dating Ronda Seven Guidelines for Safeguarding the Middle Ground (part 1)

Ronda Seven Guidelines for Safeguarding the Middle Ground (part 1)

If you need help regulating and resolving conflict safely, these seven guidelines are for you. Adopting these guidelines will safeguard the middle ground within your relationship. Part 1 of a 3-part series.

By Marty Babits Updated: September 25, 2014 Categories: Dating after Divorce, Relationships and Dating

If you need help regulating and resolving conflict safely, these seven guidelines are for you. They can help you make difficult conversations productive, steer you and your partner away from destructive talk, and help you nurture an atmosphere of emotional safety. Without an atmosphere of emotional safety, nothing flourishes in your relationship except alienation.

Adopting these guidelines, whenever pertinent, will safeguard the middle ground within your relationship.

  • Avoid generalizing and stereotyping.
  • Do not blurt responses.
  • No name calling.
  • Speak honestly and judiciously.
  • Develop patience. Sustain it.
  • Think about what your partner says in terms of who your partner is.
  • Time out signal have it in place; use it as needed.

    1. AVOID GENERALIZING AND STEREOTYPING

    JOHN:

    KAREN:

    John generalizes about Karen’s moods, particularly when she’s around her parents. She admits to having a hard time around her parents, but believes that her feelings vary from visit to visit, her concerns change. He speaks about who he thinks she is yet, as far as she’s concerned, he doesn’t ‘get’ it. As a result Karen feels neglected and uncared for. She wonders, “Where is his openness to learning more about who I am? Where is his curiosity about who I am with respect to how I feel, as opposed to what he thinks I feel?” She adds, “He’s got me pigeonholed. I feel that he takes for granted that he understands me completely even though he doesn’t.”

    Karen belittles John, in turn, by saying that she can “never count on” him when she feels stressed. By counterattacking this way, Karen invalidates whatever helpful efforts John has made at other times. Now he feels minimized and taken for granted. Each partner’s sense of emotional safety, as a result of their generalizing, is further diminished.

    2. DO NOT BLURT RESPONSES

    Do not simply blurt out whatever comes to mind to your partner. Consult yourself while speaking with your partner. Do you identify with the following statement: “I didn’t even know what I was going to say until I heard myself saying it.” If so, this is an especially important guideline for you to work with.

    Partners at Square One tend to speak at each other without investing energy in listening to themselves or their partner. The distinction between responding and reacting makes all the difference in creating or destroying middle-ground possibilities.

    Important Point: Responding Versus Reacting

    Human response at its most productive involves reflection. Reacting, like a counter punch, does not. Once a statement is voiced, it cannot be retracted entirely. Impact cannot be recalled. Emphasize the listening aspect of the dialogue in your thinking. Focus on what your partner is expressing about who he is and how he feels. “Listening to yourself as you listen” will help you fan out options and choose your responses with maximum deliberateness and effectiveness.

    Mark and Rob are a couple who have been together for four years. I witnessed Mark attempt to repair hurt feelings that developed from an angry exchange they had had over the phone. Mark began with an apology, but Rob quickly derailed the chance for a middle ground experience with sarcasm. Rob’s reactive comments undermine a sense of connection. Let’s listen to two versions of the same dialogue.

    Version 1

    MARK:

    ROB:

    I noted to myself that Rob was making no acknowledgment of Marks’s effort to approach him peaceably.

    MARK

    ROB:

    Mark approaches again, but Rob pushes him away. Far from thinking about how his remarks are affecting the relationship, Rob glories in vindictiveness, driven compulsively by his anger. Reckless and provocative, Rob hurtles on.

    MARK

    ROB:

    So. Rob goes from accusations of selfishness to attacks on his partner’s manhood in three rapid steps. Before going to guideline 3, let’s listen in on an alternate version of their dialogue, this time with more responding and less reacting.

    Version 2

    MARK:

    ROB:

    MARK:

    ROB:

    Here Mark, rather than beginning to get defensive, senses Rob’s upset and does not take Rob’s hostility as a personal attack. Rather than investing energy in defending himself, Mark demonstrates concern for Rob by acknowledging Rob’s hurt feelings. Rob has accused him of being selfish. He responds by demonstrating generosity and interest. Often, anger masks a plea for connection, and a response that validates this need can be comforting as, here, it soothes Rob.

    MARK:

    ROB:

    When Rob becomes angry, it marks the start of a syndrome that characteristically causes him to feel out of control. By pursuing Rob’s need for connection and attention, Mark creates a bridge that underscores his understanding of how difficult this out-of-control feeling is for Rob. This helps Rob feel less isolated, which soothes him. Mark’s response models the opposite of belittling Rob’s feelings. By daring to approach Rob directly, Mark demonstrates confidence that order can be restored to their chaotic interchange. His offer of tender contact is accepted. Through his initiative, Mark has located the middle ground, and Rob extends himself beyond the confines of his anger to join him there.

    MARK:

    ROB:

    Here, Mark’s apology acknowledges and expresses concern for his partner’s pain. Rob’s reply signals that he is relieved to feel less isolated; his reflective side emerges, no longer eclipsed by the anger. Research indicates that couples who can resolve anger together, as Rob and Mark do in this second version of their fight, have a good prognosis for success as a couple.

    Rob’s comments during the first version of their fight were in appropriate to the needs of their relationship. The only sense in which his remarks were appropriate is that they segue perfectly into our next guideline

    This article was adapted with permission from The Power Of Middle Ground: A Couples Guide to Renewing Your Relationship copyright © 2009 by Marty Babits, LCSW, BCD (New York, NY) Pometheus Books 59 John Glenn Drive, Amherts, New York 14228-2119 Marty Babits, LCSW, BCD

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