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None of the first four kinds of relationship described below, are
recommended and they certainly don't do anything
to help the partner's sense of individual freedom or independence. However
most of us have often experienced
some or all of these
four in the past and hope to
avoid them again in the future. I have included them as a comparison before
looking at number 5, which offers a more useful idea of how a functional
grown-up relationship might be defined by the partners themselves.
The other reason for looking at these "not so successful" types of
relationships is that it helps to illustrate the importance of maintaining a
sense of individual freedom and independence if a relationship is
going to be positive, long-lasting and loving.
1. Traditional Patriarchal.
This type of relationship is typically found in tradition bound,
conservative male dominated Christian and Muslim
and similar traditional
societies. The male is regarded as unquestionably
dominant and the female subservient to him on most matters both within and
outside the family. Patriarchal relationships treat women as weaker, less
intelligent and therefore entitled to be controlled by the stronger male.
·
Power and control very largely in the hands of the male.
·
Little independence for females.
·
Little opportunity for the female to experience life as
an individual.
2. Traditional Matriarchal.
This type of relationship while theoretically acknowledging the male as the
head of the partnership in practice places the female in the position where
she exercises a subtle but powerful form of control. This results in her
having the final say on most significant family issues. Matriarchal
relationships tend to position men as being at best, "little boys" who need
to be guided by stronger women when it comes to making important decisions.
This form of relationship is
common in many traditional Mediterranean, Eastern European and Jewish
societies.
·
Power and control nominally in the hands of the male but
actually much more in the hands of females
·
Neither male nor females feel much sense of independence
or freedom to be themselves as individuals.
3. Co-dependent relationship
The relationship is seen as more important than the independence of either
individual. Each partner is focused largely on
trying to make the "relationship" work.
Each partner feels the loss of self (their individual identity.) And, while
each partner may recognise this loss, they each tend to blame the other
partner for causing it.
·
Each partner is unconsciously trying to extend their
power and control over the other in the belief that will somehow
help make the relationship more stable and that this in
turn will
cause them to
feel happier or like themselves more than they have in the past.
·
Typically a co-dependent relationship allows neither
partner very much room to experience life or to grow as an individual.
4. Engulfment-Abandonment
relationship (Dance)
In a relationship like this, each
partner describes themselves as controlled by the other. However, what one
is experiencing as "control" is almost totally opposite what the other is
experiencing. One of them is focused on trying to prevent their partner
from abandoning them. Let's call that partner "Aban”.
The opposite partner
whose control issues are about trying to avoid being smothered or engulfed
we will call
"Engul".
Typically
when
Aban
experiences
a sense of being
abandoned or alone
he or she panics
and
starts working overtime
to force
Engul
to come closer.
As a
result, Engul with strong engulfment issues
becomes agitated about
being over-controlled by Aban.
Engul will feel he or she is losing individual
identity. The more Aban tries to keep Engul close to them, the more Engul will feel smothered or controlled by Aban.
This increases the chance that Engul will naturally try to spend even less
time with Aban in order to maintain his or her (Engul's)
sense of identity.
Since
they do not like being controlled themselves
an
Engul partner
trying to protect their individuality may have a fear that they will appear
as "too controlling" So they tend to avoid methods of control like
manipulation that they regard as "dishonest". An Aban partner on the other hand may be inclined to use
almost any technique including manipulation to try to
force Engul
to come
closer.
This pattern is often described as a
kind of dance. Go to
Abandonment and engulfment issues explained
Maintaining individual Power and
control is more important than almost anything else in this kind of
relationship. Neither partner experiences much
sense of independence in the relationship.
5. The
Grown up Relationship
One of the comfortable features of this kind of relationship is that issues
around power and control take-up very little time and seldom assume much
importance for either partner. A peaceful relationship is not one that is
free of conflict. It’s one where both partners have the ability to deal with
conflict in fair and moderate ways that are comfortable and easy to
use and work for each person.
As they follow their own set of working guidelines
(examples only below) which
they work out for
themselves, grown-up partners learn to define and agree on how their
particular relationship can work best for them. There are no fixed or
standard rules, each couple has to work out their
own set of rules between them. However typically some of the guidelines will
focus around issues like:
·
ways they are both comfortable with for
developing strong personal bonds and ways of connecting closely and
comfortably with a high level of trust, mutual respect and friendship
·
at the same time, allowing each partner
plenty of room to maintain their individuality, that is each person allowing
the other as much space as they need to continue being who they are as an
individual
·
ways of developing closer intimacy at
times, maintaining strong individuality at other times
To achieve this kind of outcome both
partners will need to become well practised in different grown-up
partnership skills. These will in themselves help define the nature of their
individual relationship for example:
·
working out ways that suit both partners
that allow them to share a resource that is limited, for example, time,
money, physical energy, space, professional activities and so on. For
example: For how long and how often does each person want to spend time with
the other and how much time apart? How will expenses be shared? What
expenses will not be shared?
·
agreement about defined limits, that is
what is and is not acceptable within the relationship. This is a very
important part of providing each partner with a continued sense of being an
individual, and on protecting them from losing their individuality within
the relationship. Some relationships may involve very few limits and still
be successful.
·
a willingness to experiment, to try new
ideas and solutions without a guarantee that they will work. An acceptance
that in a relationship there is no such thing as a totally failed
experiment. Some useful new information will always be discovered as a
result of trial and error experiments
·
developing their own set of negotiation
(conflict resolution) skills to deal with issues of conflict. Understanding
that in every negotiation it is normal for one person to want more or less
than the other. Negotiation it is just grown-up way of discovering a
midpoint where both are comfortable with the outcome. These skills might
include for example:
·
mutual sharing, give and take, trade-offs,
one person giving up something in return for a benefit from the other
·
agreeing to disagree rather than continue
to let unresolvable issues damage the friendship. Agreeing to put a
difficult matter on hold (time-out) for a fixed period of time before
bringing it up again.
·
developing the ability to negotiate in a
grown-up way about living arrangements, (cooking, tidying, shopping,
laundry).
·
Finding ways to help make it safe for each
partner to increase their sense of intimacy within the relationship.
Understanding that the greater the level of intimacy the more it is normal
to experience an increased sense of vulnerability. Developing ways to warn
the other partner when this happens, so they can back off for a while or do
something which will help make it safer for both of them.
·
developing boundaries that are comfortable
for both partners around critical issues such as sexual boundaries and
limits, financial boundaries and limits, boundaries and limits relating to
other members of the each partner' s family and friends both children and
adults.
Feedback - please e-mail me John Bligh Nutting -
at nutting@growingaware.com
Copyright © John Nutting
1996 -
- 2008 and ©
GROWING AWARENESS 1996 - - 2008
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