I'm the apple of her eye! |
I can say that through the years, I have
assimilated some of Ann’s personal and gender characteristics and she likewise
has assimilated some of mine. Perhaps
more importantly from the standpoint of the couple’s therapy that I do routinely
these days, she has been working on her own personal issues while at the same
time I have been working on my own. What
that has served to accomplish is to keep us within emotional reach of one
another. What I mean by that is she has
grown more secure in herself through the years while I have grown more secure
in myself in those years, and that growth has been fairly equivalent.
Based upon my research and my clinical experience,
when one partner in a relationship goes forward or backward in a significant
way in their emotional life and their partner does not simultaneously respond
in like manner, there are problems. For
example, if a partner gets caught up in an addiction, there is a regression in his
or her emotional life, while at the same time, their partner usually has
maintained and not regressed. That’s a
problem. That presents a widening gap in
their emotional reach of one another.
Another example might be a partner who has an exciting, fulfilling job
while the other has a repetitive, non-stimulating life at home. (Read my daughter’s example of my hypothesis in
my recent blog entry of her blog post.)
That’s a problem. That also
likely causes a widening gap in their emotional reach.
As I state often in my clinical experience, when
we go into a partner relationship, we enter at the level of our
dysfunction. In other words, we find and
connect with someone who is as similarly “messed up” as we are (or
aren’t). We fall in love with someone
who is within emotional reach of us. Harville
Hendrix, who has written extensively about finding our “Imago,” (Greek for our “image”—
our likeness) is stating what I just wrote but in a different way. We enter into relationships with similar
“baggage” from our families of origin and our life experiences (nurture), and
who we are (nature.) If partners aren’t
similarly “messed up,” the relationship will likely not last.
Icy surroundings, warm hearts |
But then, unless a couple’s emotional lives remain
somewhat close as the years pass, their relationship will likely be in peril
and likely will not last. Having read this
hypothesis, I imagine my daughter might think that her relationship with my
son-in-law might be doomed. That is not
necessarily so. If both are really
concerned about the other and each is willing to be humble and open
to making changes in themselves, not expecting the other to change
before they do, then they likely will stay within emotional reach of one
another. I pretty sure that will be the
case with my daughter and her good husband who is a wonderful, humble man, and
whom I am proud to have as a son-in-law.
I know that Ann really cares for me on a deep
level as I care deeply for her, but we both humbly realize that we each have
issues and we try to work on them constantly.
In order for our marriage to flourish—that third entity in our
partnership beyond her and me—, each entity has to “take care of their own side
of the street.” As we do so, the
emotional distance between us is relatively small and we can deal with the
resulting bumps in the road as they occur.
To be fully transparent, we have not always cleaned
our own sides of the street. In the past
we looked outwardly to the other, to some degree, to meet our emotional
needs. And that occasionally surfaces
even now, but when our partnership was wobbly in the past during challenges in
child rearing, we got into therapy and we BOTH started working on our own
“stuff,” and we continue to do so. As a
consequence, we have grown, and we have grown more or less at the same rate. That small emotional distance between us has
allowed us to grow together as a couple!
We sometimes "put on the dog" |
Longevity in marriages does not necessarily mean
that all is well and blissful. For every
one that is, there are as many or more that are not. Couples can often merely tolerate one another
because there is little emotional connection; they are not within emotional
reach of one each other. Those partners will
often look to fulfill emotional needs outside of their relationship because
there is so precious little within it.
So as I approach April 22, I have a huge smile on
my face! I have never been happier and
more in love than I am right now at this time of my life. My marriage just keeps getting better because
there is emotional connection and passion.
My wife is my best friend, my confidant, my lover. I cannot wait to be around her and love
living life with her. And what is most
wondrous about this relationship is that the doctrine of my Church dictates it
can last beyond death. It can last
forever; there is no “‘til death do you part.”
Why wouldn’t I want this blissful experience to go on indefinitely?
I am working hard on what I can control—myself,
and on our marriage so that the transition from mortality to eternity will be
natural. HAPPY ANNIVERSARY TO ME!
"You are my lover, you're my best friend, you're in my soul" |
1 comment:
Thanks for posting this, Dad. It was wonderful to read. You guys are an amazing example. Thank you.
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