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| TEN COMMON RELATIONSHIP-SABOTAGING BEHAVIORS PART 3 By Randy Gunther, Ph. D. ARE YOU AN ADDICT? By answering the following questions, you can determine if addictions have been a factor in your relationships MARTYRDOM: “MAYBE IT’LL BE MY TURN SOMEDAY”
Being with a martyr is like having a credit card you can never pay off. The martyr’s attempt to build reciprocal obligation is one of the saddest and most ineffective ways to manipulate. People who encourage their partners to take advantage of their generosity and then suffer in silence cannot maintain this imbalance forever. Their partners will eventually get a detailed report of how much they’ve been given and what they need to do to make amends. ARE YOU A MARTYR IN YOUR RELATIONSHIP? By answering the following questions, you can determine if martyrdom has been a factor in your relationships:
DEFENSIVENESS: “IT’S NOT MY FAULT!” When partners are defending themselves against a perceived emotional attack, they cannot listen, learn, or change. They are driven to invalidate what they feel as a critical challenge. If you’re like most people, you will react defensively when you feel threatened. It’s difficult to look into the eyes of someone who matters and accept unasked-for criticism without trying to justify what you’ve done, especially if the accusations don’t feel fair. Most people are unsettled when this happens, but they try to consider the source and the situation before they react. Chronic defenders do not have that luxury. If they believe that an accusation is focused in their direction, they cannot respond with anything but a justification for their behavior. Chronic defenders may respond to an assumed attack in several ways, but each has the same intent, to get out from under the accusation by invalidating it:
If you respond this way, your partner usually will try to invalidate your invalidating response, which leads to a downward spiral. The cycle of attack and defense increases. After several rounds, no one will be listening anymore and nothing will be solved. ARE YOU A CHRONIC DEFENDER? By answering the following questions, you can determine if defensiveness has been a factor in your relationships:
TRUST BREAKERS: “I NEVER REALLY AGREED TO THAT” Betrayal is the worst of all relationship-sabotaging behaviors. People who make a practice of breaking promises, rewriting history, ignoring agreements, or denying their partner’s reality break hearts and destroy faith. Of course, many of the agreements lovers make at the beginning of relationships have to be renegotiated as time goes by. People change and relationships mature. But partners who live in each other’s hearts are committed to sharing who they are and what they do as their relationships evolve. Both agree that there are no reasons valid enough to keep anything secret that could adversely affect either partner. They have total faith in the sacredness of that agreement. Trust is faith that what is promised will come true or that the reasons it can’t will be explained. For children, trust is the foundation of the ability to love and to feel safe. If they are consistently faced with disappointment or disillusionment, they come to believe that what is promised is not real and cannot be counted upon. The earlier those negative experiences happen, the more likely those children will grow into adults who can neither trust nor be trusted. When adult trust breakers are busted, they will do whatever is necessary to get out of being held accountable. If their partners feel too uncertain to hold their ground, they may be susceptible to the trust breaker’s ability to get them to believe again. Many partners continue to love their trust breakers even though they know that more betrayals lie ahead. Attachments don’t always make sense, and enough love can rationalize the most painful of outcomes. But, if the couple stays together, the cycles of belief and disillusionment will take their toll. Trust is the foundation of everything that matters. When it’s gone, all agreements become invalid. ARE YOU A TRUST BREAKER? By answering the following questions, you can determine if being a trust breaker has been a factor in your past relationships:
Other Articles by Randi Gunther Ph.D. For more articles on relationships before and after divorce, visit www.divorcemag.com/articles/Relationships. |
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