Gift : 12 Lessons to Save Your Life Edith Eger (pdf e book reader TXT) đ
- Author: Edith Eger
Book online «Gift : 12 Lessons to Save Your Life Edith Eger (pdf e book reader TXT) đ». Author Edith Eger
When weâre imprisoned, itâs the damaging messages that stick.
âBut thereâs another message I hear in your story,â I told her. âThat youâre a woman of strength. Once you were that scared, lonely girl standing on the street with your suitcases. Many times you could have died, and you didnât. Now look at you. Out of something you didnât want, you made something good. Youâre good.â
Believing at a fundamental level that she wasnât worthy of love, Marina had chosen a partner and patterns of behavior that reinforced this belief. I often see this dynamic in military marriages. When itâs only a matter of time before youâll have to deploy or move and start your life anew, itâs hard to trust that someone will really stick with you through the distance and disruption. One way to cope with the fear of how much it will hurt to be apartâor the fear that someone will leave us or be unfaithfulâis to avoid being close. Marina had married a man who charmed her into feeling safe and adored, only to use their relationship as a punching bag. He was carrying his own pain into the relationshipâand his method of coping with his unresolved emotional business, to rage and blame, just reinforced Marinaâs internalized message that to love is to be hurt and abandoned.
âPerhaps youâre both using the fighting to fight intimacy,â I said. âSo letâs look at your pattern.â
Many couples have a three-step dance, a cycle of conflict they keep repeating. Step one is frustration. Itâs left to fester, and pretty soon they move on to step two: fighting. They yell or rage until theyâre tired, and fall into step three: making up. (Never have sex after a fight. It just reinforces the fighting!) Making up seems like the end of the conflict, but itâs really a continuation of the cycle. The initial frustration hasnât been resolved. Youâve just set yourselves up for another go-round.
I wanted to give Marina some tools to help her stop the dance at step one. What were the frustration triggers that kept launching them into the same imprisoning dance?
âYouâre either contributing to the relationship or youâre contaminating it,â I said. âHow do each of you contaminate the marriage?â
âWhen I want to have a discussion with himâexpress a feeling or bring something upâheâs afraid of being guilty, that somethingâs his fault.â His preferred defense was offenseâto turn the tables and attack Marina with blame and criticism.
âAnd whatâs your part in it?â I asked.
âI try to explain myself. Or I say, âStop,â and he explodes and starts kicking or throwing or smashing something.â
I gave her an assignment, a detour to get them off the path they kept choosing. âThe next time he tells you youâre wrong, your answer is âYouâre right.â He canât fight with that. And youâre not lying, because everybody makes mistakes; anybody could improve. Just say, âYes, youâre right.âââ
If we deny an accusation, weâre still accepting blame. Weâre taking responsibility for something that isnât ours.
âThe next time heâs angry, ask yourself, âWhose problem is it?â Unless you caused the problem, youâre not responsible when he tries to put the monkey on your back. Give the monkey back. Say, âSounds like youâre in a tough position. Sounds like youâre mad about that.â When he tries to make his feelings about you, give the feeling back to him. Itâs his feeling to face and you hope heâll let go. When you step into the ring, heâs looking at you, not at his feeling. Stop rescuing him.â
When Marina and I spoke a few weeks later, she said the de-escalation tools were working. Their fights had radically diminished.
âBut I have so much resentment against him,â she said. This time, it wasnât his anger she wanted to talk about. It was her own. âIn my mind, I make him responsible for everything.â
âSo do the opposite,â I said. âThank him.â
She stared at me, eyebrows raised in surprise.
âYou choose your attitude. So thank him. And thank your parents, too. Theyâre helping you become a very good survivor.â
âAnd just ignore what happened? Leave out what they did?â
âMake peace with it.â
Many of us didnât have the loving and caring parents we desired and deserved. Maybe they were preoccupied, angry, worried, depressed. Maybe we were born at the wrong time, in a season of friction or loss or financial strain. Maybe our caregivers were dealing with their own trauma, and they werenât always responsive to our needs for attention and affection. Maybe they didnât pick us up and say, âWe always wanted a child just like you.â
âYouâre grieving over the parents you never had,â I told Marina. âAnd you can grieve over the husband you donât have.â
Grief helps us face and ultimately release what happened or didnât happen. And it opens up space to see what is and choose where we go from here.
âWould you like to be married to you?â I asked.
She gave me a confused look.
âWhat do you like about you?â
She was silent, her brow creased as though taken aback, or maybe she was just searching for the words.
She began hesitantly, but her voice became fuller as she spoke. Her eyes brightened and a flush rose in her cheeks.
âI like that I care about other people,â she said. âI like that I have passionâthat I love climbing high. I like that I donât give up.â
âWrite it down, honey,â I said. âCarry those words in your purse.â
Taking an honest inventory is so important. Itâs easy to reach for critiques of others and ourselves, to focus on wrongs and complaints. But all of us are good. We choose what we focus on.
âWhatâs good about your husband?â I asked.
She paused, squinting slightly, as though trying to see into the distance. âHe cares,â she said. âEven though he is like he is, I know he cares about me. And heâs working hard. I injured my shoulder, and he helped me. There are times when he supports me.â
âAre you stronger with him, or without him?â
Only you can decide if a
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