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How to Connect Emotionally with Your Spouse
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Feature Article
How to Connect Emotionally with Your Spouse
Hello <$firstname$>,
Are you having a difficult time connecting with your spouse?
Do you try connecting with your partner only to come up empty?
If the answer is yes, this special Newsletter is just for you <$firstname$>.
This article is by Dr. Frank Gunzburg, an online colleague. Frank goes back about as far as I do, professionally, helping hundreds of couples and thousands of people whose lives are shaken by relationship crisis.
Last month, my friend Dr. Frank Gunzburg wrote an
incredibly insightful article that teaches you step by
step how to reconnect again.
So if you feel like you are trapped in an emotionally
arctic wasteland in your relationship, or even if you
simply want to deepen an emotional connection you already
have, keep reading.
It may just save your marriage.
1) How to Connect Emotionally with Your Spouse
Frank Gunzburg, PhD
Susan and Alex were sitting in my office trying to rebuild
an emotional connection that had been destroyed by years
of distance, neglect, and a short affair Alex was engaged
in a year before.
Susan started telling Alex how important the intimate
connection they once had was to her. She said, "Alex,
I used to love it when we were intimate."
Alex said, "Ya, I know."
And that was the end of the conversation ... or it would
have been if I hadn't intervened.
The problem here was the same problem so many people have
when they are trying to connect with their partner
emotionally—the communication falls apart because each thinks
he knows what the other means.
It was absolutely clear to me that Alex didn't have the
slightest idea what Susan was talking about. But those
three little words—ya, I know—were about to kill a moment
that had the potential to be truly powerful for Susan and
Alex.
Knowing it couldn’t stop there, I asked Alex what he
thought Susan was talking about.
He said, "Susan wants us to have more sex. All she can talk
about is being intimate."
Susan, of course, was aghast. Sex was the last thing on her
mind, and she told Alex as much.
He consequently became annoyed and confused and had a hard
time continuing with the session.
With a little gentle guidance he stayed. And the
moments that followed became some of the most powerful in
their relationship.
How to Deepen the Emotional Connection
When an intimate relationship is operating at an optimal
level, the two people in the relationship touch each other
emotionally by talking to and listening to one another in
a passionate and sensitive way.
If you have suffered some trauma in your relationship or
you’ve grown apart over time, you may not be touching each
other this way right now.
When this emotional distance goes on too long, it can be
dangerous to a relationship. You run the risk of growing
even further apart and your relationship may eventually
dissolve altogether.
This primarily happens because people don’t know how to
intimately communicate. They talk and listen the way Susan and Alex
did in my office. There are few words, or there could be a lot of words,
a whole lot of assumptions, and too little investigation of what’s
going on for the other person.
The good news is that intimate communication isn’t an inborn trait.
It’s a skill that can be learned. And learning this skill
will help you connect to your partner on a much deeper
emotional level.
Let’s look at how you do that.
Knowing When to Talk: Feel the Moment and Reach Out
The emotionally deepening moments in your relationship will
not happen everyday and shouldn’t. (See more about this in
the “Advice for Women” below.) They will be scattered
throughout your relationship.
So the first step to emotionally connected communication
is learning how to catch the opportunities to deepen your
emotional connection and take advantage of them.
Alex and Susan had that kind of opportunity when Alex chose
to stay in session and continued investigating what his
wife was telling him.
But these moments can present themselves in many other ways
as well.
Over the course of your lives together you may find
yourselves sitting on a balcony looking out over a
beautiful ocean view sipping a glass of wine or curled up
by a fireplace, warm and relaxed.
In these romantic, personal moments you can touch each
other in ways that are intimate, but not necessarily
sexual. You can touch each other with your understanding.
Perhaps, in a moment like this your partner will open up
and share something that’s important to her with you. Or,
you may willingly share a piece of yourself with your
partner.
When this happens it’s time to open up and truly
communicate with your partner. And when I say communicate,
I don’t mean simply talk the way we do everyday. I mean
learning HOW to talk and learning HOW to listen.
Because despite the fact that we all learn to speak at a
young age, very few of us really know how to communicate
about feelings in depth.
Luckily, you’re about to learn.
Before I get to that I wanted to mention another issue. In
some relationships traumatic events have made it very
difficult to communicate intimately. You may find that
you very rarely have moments like the ones described above.
In my book How to Survive An Affair (http://www.1shoppingcart.com/app/aftrack.asp?afid=334668),
I offer ways to develop communication and rebuild
intimacy. Even if you haven’t suffered from an affair, some
of those techniques may help you.
Being the Speaker: Sharing Your Soul without Sharing Too Much
You’re sitting there by the fireplace, wrapped up in your
partner’s embrace, and you’ve opened up and shared some
important part of yourself with your partner.
This could be something you have discussed before or
something brand new. It could be something about your
relationship or about your personal life. It could be an
aspect of your relationship or your partner you are concerned
about or it could be something you truly cherish in your
marriage.
In essence, it could be ANYTHING that is meaningful to you.
Any part of yourself you share with your partner has the
potential to deepen the emotional connection you have.
So being a good, emotionally connected speaker isn’t about
what you say (as long as you are sharing something authentic and
important to you), it’s about how you say it.
And there are a few important guidelines to follow when you
are sharing with your partner.
The 3 Rules for Emotionally Connected Speaking
1. Share only one thing at a time. Human beings have
cognitive limitations. If you share too many things with
your partner at one time he will probably only remember the
last part of what you tell him. So keep the packages of
information small.
2. Don’t make accusations. The reason for this rule is
pretty obvious: If you become accusatory your partner
will likely react by becoming defensive and the whole
moment will evaporate.
Don’t let your voice sound angry or accusing, don’t let
the words you say be accusatory either. With a little
thought there is almost always a way to share sensitive
information about your partner or your relationship in a
non-accusatory way.
3. Help your partner understand you. As the speaker, it’s
your job to help the listener truly understand how you feel
or what you think about the issue you are sharing.
In a good conversation a listener will ask questions,
repeat back what the speaker has said and try to
investigate the issue being discussed so he can understand
it more completely (see the section on listening below
for more details).
When this happens respond as openly and truly as you know
how. Try and share yourself in a new way with your partner.
Following these three rules will help you engage your
partner, deepen the conversation, and foster a new
emotional connection.
Learning to Listen: Drop Assumptions and Begin to Investigate
Assumptions kill conversations. Take the example of Susan
and Alex for instance. It was Alex’s assumption that he
understood what Susan was saying which nearly destroyed the
intimate moment that was developing.
There’s only one way to make sure this doesn’t happen to you …
…Assume nothing: Check out your assumptions and freely
ask for clarifications.
Too many people assume they know what their partner is
thinking or feeling. So, instead of using an intimate
moment as an opportunity to connect on a deeper level,
they blow their chance.
This eliminates the possibility for an emotionally
connected conversation.
When you take on the role of the listener (which you want
to do anytime your partner is trying to share something
meaningful with you),it’s your job to drop your assumptions
and investigate what’s being said so you can deepen your
understanding of your partner.
There are two major ways to do this.
2 Techniques for Investigating What’s Meaningful to Your Partner
The best techniques I know to investigate what’s truly going
on for your partner are:
1. Repeat back your understanding of what your partner has
told you and ask if it’s accurate – this means explaining what
you heard rather than parroting the words—but if you cannot
formulate any other response, parroting is an option.
Instead of simply assuming you know what your partner means
when she shares something with you, you should repeat what you
think she has said and make sure your understanding of it is accurate.
For example, if your partner has just told you she gets
frustrated when you come home late from work, because it
interferes with your time together, you might investigate
this by saying:
“I think you are saying that you really want to spend time
together and when I come home late from work you are
disappointed because it is like I robbed us of the extra time that
could have been our time together. Is that right?”
This opens up the opportunity for your partner to expand
on or change what she has said so that you can understand
her true feelings more clearly.
You might nail it the first time … but that rarely happens.
It’s far more likely that your partner will revise her
statement, expand on it, or contradict it completely. Allow
it to happen
Why allow it? Because this is exactly what’s supposed
to happen.
Don’t get frustrated if the revised statements don’t match
the original. A conversation of this nature isn’t about
finding the “truth” in an objective sense, it’s about
finding out what’s true for your partner. That’s how
you deepen your emotional connection.
Let’s say you repeat back the statement above and she
responds by saying:
“Well, that’s not really it. What really frustrates me is
that you don’t call and tell me you’re going to be late.
If you could do that it would help me rearrange my own plans
to accommodate your schedule.”
Notice this statement doesn’t match the original. It contains
a lot of new information and in some ways it even
contradicts the original. This kind of thing is liable
to happen in emotionally connected conversations.
That’s because people develop their thoughts in the moment,
based on the back-and-forth of the conversation.
That’s what your partner is doing, and your job to help her
do it. So, instead of becoming frustrated, use these
moments as an opportunity to develop the discourse.
2. Ask open-ended questions.
An excellent way to keep this interaction going, deepen
your understanding of what your partner is trying to express
to you, and help her develop her thoughts is to ask
open-ended questions.
An open-ended question is a question that requires more
than a simple “yes” or “no” answer. It’s an investigative
question that helps tease out a person’s thoughts and
feelings.
There are a lot of instructions about how to develop
open-ended questions in How to Survive an Affair
(http://www.1shoppingcart.com/app/aftrack.asp?afid=334668) and the techniques
are too complex to go into here, so I will let you refer
to that book for more suggestions.
But one easy way to know whether or not you are asking an
open-ended question is your partner’s response. If she
expands on the issue you are discussing in a non-defensive
way, you have probably successfully executed a good
open-ended question. Some people, however, are just good at
giving free information even without open-ended questions.
Continuing on with the example above, you could respond to
your partner’s new statement with a recap followed by an
open-ended question or request for more information. The
recap gives your partner the opportunity to correct your
understanding of what was said or what was meant, if
it needs correcting.
You might say:
“I understand that it bothers you when I don’t call home if
I’m going to be late. Tell me more about what the
experience is like for you.”
This gives your partner a further opportunity to expand on
the issue, share more information, and reveal more of herself.
All of this, in turn, gives you the chance to deepen your
understanding of your partner. At some point, though, you
have to risk stating your own understanding of what was meant.
This takes time and it takes some energy, but it’s worth it
because it allows you to powerfully connect to your partner
about something that’s important to her.
There are a few more things you need to know to become
a master listener, and that’s what NOT to do when you are
in the listener role. If the 2 techniques above are the
listening “dos,” these are the “DON’Ts”.
The Listening DON’Ts
1. Don’t get defensive. However your partner responds,
think about it as if she were talking about someone else
to help you remain non-defensive.
Don’t contradict what your partner says even if it’s not the
truth. If she says, “You never call me.” Don’t respond by saying,
“I do TOO!!” This will kill the moment and destroy your
developing connection.
Instead, take the hit for what’s being said. You can take
it. And even if it doesn’t seem true to you, it’s true
for your partner otherwise she wouldn’t have said it.
2. Don’t take the spotlight off your partner. As you begin
to understand your partner’s feelings you should share this
understanding with her. But you need to do this without
taking the spotlight off her. In other words, don’t turn this
into what you think and what your experience is.
Tell her that you can see how she feels, or you could
imagine why she would feel that way, but don’t start
talking about “a situation you had” that was similar or
how “you feel when that happens.”
The speaker is the one that’s sharing here, and it’s the
listener’s job to try and understand what’s being said.
Let her keep the spotlight. It’s the only way you will
understand her better.
When it All Comes Together
In moments when this process works as it should you can see
the intimacy grow on your partner’s face. You can see the
change and emotional deepening happen before your eyes,
and can often feel it yourself too.
That’s what happened with Susan and Alex that day.
When Alex overcame his initial anger and frustration he
was able to investigate what Susan was really talking about,
and it changed the way they understood one another.
Alex said, “Susan, if it’s not sex you’re talking about,
then what kind of intimacy are we discussing here?”
Susan responded, “I love it when you touch me with your words.
I love it when we talk. I love it when we share with
one another.”
I watched as Alex’s frustration melted away into quiet
thoughtfulness in that moment, and for the first time I
could see what brought these two people together in the
first place.
I got to be witness to a special event that day. I
watched as a conversation took place that helped Susan
and Alex start to rebuild and deepen an emotional
connection that had been dormant for a long time.
The same thing can happen for you.
Support and Guidance
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