say “show up,” I don’t mean just dragging my body along through the day, sort of being there.  I mean really Showing UP!  Bringing myself, all of me, into the present and into the presence of the moment.

Woody Allen said “Eighty percent of success is just showing up.”  Unfortunately, many people have used this as an excuse to just be somewhere, to be physically present — hoping that will be enough.  That is not showing up.  In an interview, Allen revealed that the life lesson he was talking about was the need to do what you were doing.  If you wanted to write a book, you had to close the door and write — not do all the distractions that come from that.  If you wanted to learn the clarinet, you had to actually show up and practice.

“What,” you may ask, “does your mental attitude have to do with ME saving my marriage?”

Ah, there is the important point of this article.  I think YOUR mental attitude is a huge determinant of your capacity to save your marriage.  Let me be clear:  you may have a great mental attitude but still not save your marriage.  But I guarantee that if you have a poor mental attitude, you will NOT be able to save your marriage.

Fortunately, you do have control over your attitude.  You may not have control over whether your mind keeps tossing out the sabotaging thoughts.  But you do have a choice in whether you buy into those thoughts.

Your mind is simply doing what minds do:  creating thoughts.  Minds do that.  Some are useful and constructive.  Others are useless and/or destructive.  Fortunately, your observing mind gets to make a choice — listen to the constructive, ignore the destructive.

The real problem is not your mind thinking; it is when you buy into the thoughts as reality.  Sure, my shoulder was a bit tweaked this morning.  So, I needed to be mindful of that while exercising.  But it did NOT necessitate me avoiding the exercising.  It was simply a matter of examining the thought for what was useful and ignoring the useless.

When you have made a decision to save your marriage, you have to make a shift to a new mindset.  Your mind will constantly send you thoughts about why you can’t/shouldn’t/won’t save your marriage.  But that does not make those thoughts true.  It is just your sabotaging mind at work.

The story has yet to be finished, even if your mind has written the ending.  In fact, your mind probably has written any number of endings.

Which ending is true?

The ending of the story has yet to be written, so don’t believe that sabotaging mind!  Time for a readjustment.  It is time to tap into a different attitude.

Here are some ways to do this:

1)  Consult your plans, not your emotions.

This is a quote my wife often uses (she is also a therapist).

We often stop following our plan, but instead start allowing our emotions (caused by the thoughts of your sabotaging mind) to guide our actions.  Your emotions are not reasons for actions.  They are the results of your thoughts.  And the longer you linger on those thoughts, the more power those thoughts/emotions gain.  And the more power those emotions gain, the stronger you grow to believe your thoughts are true.

Might your thoughts be true?  Sure.  But they may also be false.  Or at least exaggerated.  At the very least, when you get lost in your thoughts, you lose your capacity of noticing the difference.  When you consult with your plan, you stay on-course.

Notice, though, that there is a need to have a plan to consult!  If you have not created your plan to save your marriage, you may find some help with my Save The Marriage System.

2)  Make a decision to Show Up.

Do a self-check here and there.  Are you really present?  When you are with your spouse, are you really there?  Are you really listening?  Are you stuck in the past, in what has happened?  Are you convinced that you have “been done wrong,” and there needs to be a shift on the part of your spouse?  Are you ready to let go of your complaints?

Sometimes, instead of really being present, we let that internal “script writer” really take control.  Then, the conversation with a spouse is less about what is really being spoken and more about creating the script you think should be spoken.  Yep, that mind is a great (almost Academy Award worthy) creator of the conversation that “should” happen.  Unfortunately, your spouse is also creating a script, with an entirely different writer.  Neither of you will stay “on script,” either your own or your spouse’s script.

So instead, try to really show up and focus on the words being spoken.  Ignore that script-writing mind that tells you about the words that “should” be spoken.  Respond from the deeper place of having truly listened to your spouse.

Presence is powerful.  Your presence can only happen in the present.

3)  Recognize the difference between your thoughts and you.

Our mind is just the creator of thoughts.  The same mind that takes humans to great heights also pulls us to great depths — but only when we forget that our mind is just thinking.

The fact that we are thinking is never the issue.  The fact that we forget we are thinking is the real problem.  A quick reminder to myself that I am just thinking is often enough to give me a little space.  Just enough space to see the thoughts are not reality.  Just a thought.  Then I have a choice to stop believing that thought.

We all have the “observational mind,” capable of stepping back to watch the voiced mind talking and talking.  Once you shift to the observational mind, the voiced mind is shifted just a little away from pretending to be reality.  It is suddenly quite clear that the voiced mind is just thinking.

Just to remind you, not every thought is false.  Remember, my shoulder really was sore this morning.  So there was an element of truth.

This is important, though:  Not every thought is true!  We tend to err on the side of believing every thought.  We tend to stop noticing how critical and sabotaging our minds can be.

You are not your thoughts.  You are having thoughts.  You are observing your mind at work.  It is up to you to decide just how much you will believe those thoughts.

4)  You CAN shift your attitude!

We live in a world that seems to have bought into the belief that we are slaves to our emotions.  Our emotional life is given way too much power and authority.  People say “I can’t help how I feel,” not as a statement of their emotions, but as a justification for their actions.

Emotions are often beyond our control.  There are lots of impactors on our emotional life.  Thoughts certainly play a key role on that front.  The environment also is a factor.  I know that gray days are going to gray my mood.  But you know what?  I have spoken with people who actually LOVE the same weather that leaves me feeling low.

Hmmm.  So, those feelings are not because of my environment, but how I respond/react to my environment — and how I think about that environment!

Okay, so I will admit that we are not able to stop our emotions.  And I would not want to do that.  I am not wanting to create a “plain vanilla” existence.

I just want to draw a distinction between how we feel and how we choose to act — how we choose to Show Up!

So, how DO you choose to ACT differently than you FEEL?  Well, it is probably something you have done repeatedly throughout your life.

When I was younger, from my early teens to late teens, I was a performing magician.  I started doing tricks even earlier and got hooked.  In fact, at one time, I was convinced I wanted to be (don’t laugh!) a professional magician.  What started as curiosity soon grew to a job.  I was fairly in-demand for parties, both children and adults.  I did a ton of shows.

During those years, I learned a great deal that still teaches me today.  I cut my teeth on public speaking by doing birthday parties and other events.  And one of the things I learned is that if I did not bring the energy for the show, there would be no energy.  It did not matter if I had a bad day, if my parents were upset with me (or I with them), if I was upset about not being able to get a date, or any other manner of teenage angst.  I was being paid to perform.  So, I showed up.

I discovered that even if I didn’t feel the energy, I could create the energy.  I could step onto stage and BE the energy that needed to be there.  I could set aside my emotional mindset and embrace my “show-up mindset.”

What I learned is that there is no situation where that is not possible.  I can always make a choice to pull from deep within and really show up.  That doesn’t mean that I always do.  But I always know that I can, so if I don’t show up, it is really my own fault.

5)  Adopt a PMA.

One of my passions is scuba diving.  I spend far too much time breathing air above the surface when I would rather breathe it below the surface (in the tropics, please) of the water.  I enjoy it so much that I decided I wanted to teach others to love it, so I became a certified scuba instructor.

But long before that certification, I went through the basic certification as a diver.  My instructor (and now we co-instruct) is a long-time diver.  In fact, he was certified at about the very beginning of any certification.  He still dives and is very active.  And he was an excellent role model as I was moving through certification.

I remember the very first lecture, poolside, in my first class.  Ray announced to the class that there would be some challenges in the training process.  He expected one thing from us.  Not perfection, and not successfully completing each task.  But he expected us to have a PMA — Positive Mental Attitude.

During his discussion, Ray noted that a PMA included an assumption that we could do the activity.  It was a willingness to learn, to try, and then to practice each skill.  Ray simply asked that we never say to ourselves, “I can’t do that.”  Instead, we were to keep reminding ourselves that we COULD do it, then work at it until we could.

There are many times during my years as a coach/therapist where someone has said, “I can’t. . . .” and fill in the blank with any number of things they believed they were incapable of.  I would always end there phrase with “yet.”  I didn’t mind someone saying “I can’t [fill in the blank] yet.”  Then we could explore how to get past the limits and make it happen.

Again, just to remind you, not every marriage is going to be saved.  But to start with an attitude that your relationship cannot be saved locks you into that, with no other option.  I would rather you choose a “wait and see” approach to what happens to the marriage, while saying “I CAN work on this relationship.  I can work to reconnect, to build a stronger relationship.  I can work to be a better person, to forgive, and to be forgiven.”

Step into your own PMA, and recognize you get to choose the attitude you carry around.

6) Disconnect from the outcome.

This last point may confuse you a bit.  Your goal is to save a relationship, right?  So why disconnect from the outcome?

Because you have no control over the outcome.

You may do all of the right things, you may have a great PMA, you may be a great person that would be a great spouse.  And still, your partner can opt to leave the relationship.

If you are tied to an outcome, you will only be okay if that outcome is achieved.  And yet the outcome is not in your control.  It is always a losing situation to have your well-being tied to something for which you do not have control.

So what do you have control over?

You have control to choose to work on the relationship.  You have control to choose your attitude of how you will approach life.  You have control to not believe everything your mind cooks up.  You have control to choose a course of action, regardless of the emotional storms that hit you.

The outcome, you have no control.  The process, you have full control of how you enter into it.

7)  Show Up.

Make it your goal to show up more and more in life.  Be present.  Bring yourself into the moment.  Leave your fears to the side.  Choose to show up in all of your awesomeness!

Are You Committed to Your Marriage or Your Complaints?
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

Every week, I have the privilege of working with a very talented group of Relationship Coaches.  They are on staff for one purpose:  to help you learn how to save your marriage.

But I get the benefit of their talent as we all learn from each other.  Since we are spread all over the map, our meetings are by phone.  And this past week, on that phone call, I got a gem of an insight I wanted to share with you.

Annette told us that she asked a client, “Are you committed to your relationship, or are you committed to your complaints?”

Let that sink in for a minute.

Where is your commitment?  Is it to being right, to hold your spouse’s perceived shortcomings, mistakes, missteps, and failures up for the world to see?  Or is it a commitment to building a loving marriage you both can treasure?

Here is a fairly universal truth — we all secretly believe that we are right, and our beliefs are true.  Oh sure, we may have some moments of doubt, but in the heat of a moment, we lead with our secret belief — not our humility.

This is true, even if you are working hard to save the marriage.  Even if you are here, looking for advice on how you can turn your marriage around, this is a question to ponder.

You see, over the years, I have heard from the spouse who is trying to save a marriage and I have heard from the spouse who wants out.  The difference between them is not a belief in their personal innocence and rightness, but that one still wants to move forward and the other does not.

I am blessed with a loving wife and a strong marriage.  Yet this still applies to me.  A few years back, my wife and I got into a “heated discussion.”  The content, like almost every other argument, is long lost to time.

During this particular discussion, we were in the midst of daily life in our house.  So, the argument would go for a few exchanges, then we had to get something done.  During one of the lulls, my wife had to go downstairs to take care of something.

Standing there in the kitchen, my mind kept playing out the discussion we were having, and a commitment grew in my mind about how right I was!

As that little scriptwriter in our mind often does, it created a script that I just knew would win the debate.  In my mind, my wife would see how right I was and how wrong she was.  So, against the better judgement of my neo-cortex, I followed to the basement.  I was just warming up to deliver my argument.  My wife turned and said “Before you say anything, if we are going to be together for our entire life, is what you are about to say going to help?”

I gulped down my words.  I thought about what she said, and apologized.  The argument ended there.

When I went to the basement, my commitment to my complaint was stronger than my commitment to our relationship.

Is that ever true for you?

Do you find yourself more committed to defending your beliefs than to defending your relationship.

Do you find yourself more committed to pointing out the “needed areas of improvement” in your spouse than you are to being in a loving relationship?

Do you find yourself more committed to scoring points and keeping score than to connecting and building connection?

Let me invite you to have a stronger commitment to your relationship than your commitment to your complaints.

Can Every Marriage Be Saved? Will YOUR Marriage Be Saved?
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

how to save your marriageI am in the process of trying to provide more resources to help people who want to know how to save a marriage.  So, I turned to the experts in that area:  you!  I sent out a request to some people by email, asking them to take a very short survey.

First, I was shocked in how many people jumped in to give me some ideas!  I offered nothing, other than a promise that I would work on developing more help.  And still, many people responded.

But second, in the process, my heart ached.  I asked for some ideas on what I might have missed and one reply really made me sad:  “You make us feel bad that we can’t save our marriage.”  Wow!  That one got me.  Every day, I work to help people to save their marriage, but I NEVER want someone to feel bad when that does not happen.

Marriage is one spot where you only partially have control.  The other person still holds a trump card.  As I have told many couples, staying married is like a vote — but one that requires unanimous support.  One vote to stay and one to end it will often end it.

In every state in the United States, it is possible to divorce, even if one person does not want it.  In fact, the “no fault” movement of a couple of decades ago made it easy to leave, even if one person still wants to fight for it.  Sure, it did allow many people to leave marriages of abuse or infidelity.  (Which, by the way, is not a “no fault.”)

But it also made it possible for one person to take action, and over the protests and efforts of the other, get divorced.

My intention, over the course of my professional life, has been to save as many unnecessary divorces as possible.  But more than that, it has been to build incredible marriages, strong enough to thrive in a fairly heartless world.

To that end, I have always tried to provide assistance and sources that will do just that:  save marriages and rebuild them.

I have never been so optimistic as to believe that EVERY marriage can be saved.  Only that MANY could be saved.

And many times, I receive an email asking “will MY marriage be saved?”  Because that really is the root of the question, isn’t it?  It doesn’t matter if many marriages can be saved.  The “rubber hits the road” with YOUR marriage.  And unfortunately, here is the truth:  I cannot predict, from this distance, whether your particular relationship is retrievable.  I do know that many use my principles and are successful in reestablishing a relationship, rebuilding a crumbling marriage.

So my question is this:  “do you want to try?”

There are few guarantees in life.  But you do have a choice in your attitude.  Will you be hopeful or hopeless?  Will you see your life plan as meaningful or meaningless?

For myself, I always tend to be hopeful that a relationship can be saved, and I find it meaningful for people to work on improving a relationship.  How about you?

I also recognize there are limits.  The limits are around what we can and cannot control.

You cannot control:Your spouse’s reaction.  Your spouse is going to react however he/she reacts, and there is no way we can control that.
The influence of family and friends.  Your spouse may find poor counsel with family and friends.  Those people may push your spouse to continue the process of disconnection.  You have no control over that.
Your spouse acting out or committing infidelity.  Sometimes, we all take responsibility for actions of another.  While I am clear with people that infidelity happens in disconnected relationships, that is not the same as being responsible for or causing the action.  A person, at some point, chooses to act out or commit adultery.  It is not in the control of the spouse.
Your spouse having an addiction.  I could go on for quite a while about this, but let me be clear:  the person who is acting out the addiction is 100% responsible for the addiction — and for ending the addiction.  The spouse is NOT responsible, nor do they cause the addiction.  But it can certainly derail the attempts to reconnect a relationship.
Your spouse’s mental health.  If you have a spouse with depression or anxiety, or a spouse who suffers from some other mental illness, it is not you causing it.  And you cannot make the other person get treatment (at least until there is a risk to life).  This is a statement of practicality, not philosophy.  People have to find their way to treatment when they are ready.  But again, it can make reconnecting very difficult.
Your spouse’s willingness to forgive.  This is a big one.  A marriage has to be partially built on a willingness to forgive, given the intimate nature of marriage.  People are just going to hurt each other when they live that close.  No way around it.  But sometimes, people misunderstand the nature of forgiveness and refuse to forgive (sadly, since that means they must continue to drag the pain around).

All of those pieces, you cannot control.  Your spouse has to find his/her own way through those issues.  They can certainly keep you from connecting, but you can do little but watch.

That said, there are some things you CAN control:Your own reaction.  This is not an absolute.  Sometimes, a reaction sneaks through that we cannot stop. (Thank goodness for apologies!)  But for the most part, we have control over how we react.  Have you ever noticed that there are some people that you will react in ways that you would NEVER react with some other person?  For instance, you might yell at a friend for something that would keep you silent with a police officer or a boss.  In other words, there are times when we pretend that we reacted because there was no option.  But there often is.
Your Boundaries and your Standards.  Boundaries are what you WILL NOT let someone else do to you.  For example, you may have a boundary that someone cannot yell at you, curse at you, hit you, push you, etc.  Standards are what you expect of yourself.  You may say you will be honest with other people, that you will treat people with respect, that you will forgive and move on, etc.  The danger is trying to put your standard on someone else or forgetting to hold your boundaries.  Nonetheless, you do have control over both.
Your own addictions and health.  Again, not an absolute.  Sometimes, our health is not in our control.  But whether we get help or not, and whether we address our issues or not, that is always in our control.
Taking care of yourself.  Yep, pretty much in your control.  If you eat poorly, rest too little, exercise too little, and forget to attend to your own needs, that is your issue, and in your control.  And you may notice that when people do not take care of and respect themselves, few others do.  So even in the midst of a marriage crisis, make it a priority to take care of yourself.
Focusing on a fuller life.  When we are in a crisis, we often become uni-dimensional — focused only on that one aspect.  Our life begins to become a one-track emphasis on a piece of life.  But life is about fullness and meaning.  It is about growing and developing.  So even if your marriage is in trouble, be sure you are multidimensional in your approach to life.

You are NOT your marriage crisis!

3 Reasons Why Your Efforts To Save Your Marriage Are Failing
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

Your marriage is in crisis.  It may be a surprise or it may just be you have finally hit bottom after watching a slow and chronic decline.  But either way, you find yourself fighting for your marriage.

When “Anne” called, she was in the same spot.  Her husband dropped the news on her over the weekend.  She knew things weren’t great, but thought they were just in a slump.  She told me that on Friday, he seemed irritated and distant, but she just chalked it up to a bad day at work.

But by Saturday afternoon, it was clear something else was going on.  After some prodding and poking, he finally erupted with “I’m not happy!”  From there, the conversation quickly devolved into an argument.  And with that, her husband announced, “This is why I am done!  We always end up here!”

Where did the discussion go wrong?

Mistake #1 — Anne begged, cajoled, and argued, in an attempt to change her husband’s mind.  She was sure that if she could just get him to “see the light,” he would decide to hang in there and work on it.

Instead, Anne proved his point.  She turned into her worst side.  Her controlling tendencies emerged.  And in the process, she tried to use words to “convince,” but they ended up feeling more like attacks and “crazy talk.”

Mistake #2 — Anne threatened.  She threatened to take the children, take the house, take the money, and tell everyone about her husband’s “true side.”

That was another leap further into crisis.  Now, not only was her husband unhappy, he was also feeling threatened.  Whenever anyone feels threatened, we tend to defend ourselves.  And when we defend ourselves, we armor ourselves.  Any warm emotions have to be hidden and put away.  What emerges instead, is anger and counter-threat.

To add insult to injury, since divorce is a legal process, the many threats Anne leveled, she could not even fulfill.  But in her blind fear, she lashed out.

Mistake #3 — Anne manipulated.  Somewhere on the internet, on a site about how to save your marriage, Anne read about using “reverse psychology.”  So, Anne tried that.  For a second, her husband was speechless — just long enough for Anne to think she had made some leeway.  Then, she discovered that his speechlessness was his confusion and frustration that Anne was not really in the conversation.  She was still working to control the situation — and therefore, him.

That was, as we say in the South, “gas on the fire.”  In a matter of 24 hours, Anne had managed to watch her husband go from being unhappy to living in an apartment across town.  In fact, in that same period, he had also made it very clear that any conversation with Anne was off-limits until she “stopped acting that way.”

Does any of this sound familiar?  Perhaps you have made the same mistakes.  Perhaps you find yourself still stuck.

Here is the overarching mistake that Anne made:  she was reacting out of fear.  Whenever we move from fear, we are in deep trouble.  Almost always, our reaction makes things worse.  In a panic, our insecure and threatened brain takes over, and off we run into deeper trouble.

Fear is never the best lead for our reaction.  But we have to have an alternative.  You want to make a plan on how you are going to rebuild your marriage.  You do NOT want to be running on emotion.  It will end up just like Anne.  Now, Anne and I are working on her plan, trying to rebuild the relationship 1 step at a time.  While Anne made mistakes and raised the barrier to saving her marriage, I think we can work through it — IF she can stop giving into her fear.  Notice, I did not say she needed to stop being afraid.

It is normal to have the emotions.  It is simply not helpful to react from that emotional spot.  As my wife tells her clients, “Consult your plan, not your emotions.”

Ready to make a plan?  Click here to get the resources you need to know how to save your marriage.

“It shouldn’t be this hard”
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

how to save your marriageI had heard that line many times before.  She was just the next client to tell me this.  It was her justification for ending the relationship.

“Brenda” was distraught, only 6 years into her marriage.  Their love was so strong in the beginning.  It seemed they were perfect for each other.

Slowly, almost imperceptibly, things began to shift.  Both Brenda and “Richard” worked hard, in demanding jobs.  And both had hobbies they loved.

Richard biked, and if you know bikers, he was nearly obsessed.  On the weekends, the road bike and he spent three to five hours zipping through the countryside.  Richard did century rides on a regular basis, pedaling 100 miles at a stretch.

Brenda was a bit more meditative.  She loved yoga, and spent many sunrises on the mat, saluting the sun.

Together, things seemed to be coming apart.  Conversations turned to arguments.  Arguments turned to silence.  Physical touch disappeared, and passion waned.

When they did try to reconnect, they repeated the cycle.  One or the other was ready, but the timing was off for the other.  Saturday mornings, Brenda sought out Richard, only to find his bike gone and he with it.

Other mornings, Richard brewed coffee for two, only to see Brenda heading out with her mat and water bottle.

At the end of the frustration, Brenda wandered into my office, convinced that they had made a mistake and were not “right” for each other.  “Right?” I inquired.  “Yes, we are just not a good fit.  If we were,” said Brenda, continuing with the phrase I so dislike, “it would not be this hard.”

Hmmm.  How did we get to this point?  Why do we assume that a relationship is wrong (or at least “not right”) if it is difficult?  Why is “easy” a sign of something being “right”?

I wondered this aloud, and got a quizzical expression from Brenda.  It would appear that I had uttered nonsense.  And perhaps I had.  But it just didn’t make sense to me.

Several years back, I was out of shape, in poor health, eating junk, and on the verge of a health crisis.  I was fortunate that the crisis passed, and I heard the wake-up call.

I started exercising, tried to eat better, and worked to improve myself.

And guess what?  IT WAS EXCRUCIATING!  I would exercise (which was hard) and then be in pain from exercising (which was harder).  I had to force myself to get up and do it again.

Foods I loved were deemed “off limits” by me, and I had to change my eating patterns.  It may come as no surprise that fats and sugars are, well, de-lish!  Not good for me, but mighty tasty!

I had to rewire my taste buds and my habits.  I had to get beyond the difficult and keep trying.

This morning, I got up, drank down a mixture of greens and antioxidants, swallowed some supplements, and hit the basement for exercise.

You know what?  It was STILL difficult.  Not painful, but a challenge.  In fact, I can always tell when I am no longer growing and progressing — it isn’t a challenge!

Which brings me back to couples.  If the relationship is not a bit of a challenge, YOU ARE NOT DOING IT RIGHT!  You are pretending to relate.  You are hiding the tough spots.  And you will discover that when you need the strength that comes with challenge and it is not there.

The other side?  If your relationship is a challenge AND you keep at it, you will be rewarded.  You will have the skills it takes to make it through the tough times together.  You will have the honesty of knowing that you have each others’ backs.

. . . But ONLY if you both commit to sticking with it, not looking for the easy way out, and NOT saying “this is too hard.”  If you tell me “this is tough,” I will agree.  Any intimate relationship is.  Just don’t tell me it shouldn’t be so hard.  That is a lie we tell ourselves before we give up.

 

When you are ready, grab my Save The Marriage System by CLICKING HERE!

Where Is The Gap?
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

In every relational problem, there is a gap.  And no, I am not referring to a store!

The gap is the space between where things are and where you want them to be.  The gap is between how things are and how they should be.  The gap is between how you see things and how your spouse sees things.  The gap is between any number of items.  But between each of these items, that gap leads to friction and disconnect.

Friction comes when the gap is not that large.  It rubs you against your spouse as you struggle to get on the same side.  Over time, though, the gap widens until there is disconnect and disillusionment.

Whenever I think about coaching, relationship or otherwise, I see the challenge as helping someone get from where they are to where they want to be.  And the way to do this is to note the places of being stuck.

So let me ask you, Where Are The Gaps?jumpthegap

This is not a theoretical question to assert there are gaps.  It is an exercise.  Sit down and make a list.

Note on one column where you are, and note in the other column of where your spouse is.  How far apart are you?

Note on one column where your marriage is.  In the other column, note where your marriage needs to be.  How far apart is it?

As you begin to clarify the gaps in your relationship, you can begin to see themes and directions.

When you are ready to take the next step in closing the gap, I invite you to grab the Save The Marriage System.