Rising Sun Psychotherapy & Nuevo Amanecer
Michele Boudreau, PhD, MFT, LMHC

Causes & Cures
of Relationship Problems

 

If your car was stuck in sand, would you continue to press on the gas pedal
or would you get out and figure out a new line of action? Most people would
do the latter. Yet, when it comes to relationships, people often keep their
foot on the gas and dig themselves deeper. A man may continue to
provoke his spouse to be “rebellious” by attempting to control her. A woman
may drive her partner further away by chasing him when he distances. How
do these vicious cycles get started? The answer lies in the mystery of
romance. High levels of attraction actually produce a chemical change. A
person’s system becomes flooded with endorphins, nature’s painkiller, and
while on this “high” it is easy to be blinded to signs of trouble. This type of
attraction is often created because:

 

 


Often, the seeds of trouble are sown when the relationship becomes
“official” and partners make a commitment. Each person begins to focus on
being taken care of and is less inclined to accommodate the other’s needs.
As a result, full-fledged conflict may emerge or resentments may slowly
build over the years. For example, a woman may wake up and realize that
her efforts to be docile and compliant are never going to win her the
approval she seeks; or a wife’s warmth and attentiveness may suddenly
seem like a demand for smothering closeness.


FROM DESIRABLE DIFFERENCES TO INCOMPATIBLE POLARITIES


When unresolved resentments build, the differences that were once a
source of attraction become sore spots. Instead of complementing each
other, differences begin producing conflict. The ways couples can “polarize”
their differences are endless:


            
     Differences                                        Polarities














 


In healthy relationships, differences are interchangeable and a source of
learning. Partners can take turns giving and receiving or being
spontaneous and setting limits. The relationship achieves a balance of
closeness and freedom so that neither suffocation nor detachment results.
Unfortunately, when both people in the relationship resist fulfilling their
potentials, they become stuck playing certain roles and cease growing. A
couple may be satisfied acting out this polarization for years until a crisis
occurs. For example, a woman who stubbornly holds onto her role as
nurturer (out of a fear of her own “selfishness”) may find this too taxing
when she starts working. To make the relationship more open and flexible,
one person must change and allow the other to be upset. If this is done with
firmness and sympathy, even rigid “tyrants” can realize their partners can
act independently and remain committed to the relationship.


GENDER DIFFERENCES

Recent research on the brain and nervous system explains how common
male-female patterns can become stuck in gender polarities:

 

 


Although male distancing/detachment and female closeness/caretaking
patterns can be common, a free-spirited, self-absorbed woman can trigger
a man to be dependent and doting. Likewise, a talkative man may prod a
woman to be the guardian of space and distance in the relationship.
Furthermore, polarities are not stable and can flip-flop wildly over time.
When a woman who has fought for closeness for years gives up and
decides to exit the relationship, a man who was previously distant may
pursue ardently. To discover the polarities in your relationship, create a
metaphor:


Exercise: Relationship Metaphors


1.  Choose an image or symbol of how your partner would appear to you in
   a dream, fairy tale, or cartoon—A playful satyr dancing through the
   woods.


2.  What form would you take in relationship to your partner’s—The moon
   above.


3.  What interaction or dance happens between the two forms—I watch him
   in my light.


4.  What is the worst nightmare that could happen between the two forms
   He goes off on his escapades, never noticing that I light his way.


5.  What would be the best outcome—He would wait for me and play with
   the shadows I make.
 


References


Ideas on infatuation come from Getting the Love You Want by Harville
Hendrix. (Henry Holt, 1988).


The corpus callosum is the mass of fibers connecting the right and left
sides of the brain. Information on physical gender differences was taken
from Divorce Busting by Michele Weiner-David (Simon & Schuster, 1992),
pp. 50–51.


Exercise from The Process of Change by Peggy Papp (Guilford Press,
1983), p. 142.

Internet Copyright

Creative/Organized

 


Free spirit/Self-disciplined


Independent/Relationship-oriented


Receiving/Nurturing


Leading/Following

Sloppy/"Neat Freak"

Irresponsible/Responsible
Impulsive/Rigid
Emotional/Reserved
Distancing/Pursuing
Detached/Dependent
Underinvolved/Overinvolved
Uncommitted/Committed
Sick/Healthy
Helpless/Competent
Master/Servant
Dominant/Yielding
Parent/Child

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