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The Love Breakthough:
("O",
The Oprah Magazine, January
2005, pp. 128-131, 163-164)
Brent J. Atkinson, Ph.D.
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"Somebody please get me out of here!" Grace had to check to be
sure that she hadn’t actually blurted the words out loud.
She’d come to this wedding reception as a favor to her husband,
Adam, whose friend from high school was getting married.
Adam was sitting at the main table, laughing and having a great
time while Grace was stuck listening to a plump, middle-aged woman
chatter about her poodle. Grace
thought to herself, "This is the last place on earth I want to be
right now." She looked
repeatedly in Adam’s direction. Finally
catching his eye, she motioned for him to come over.
But Adam shook his head and mouthed "I can’t!"
"Bullshit" thought Grace.
She’d already seen other members of the wedding party leave the
table to talk to their families. "This is so typical" she
thought. "He drags me
here, then abandons me."
After
what seemed like an eternity, the dancing began.
Grace’s irritation yielded to a sense of anticipation as Adam
smiled and began walking toward her.
But he never made it across the room.
He was intercepted by three friends who insisted that he go
outside with them to smoke cigars. Adam
held up one finger, signaling that he’d be there in a minute.
Before Grace could register a protest, Adam disappeared out the
door. Grace sat and stewed,
planning what she would say to him when he returned.
Ten minutes passed, then twenty.
After a half hour, she simply walked out of the reception, got in
her car and went home. Adam
eventually returned and searched for Grace.
Gradually, it dawned on him that she had left.
He called her cell phone, but she didn’t pick up.
He shook his head, muttered "What a baby!" and then
returned to the party. At
four o’clock in the morning, Adam slipped into the bedroom, grateful
that Grace was sound asleep.
Adam’s
eyes popped open at 9am to the sound of the coffee grinder. "Uh
oh." he thought to himself. "Its
time to face the music." He
got up and snuck up behind Grace and gave her a hug.
Grace endured it silently until Adam gave up and released her.
Playing dumb, Adam asked, "Why did you leave last night?
I was looking for you."
Grace rolled her eyes, and replied, "Yeah, you were looking
really hard, weren’t you?"
Grace’s sarcasm let Adam know that he was in the doghouse – a
place he knew all too well.
Adam
was still reeling from the abrupt change he’d seen in Grace since
they’d gotten married three years before. Grace’s independence was
one of the things that Adam had found most attractive about her, but as
soon as they said, "I do," she morphed into a demanding,
controlling nag who constantly required his attention – or so it
seemed to him. Adam let out an exasperated sigh, and backed away,
thinking, "Here we go again."
Grace and Adam didn’t speak for the reminder of the day or the
following morning. In
fact, when they came in for their therapy session three days later, they
still hadn’t spoken.
Most people
believe that certain ways of behaving in relationships are correct and
others are incorrect. This
is true to some degree. We
would probably all agree that physically assaulting one’s partner is
wrong. But marriage
researchers have found that the vast majority of things couples argue
about involve areas in which
there is no evidence that one partner’s standards are better or
"healthier" than the other’s.
Take
selfishness—most of us think it’s bad for relationships.
The problem is that there are so many potentially legitimate
yardsticks for measuring pigishness and we tend to use our own, not our
partners’. Grace
believed that Adam’s behavior at the reception was selfish – he was
thinking only of himself. But
Adam believed that Grace was the one who acted badly.
He wouldn’t dream of restricting her desire to be with her
friends.
In
my office, I explained to Grace that if she wanted to believe that
Adam’s actions were wrong, she had every right to.
But in doing so, she’d be putting herself in the company of
those who are destined to fail in their relationships.
The choice was hers. I wouldn’t try to stop her. But I could
and did tell her that evidence from seven studies spearheaded by John
Gottman at the University of Washington suggests that if Adam and Grace
continued with their critical attitudes toward each other, the chances
of their marriage surviving over the long haul are less than 20%.
I also
explained that Adam’s responses weren’t any more effective than
Grace’s. He had made it
clear that he thought Grace was over-reacting and that her expectations
were out of line, but Adam needed to know that beliefs like this are
highly predictive of divorce. Partners
who succeed in their relationships recognize that conflicts are not
usually about "right" or "wrong," they’re about
legitimately different expectations.
I told Adam it was important that he recognize Grace’s needs at
the reception were just as legitimate as his.
I
could see them struggling with this information.
To Grace, dropping the idea that Adam was wrong would be like
letting him off the hook. If
he wasn’t the bad guy, did she really have a right to be upset?
It’s
natural to feel agitated when your expectations are ignored, I
explained, and she had every right to insist that Adam take her feelings
into account. But Adam would
be more able to do this if she could give up the idea that he did
something wrong and instead explain to him how she felt.
Once Grace realized her critical attitude was working against
her, she saw the value in not blaming Adam. Instead she confessed that
she felt unimportant to him and she was afraid that he cared more about
his friends than her. This
was a bold move on Grace’s part, leaving her vulnerable.
She braced herself for his response.
But Adam’s eyes softened immediately, and he offered an
unsolicited apology, assuring her that he would try to be more sensitive
to her feelings.
I
wasn’t surprised. I’ve
spent 20 years as a marriage counselor, witnessing the profound rewards
partners like Grace and Adam reap once they’ve adjusted their
attitudes toward each other. The
way our brains are wired, the most effective way to solicit
understanding and cooperation is not by attempting to prove oneself
right at the other’s expense. It’s by exposing vulnerability.
This is a difficult adjustment for anyone to make when feeling
threatened, but in relationships where an emotional bond exists,
evidence suggests that the brains of those involved are set up to
respond to vulnerability with empathy.
A
week later, Adam and Grace sat sullenly on my couch.
The day before, Grace had decided to surprise Adam by showing up
at his office to take him out to lunch.
Adam wasn’t as pleased as Grace anticipated, because he’d
already planned a working lunch with a colleague who was helping him
with a project. Reluctantly,
he broke his plans and went out with Grace, but she was incensed by his
attitude.
What
happened here? The couple
had experienced first-hand the enormous benefits of abandoning critical
judgments of each other, yet less than seven days later, they were
locked into the same defensive attitudes that had created the impasse at
the reception. The lesson they’d learned the previous week was
forgotten, just when they needed to remember it most.
Grace
and Adam aren’t unique. I’ve
spent years patting myself on the back after helping couples experience
heartfelt changes during therapy sessions, only to watch them show up
the next week as miserable as ever.
Why do people forget what they pick up so easily? Recent neuroscience
studies suggest that new insights often don’t last because they
aren’t integrated into the brain states that become active when the
insights are most necessary. Finding
a new way of thinking when we are calm doesn’t necessarily transfer to
moments when we’re upset. When we feel threatened, our brains
automatically kick into special operating modes that are designed for
self-protection – not relationship bliss.
Early indications of our special self-protective modes emerged
from studies involving electrical stimulation of the brain date back to
the 1950’s. By implanting
electrodes deep within specific regions of patients’ brains, then
applying electrical pulses, researchers were stunned to see the moods,
desires and concerns of patients change dramatically.
For example, upon stimulation, a patient in a study conducted by
Robert Heath of Tulane University School of Medicine flew into a rage
and felt suddenly offended, and threatened to kill the physician who was
closest to him at the time. Patients
in such studies are often surprised and confused by their own actions.
When stimulation ceased, one patient remarked, “Why does it
make me do this? I
couldn’t help it. I
didn’t have any control. I
wanted to slap your face.” Even
though they know ahead of time that the electrical stimulation might
trigger anger, when the self-protective states in their brains are
activated, they trust the feeling that they’ve actually been offended.
Neuroscientist
Joseph LeDoux at the Center for Neural Science at
New York
University
, has identified the neural mechanisms that explain how this happens.
Using a variety of methods for locating how information travels
throughout the brain, LeDoux discovered that emotion has a privileged
position of influence. His
studies suggest that our brains are set up so that self-protective
emotions can hijack the conscious mind for periods of time, driving us
to think and act in ways that we may later regret.
Although Grace left the previous therapy session armed with new
knowledge about how to bring out the best in Adam, when he balked at
going to lunch with her, Grace was seized by an impulse to criticize
him. Grace couldn’t apply the new way of thinking she’d learned the
previous week because she was in an operating mode that was programmed
for self-protection – not mutual understanding.
When she questioned Adam’s priorities, his walls went up
immediately.
Fortunately,
our brains are not only equipped for self-protection; we’re also wired
for love. Jaak Panksepp and
his colleagues at Bowling Green State University have found the neural
pathways for four specialized brain states that produce feelings that
draw us closer to those we love: One
state produces a feeling of vulnerability and a longing for emotional
contact, a second produces feelings of tenderness and the urge to care
for others, a third produces the urges for spontaneous and playful
social contact, and a fourth activates sexual desire.
While it’s possible to engage in caring actions without the
activation of these mood states, such actions often feel fake, lacking
the heartfelt quality that gives them meaning.
Caring acts are simply that: acts.
When
relationships are going well, the intimacy states are naturally active
– and the feelings they produce are contagious.
When one person is feeling sad, tender, playful or lustful,
it’s easy for the other to feel something similar.
For example, Panksepp has found that distress cries of young
animals automatically activate the caretaking circuits of nearby adult
animals. UCLA researcher
Marco Iacoboni believes that this may be because of "mirror
neurons" recently discovered in various many areas of the brain.
Mirror neurons allow us to feel what another person is
experiencing. This is why we
cry at the movies when we sense the emotions of the characters, even
though we don’t know them. Mirror
neurons help our brains recreate the feelings inside of ourselves,
allowing us to be powerfully affected by others.
In
our first session, when I helped Grace move from her critical stance to
a more vulnerable place, I had bet on Adam’s mirror neurons, and I
wasn’t disappointed. When
she disclosed that she was feeling unimportant, Adam’s brain
automatically responded with tenderness.
With
guidance, clients like Grace and Adam can develop the ability to shift
from critical and defensive postures to more unguarded internal states.
Nearly all neuroscience researchers agree on one thing: The
mechanism through which the brain acquires new habits is repetition.
One of the most enduring concepts in the field of neuroscience is
Hebb’s Law, which states that when brain processes occur together over
and over again, the connections between the neurons involved are
strengthened, so that these processes are more likely to occur in
conjunction in the future. I
knew that if Grace and Adam could think differently while they were
angered, and if they could do this enough times, the new thought
processes would begin spontaneously each time they became annoyed with
each other, and they’d stand a chance of eliminating their knee-jerk
reactions. Rehearsing new
thoughts alone would not do the trick.
They’d each have to practice new ways of thinking under game
conditions -- that is, when they were actually furious.
The
problem was that when Grace and Adam fought, they seemed completely
unable to avoid their usual interactions unless I was there to help
them. Near the end of our
second session, Adam remarked, "I wish we could take you home with
us!" I replied,
"Maybe you can!" I
made Adam and Grace each an audiotape that they promised to listen to
each time they found themselves ready to smack the other upside the
head. This isn’t unusual; the way our brains work means most of us
require outside input when we’re enraged.
Pre-recorded audiotapes are a great way to get an unbiased
perspective exactly when we need it.
Grace’s
first used her audiotape just three days later.
Without consulting her, Adam made arrangements to watch Monday
Night Football at a friend’s house.
When Adam called Grace to tell her, she was miffed but shrugged
it off. As the evening wore
on, though, she was flooded by thoughts like, "He was single so
long that he doesn’t know how to be in a relationship!" and
"This man is an emotional moron!"
She
decided that maybe it would be a good idea to listen to the tape I’d
made for her: "Grace,
if you’re listening to this, you’re probably feeling like Adam has
been inattentive or selfish in some way.
It probably feels like he’s ignoring your wishes.
I’m making this tape because I want him to be as concerned
about your needs as he is his own, and I won’t be satisfied until he
is." My words helped
Grace relax somewhat, although she still felt angry.
"Grace, remember in our last session how I was talking to
you about the fact that 96% of the time, the likelihood that a
person’s partner will care about how she or he feels depends on the
attitude that she or he has in the beginning moments of the
conversation? Your
attitude can have a powerful effect on Adam, even if he has a bad
attitude to begin with. Right
now, you probably feel that Adam’s actions or thinking are wrong, or
out of line in some way. If
you enter the conversation with this attitude, you can kiss the chances
of getting Adam to care about how you feel goodbye."
This
statement infuriated Grace and she turned the tape off.
But after a few minutes, she decided to go back to it.
"Grace, is it possible that if the roles were reversed, Adam
wouldn’t be as mad at you?" She
had to admit, Adam wouldn’t be bothered if she made plans without
consulting him.
At
eleven o’clock, Adam’s car rolled into the garage.
Grace took a deep breath and waited for him to come inside.
As he walked through the door, he looked apprehensive.
Grace began, "Adam, I don’t like it when you make plans
without talking to me first." Adam
protested, "But we didn’t have any plans!"
Grace felt a surge of irritation but caught herself, and relaxed.
"Look, Adam, I’m not saying it was wrong for you to do
that. I know that you
probably wouldn’t have been irritated with me if I made plans without
consulting you. I just think
we’re different on this type of thing."
In a strange way, Grace felt powerful as she uttered these words.
For a moment, Adam seemed confused.
This was not the Grace he knew.
After a moment of silence, his demeanor shifted, and he said
softly, "I could easily have called before I committed to the game.
I just didn’t think about it.
I’m sorry. I really
don’t mind checking with you at all."
In
our next session, Grace relayed these events to me with a well-deserved
sense of pride. She was
beginning to understand how much the fate of her relationship was in her
own hands. As the weeks
passed, Grace was still frustrated each time Adam seemed inattentive to
her desires, but she used the tape every time, and her attitude began
changing more easily. Three
weeks later, she reported that she actually began hearing my words in
her head without using the tape.
This
signaled that her brain was being rewired for more flexibility, and she
was no longer driven by the dictates of her automatic judgmental
thoughts. Meanwhile, on
Adam’s tape, I encouraged him to avoid his tendency to discredit
Grace’s expectations just because they were different than his, and to
look for the legitimate needs that drove her reactions.
The
disarming of Adam and Grace’s self-protective states was only the
first part of their therapy, but it opened the way for each of them to
become honest with each other about their needs and fears.
Once the critical judgments ceased, Adam was able to disclose his
terror of the kind of suffocating dependency he’d experienced as a
child from his emotionally needy mother.
Sensing his discomfort, Grace was able to assure Adam that she
would respect his need for autonomy.
Ironically, this made Adam want more connectedness with Grace. In
turn, Grace was able to describe the feelings of insignificance she’d
experienced growing up as the youngest child in a large family.
This helped Adam understand her panic when he seemed inattentive.
He was relieved to find that Grace didn’t want him to take care
of her; she simply needed him to check in more.
Their
relationship improved because they learned perhaps the most important
lesson that the brain sciences have given us:
Our moods and attitudes play a more powerful role in influencing
our partners than the persuasiveness of our arguments.
Grace found that she could get the understanding and caring she
needed from Adam not by trying to prove him wrong but rather by shifting
to an unguarded place and honestly expressing her needs and fears.
Adam discovered that when he tried convincing Grace that her
criticisms were unwarranted, the self-protective mechanisms in her brain
rejected his influence. But
when he listened to the feelings that drove Grace’s reaction, her
internal wall came down.
Grace
and Adam aren’t unique.
People often struggle mightily to influence each other’s
behavior, only to fail because they don’t understand that their own
critical attitudes and moods are triggering their partner’s natural
defenses.
Couples must retrain lifelong neuroemotional habits, in much the
same way athletic or musical ability is honed through intense training
and practice. Lasting
change requires new impulses—ones that are formed only by making the
same internal shifts over and over. If there’s one thing that’s
clear to me from my new understanding of the brain, it’s that we will
never succeed in out-muscling emotional states with the power of
rationality. My experience tells me that when partners are approached
with compassion rather than cool logic or blazing argument,
internal states will usually shift in ways that create the possibility
for real intimacy. Our brains, after all, are wired for love.
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