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Monthly Archives: October 2012

Relationship Work Can Be Tough Alone!

05 Friday Oct 2012

Posted by Adapting2Change in couples counseling, curt canada, divorce separation, life coach, marriage, relationships, Uncategorized, washington dc

≈ 1 Comment


As the saying goes, it takes two to tango. It also takes two to make a couple. It takes two to make a relationship and, it follows, two to work on that relationship.

But what happens when one person in a relationship doesn’t want to do the work—especially if that work means going to couples counseling, coaching, or therapy.

First, it’s important to make sure your mate really doesn’t want to go. Lorna Hecker, Clinic Director of the Marriage and Family Therapy Center of Purdue University, lists these tips for asking your partner to join you in marital/relationship therapy:

•  Ask your partner to join you. Most people are just afraid to ask. Express your concern about your relationship in a non-blaming way. Don’t let the myth that “he/she will never go to counseling” dissuade you. As a therapist, I hear this all the time, and 90 percent of the time, it just isn’t true that someone will never go to therapy.

•  Don’t let your partner pull you into an argument. Try a broken record technique such as: “We disagree; and we disagree a lot. That’s why I would like for us to go to marital therapy.” Say it over and over (like a broken record), rather than get pulled into an argument. Also, ask for what you do want from your partner, rather than what you don’t want..

•  If you have previously asked your partner to go to therapy before and he/she refused, ask again, but ask differently. Most people have great difficulty asking their partner to counseling in a non-defensive, caring way because they are hurting. Try, “I love you, I care about us and I need some help in learning how to communicate to you better. I would like to try counseling.” Select a time when there are no distractions, and your partner is rested.

And if your partner absolutely refuses to try couples counseling? Go yourself. At the very least you can change how you are managing your relationship problems. Even if only one person in a relationship sees a counselor or therapist, change can happen.

“The overall relationship you have together may or may not improve, however your own attitude about it will,” says Larry James, author of How to Really Love the One You’re With! This alone is a positive step in the right direction.”

Dr. Phil C. McGraw puts it more bluntly. In his book, Relationship Rescue, he urges all partners who are unhappy in a relationship to first tend to themselves before trying to change a spouse, lover, partner or boyfriend/girlfriend.

“It is not possible for you to have a seriously defective long-term relationship unless you have generated and adopted a lifestyle to sustain it,” he writes in Relationship Rescue. “The reality of your relationship along with your overall lifestyle and your relationship with yourself are one hundred percent inextricably intertwined.”

In other words, how are you doing with your own relationship with the #1 person in your life—you? Although it’s important to acknowledge your disappointment that your partner won’t go to therapy or read about relationships with you, it’s even more important to move on to the next step.

“The most important relationship is the relationship you have with yourself,” James says.

If taking care of you means going to counseling, first make sure you are truly committed to changing. Counseling can be very emotionally challenging because you are forced to come face to face with some painful realities about the ways you interact with your mate. A “what can I do to be a happier person and maybe improve my relationship, too?” approach will probably be more effective than a “what do I do to get him/her to change so I can be happier?”

Alabama mediator and divorce lawyer Lee Borden urges his clients to seek counseling, even if it means going alone. He even urges couples who have decided to divorce to seek counseling to understand what went wrong and perhaps avoid certain behavior patterns in the future.

As he puts it, “As you work to know yourself, and particularly as you do it under the guidance of a caring professional, you may discover what makes you tick and find yourself on the road to healing and wholeness.”

I advise clients as a relationship and career coach to consider healthy and strategic practical ways to continue strengthening themselves physically, getting proper rest and exercise. I recommend eating well.

Often under such circumstances and added stress we choose to retreat and hide and involve ourselves in unhealthy behaviors. Coaching can help you keep your head on straight with collaborative support and focused goals as you tackle tough relationship issues alone. If you’re seeing a counselor or therapist do let them know if you’re also working with a Life Coach.

That step takes a lot of courage and commitment but it’s a step few regret taking—even alone.

The Three Cs of Change

Any change begins with courage, clarity and commitment.

Courage. It takes courage to be truthful about your own part in keeping the relationship “stuck.” For some people, being “right” is more important than creating a new and better relationship. It takes courage to jump off that pedestal.

Clarity. Who are you and what do you want in your relationship? When you can clearly see how you helped create your relationship, it’s a lot easier to change.

Commitment. Change requires taking the leap and sincerely dedicating yourself to creating a shift. Your partner may or may not cooperate with you, but in the end, you will have made the necessary changes to be ready and willing for a productive relationship.

Curt Canada coaches clients in Washington DC at adapting2change in Glover Park. Email Curt at info@adapting2change.com

Author’s content used under license, © 2008 Claire Communications

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