Category Archives: Family Dynamics

How do I fight fair?

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Melissa Killeen

The following is a new post about my continuing journey with a particular client, its focus on how he might have better conversations with his girlfriend, even when they start out as hot-headed disagreements and potentially explosive discussions.

First, I asked my client to describe what kind of person he is. Does he like a good debate? How does he conduct himself in an adversarial discussion? Does he avoid conflict at all costs? What about criticism? Does he interpret it, or disagreement, as an attack on him? Will he use a verbal dagger to stab his opponent, only to regret it later? Does he lose his head when an argument ratchets up a notch? Or does he back away, withdraw and become silent when he is angry? Is it his style to dredge up everything a person has done in the past to use as a weapon? Will he cry to get sympathy, or storm out of the room to end a discussion, all together?

In response, he laughs, and says, “at one time or another, all of the above have been characteristic of my ‘discussion’ style.” He asks, “How do I fight fair?”

Regardless of the nature of most relationships, conflict happens. For many of us, conflict creates significant discomfort, and we revert to “fall back” modes of handling it. As I mentioned in a blog post last month, it’s typical to retreat to what we learned as children, that being in a conflict situation with someone means you are going to get out of control, start acting like a child, and/or become aggressive. The truth is, conflict is a normal human component, just as normal as joy, happiness, and sadness. If handled appropriately, conflict can actually strengthen relationships, improve intimacy and our understanding of each other.

Conflict happens when two people disagree about their perceptions, desires, ideas, or values. It is not about the other person being a bad person. It is a disagreement about viewpoints. If you focus solely on the disagreement, dealing with conflict becomes easier. Fair fighting is a way to manage conflict effectively and the feelings that come with it. To fight fairly, you can follow several basic guidelines to help keep your disagreements from becoming entrenched or destructive. You may find this difficult when you think another’s point of view is irrational or just plain unfair. But remember, he or she may think the same thing about your ideas.

  1. Take your conversations into a private room or office. Consider the damage that fighting in front of your children can inflict. It can scar them emotionally, especially if you don’t have the self-control to contain the conversation. An argument conducted in front of your peers will likely be destructive to your career. Moving to another location will give you the opportunity to gather your wits, and can help you remain calm. By remaining calm it is more likely that others will consider your viewpoint.
  1. Keep what is in the past, in the past. Don’t bring up previous fights or heated discussions that don’t pertain to a current discussion. I have a household rule: You get one chance to criticize a behavior or action, and discuss it. Then it is gone, off limits for any discussion going forward. Throwing every complaint from the past into today’s argument resolves nothing. It is often a behavior of someone that knows they are losing credibility and uses this deflection tactic as a last defense. Storing up lots of grievances and hurt feelings over time is counterproductive. It’s almost impossible to deal with numerous old problems for which recollections may differ.
  1. Talk about what is really bothering you. Vague complaints are hard to process. Stay on topic, and deal with only one issue at a time. If you don’t focus on what really bothers you, you will come away from this exchange frustrated at not having your needs met, or being heard. Avoid back-stabbing or hitting below the belt. As your blood pressure rises, you get into fight mode rather than resolution mode. Simply avoid attacking your partner personally. Saying things like “Your father always did that” or “You can’t keep it in your pants,” guarantees the conversation will deteriorate beyond the point of resolution. Attacking areas of personal sensitivity creates an atmosphere of distrust, anger, and vulnerability. Accusations will lead others to focus on defending themselves rather than on understanding you. Instead, talk about how someone’s actions made you feel.
  1. Give your partner a face-saving way out of the disagreement. Avoid following them through the house, yelling at their back or screaming and kicking at a closed door (yes, that’s a form of violence!). How an argument ends is crucial. Recognize when an olive branch is being extended— perhaps in the form of an apology or a suggestion to discuss it at a later time. That’s a signal that it is time to end the discussion even if the matter is not resolved to your satisfaction. Recognizing this opens the door to resolution at another time and gives your partner that all too critical face-saving way out of the disagreement.
  1. Set a time limit. Arguments should be temporary, so don’t let them get out of hand. Don’t allow the ugliness of an argument to stretch on indefinitely. Having the last word, never automatically makes you the winner. Let the last word go, walk away, and have that last word with yourself, outside or in the basement, alone.

In my next post, I’ll focus on step-by-step guidelines for fighting fair.

 

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A Checklist: How Emotionally Mature Are You in a Heated Conversation?

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Melissa Killeen

[This is the final in a series of posts about my interactions with a recovery coaching client. In these blogs, I wanted to share what happens during a recovery coaching engagement, the discussions that take place, what usually comes up for the client and how, as a recovery coach, I respond. The series will pick up again in the near future]

I asked my client a very specific question after a blowup between he and his live-in girlfriend. If you have been following my blog, recently, you know that I have dedicated a number of posts to the topic of this particular client’s recovery and relapse, and his attempts to repair his relationship with the woman with whom he lives. So it’s become fairly obvious to me that this is going to be a recurring subject in our coaching and recovery relationship.

My client would like to believe that he is a mature, rational, 40-year-old adult. But if he is honest with himself, just as if we all are honest with ourselves, he’s surely held on to some inner emotional immaturity. The truth of the matter is that we can act like adults in our relationships or we can act like we’re 6 years old. When one partner displays emotional immaturity during a discussion, the other often follows suit, seemingly without much hesitation. Then the entire conversation fails. Perhaps the trigger is a feeling of being less-than, or of rejection or abandonment. In a flash, we become the 6-year-old that was lost in the department store, the 9-year-old that was reprimanded by a teacher or the 12-year-old listening in as their aunts and uncles fight at a Thanksgiving dinner.

As a coach, I like to differentiate between the emotional maturities of the 6-, 9- or 12-year-old, and those of the forty-year-old. When we begin to mature, our childlike behavior no longer reaps the same reward and we are forced to act more maturely. A 6-year-old is extremely limited in their choice of options when it comes to handling most types of situations. They learn as they grow, finding out what works and what doesn’t work. As adults, we have far more choices and options than a 6-year-old. Before reacting to questionable comments from another, it’s important to ask ourselves the very same question I asked my client: Do you want to be 6, 9 or 12 – or do you want to be 40? A true adult gets to choose!

Let me illustrate the difference . . .

Immature   Mature
I snap at my partner because I feel irritation. I recognize that I am irritable and why, so I calmly let my partner know how I feel and what I need to help me feel better.
I hold something that bothers me inside until I blow up at my partner. I hold something in until it comes out sideways. I tell my partner as soon as I am aware that something is bothering me so we can calmly discuss it.
I call my partner names and belittle them when we are arguing. I point fingers, invade my partner’s space and raise my voice. I realize that name-calling and belittling does not help the situation and I can voice what is really bothering me, instead. I recognize my body language, keep my hands at my sides, lower my voice and keep my distance.
I stuff my feelings, or lie to my partner because I am afraid it will start a fight, or that they will reprimand me. I am honest with my partner because I am emotionally prepared for their reaction.
I act on my sense of urgency to fight with my partner, knowing that I am reactive and emotionally activated. I recognize that I am reactive and I force myself to wait until I feel more stable to discuss it with my partner. I never respond immediately to something when I am angry, even if my partner insists.
I am defensive, hurt and argumentative when my partner complains about something I am doing. I recognize that my I am not perfect. I say I am human, I can make mistakes. I expect that sometimes my partner will have comments about my actions or behavior.
When my partner complains about me, I remind them that they have done the same thing or they did something that bothered me in the past (pointing the finger, deflection or cross-complaining). I hear that my partner is bothered by something and I validate their feelings. Any complaints I may have about them can be brought up at another time.

I spent some time with my client to discuss his reaction to this most recent blowup with his girlfriend. He identified with several of the immature characteristics in the above columns, characteristics evident in this and past exchanges. How many did he use? Did this number of immature responses overwhelm the number of mature responses? We discussed what the mature responses would have been.

Immediately, he said this was a good chart and that he was going to show it to his girlfriend to let her know that she had also displayed immaturity in their past discussions. I suggested he not do this, pointing out that as a mature adult, he need not shame his partner, even under the guise of using, to her benefit, a learning tool. It would be more effective, I explained, for him to practice mature, adult responses to future, potentially explosive situations. That that would help ensure the temperature of the next conversation not rise to a dangerous level, and expect his girlfriend to recognize his positive responses and emulate his mature behavior in these dialogues.

Using correct tools of engagement in heated discussions is seldom taught in families, or school. We learn how to argue and fight from our parents, family members or friends. At forty, it is time for my client to approach a heated conversation as a forty-year-old, not a 12-year-old.

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Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell – The Hidden Life of Family Secrets

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Dr. Ron Cohen

This guest blog was written by Dr. Ronald Cohen, a psychiatrist from Great Neck, New York, specializing in Family Systems.

Family secrets impact individuals, and family functioning. Dr. Ronald Cohen discusses four types of family secrets: essential, sweet, toxic and dangerous.

“All human beings have three lives:
public, private and secret.”
—Gabriel Garcia Marquez

In life, we must respect all three.

What is life like growing up in a family where one of the most firmly adhered to rules is “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell?” What do you do with significant information when you are inhibited from sharing it, the road block being either in yourself, in your family relationships, or in larger societal constraints? How is a secret different from healthy privacy, a safe and secure “Room of One’s Own?” When is a secret not a secret?

Evan Imber-Black, PhD has spent a professional lifetime investigating types of secrets and their impact on individuals and family functioning. She separates secrets into four, not necessarily distinct, categories: essential, sweet, toxic and dangerous.

Essential secrets create necessary limits and boundaries around a family and its sub-systems, delineating couples, children, parents and friends. They enhance closeness and connection, are protective of self, others, and relationships. By their very nature, essential secrets must be honored. Sharing without permission and/or consent creates devastating attachment injuries and violations of trust. Essential secrets are woven into the “second family” culture of adolescents and young adults. Honestly now, how much did we want our parents to know about our experimentation and indulgence in sex, drugs and rock’n’roll?

Sweet secrets are time-limited, created for someone else’s good, and usually have positive outcomes for the entire family. Sweet secrets are created for the fun of a surprise such as gifts, parties, unexpected visits and other celebrations.

Toxic secrets are often long-standing and damaging to relationships and personal well-being. They become harmful and destructive when they involve keeping information from others that they have a right to know. Over time, toxic secrets corrode relationships, destroy trust and create otherwise unexplained symptoms and increased anxiety. Abundant non-productive energy is expended on maintaining who’s in the know and who is outside the cone of silence. Toxic secrets include current extramarital affairs, irresponsible gambling, concealed illness, and undisclosed plans for divorce as well as an individual or family history of abortions, adoptions, DWIs, psychiatric hospitalizations, and incarcerations.

Dangerous secrets put individuals in physical jeopardy and/or debilitating emotional turmoil. They include plans for suicide and violence, life crippling drug and alcohol dependence, rape and incest, abuse and child neglect. Dangerous secrets require immediate disclosure and intervention to ensure safety and protect the innocent.

Secrets occur in context and live not just inside one individual but exist within the entire family system. For this reason the category and function of a secret depends on its context.

Embedded within, and extending over these categories is the concept of self-secrets, which are shared with no one (paradoxically the concept of a shared secret is not an oxymoron), and engender excessive guilt, shame, and embarrassment as one does not get realistic feedback on the consequences of the behavior and/or its disclosure. Self-secrets include concealed eating disorders (which can also be toxic or dangerous) and the shame of involuntary corporate downsizing.

The safe disclosure of toxic secrets and repair of damaged relationships require careful planning and deliberate behavior. Because of their long standing nature, there is usually no immediate requirement to reveal a toxic secret and there is time to consider how to open the secret in a safe way. Coaching from a well trained Bowen Family Systems Therapist can help one balance caution and candor when evaluating the potential positives and negatives of revealing the secret. It can also help determine where, when, how, and to whom the secret should be disclosed.

This guest blog was written by Dr Ronald Cohen, a psychiatrist from Great Neck, Long Island, New York, specializing in Family Systems. To contact Dr Cohen, please visit his web site: http://www.familyfocusedsolutions.com/ or at his email: RBCohenMD@FamilyFocusedSolutions.com or by phone: 516.466.7530.

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