|
anne-girl -> RE: Is is possible to understand how your wife thinks? (10/15/2009 10:52:32 AM)
|
quote:
The last thing I want to do is hurt my wife further when she’s already hurting. Yet that seems to be what I do nearly every time. I believe that my solution presented is what she needs, yet she tells me she needs me to listen and be quiet. But I’ve tried that and if I don’t say anything, then I feel like I’m being insensitive by not offering what I see as a course of action that would help. I’ve tried quietly listening, repeating back to her what I think she’s feeling, but if I offer a solution at the end, it still ends up all wrong. So apparently my approach still feels wrong to my bride. You're doing well with the second bit, right up until you get to the solution part. If you feel like you're not saying enough when you're just listening, try rephrasing back to her, and summarizing, what she's saying. If that still doesn't feel like enough, ask questions, but story-expanding questions, not leading questions. Ie "how did you feel when she said that?" or "why do you think he would have done that?", rather than "what if you did such-and-such?" If she says she doesn't want a solution, just don't give her one. Period. If she says she doesn't know what to do, even then, ask her if she just wants you to listen or if she offers a solution. If you must tell her what you think, stick to reflecting what she says eg "I think this must have been a difficult situation for you" etc. quote:
The flip side is that when I have an off day and I’m grumpy or whatever, I’m expected to just snap out of it … and criticism will follow if I don’t. It seems she demands understanding, yet is willing to give none to me if I’m the one that’s going off on a tangent. Of course things go downhill if I point out this double standard. What gives ladies? I'm not sure what gives as I am not your wife [;)] but I'd agree that you do need to discuss this. The best time to talk about this scenario is not when you're in a grumpy mood. I'd suggest bringing it up several days later, and find a time to tell her that you were hurt on the other day when you felt as though she expected you to be more cheerful. Stick to "I felt this way" statements rather than "you did this" statements--she can argue the facts but she can hardly tell you that you don't feel what you feel! Ask her if there was a more effective way you could have communicated with her at the time; also ask if she is having any trouble discerning when you're out of sorts. That should be enough to get the ball rolling. The key is to start the conversation when you're not in a mood that might make her feel hurt or defensive. If there's an Alpha Marriage course in your area, I can't recommend it highly enough. There was, among other things, an excellent session on communication. All the how-to-communicate rules just seemed like a lot of silly mumbo-jumbo until we tried it; then all of a sudden, by following those rules we could discuss contentious issues without getting upset. We took it as newlyweds, and while I'm sure we would have made it through without the course [8D] I believe it saved us a huge amount of heartache.
|
|
|
|