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Breaking Old Patterns:
Productive Pathways of Communication
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How many people get into an argument with a family member and then
turn to a friend, child or parent for comfort? We all have. After expressing
our frustrations to someone else, it seems easier to return to the offender
in a calm frame of mind. For the moment, our tension has lessened.
Here’s a hypothetical situation: Bill has a tough day at work, and
when he arrives home, he brings his frustration with him to his family life.
Jane, his wife, perceives him as grumpy and distant. Not knowing the cause
of Bill’s mood, Jane talks to her best friend, complaining that her relationship
is not as intimate as she desires. Jane might feel better after her talk,
but nothing has been solved. Bill continues to come home grumpy, and Jane
keeps turning to her friend in frustration. Eventually, as dissatisfaction
builds, talking to a friend no longer helps. The situation explodes. Sound
familiar?
In these types of interactions, where is the opportunity to take another,
more productive path? Common sense tells us that direct communication is
needed: turning to a third party does not solve the problem. Instead, it
creates a relationship triangle; the emotional tension between two members
runs high, so a third member is brought into the relationship in order to
lower the original emotional intensity. The spouses have resolved nothing,
succeeding only in hiding their problems by funneling their discontent with
the relationship into the third party.
While direct communication might make common sense, there’s a reason
why relationship triangles persist, even across generations. Often, the
anxiety is produced by the status quo is less powerful that the anxiety
provoked by direct confrontation. Why deal with the problem when we can
get a third party to meet our needs, even if only temporarily?
Is there any hope of escape from this situation? Of course. The couple
needs to detrianglize. They need to remove the emotional involvement of
the third party so that the couple can turn their attention to the underlying
problems causing their disagreements. Since triangles are so basic to how
we function in relationships, including a neutral third person can often
be the best way to break the emotional displacement which occurs within
highly charged family triangles.
Family therapists specialize in acting as that neutral third member
for the relationship. Being neutral means that the therapist places no emotional
investment in changing the view points of either person in the relationship;
their main purpose is to reduce the tension which normally exists between
the spouses and encourage the opening of new, productive pathways of communication.
Though it’s perfectly normal to create triangles, learning how to directly
address problems establishes a stable basis on which to found a relationship.
©2010 Peggy Levinson. All Rights Reserved. |