It is Not Fair! The Testicle Principle
By © Al Turtle 2007
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I have been monitoring this problem in my clients, and in discussions among people on the web, for about four years. Yesterday I got one more call from a person who seemed completely exhausted by trying over and over to deal with it – and failing. Here’s the deal. All issues and problems that couples bring to my office are fair. Each person can lead the way out of the troubles. If two people lead, then so much the better, but one is all that is necessary. As I have said elsewhere, “It takes one to make a marriage, and two to make a divorce.”
Oops, all problems except one, that is.
There is one problem for which only one person who can lead in the solution. I call this the Testicle Principle. Now you guys are familiar with the idea that one is a bit higher and a bit more infront or behind the other. Nature does this, to make sure that when we slam our legs together, all will be ok. Painful to have them stay side by side in a pinch. Well, the same thing is true in a couple’s relationship. In this particular problem, and in this problem only, there is a designated leader. However, since about 85% of couples that I see have this problem, this is a big deal. This is the “Unfair Problem.”
You might want to look at this article as a second part to my earlier paper on the Two Wall Problem – Reliable Membership. And you might want to review that paper again before reading on. By the way, this is the problem and solution that my wife and I started working on about 12 years ago. And, luckily I realized I was the designated leader! At that time I printed a sign for the wall of our house that reminded me of my job, my role. Using the word “Lizard” to refer to the survival instinct that was operating in myself and partner, my sign read, “You will never get love by chasing a Lizard.”
Review (of Reliable Membership principles)
The principle is that “All people require adequate, reliable (and not excessive) contact with other humans.” At any given time, each person has a position on a continuum from extremely needy, to extremely avoidant. No one will be exactly at the same spot. Put two people together and one will be more clingy (reacting to insufficient or unreliable contact) and one will be more avoidant (reacting to too much contact). In an intimate relationship, this distressing situation often becomes chronic, repeats over and over, and produces a great deal of distress. When this sort of event starts, one acts needy, clingy, clawing, interrogating, pushy, invasive, in-your-face, pain-in-the-butt, insatiable, etc. I call this person the Clinger, or the Pursuer, the Needy one. During this event the other partner acts cold, withdrawing, silent, detached, avoidant, self-contained, isolating, etc. I call this person the Avoider, or the Isolator, or the Independent one. During these events, both tend to drive each other crazy. The behavior on both sides is driven by a) a need for enough connection or enough space and b) panic / the lizard. When the Lizard takes over, watch out! I am a clinger, and have lived through this problem to its solution. I recall each stage of the learning. It was rough. My wife was an avoider. Enough said.
In my earlier paper on this subject, I shared what the solution is: a) the avoider needs adequate space on demand, and the b) clinger needs adequate reliable connection.
But this is easier said than done, and this is where the Testicle Principle comes in. I have never known an Avoider who has been able to lead the way into solving this problem. Hear me? Never. When I work in my office with Avoider individuals, who cannot get their Clinging partner to come in with them, all the Avoiders have ended up stuck – failing in their marriage. Many of the Pursuers have been successful and leading toward a great marriage. I was baffled by this for some time. Then I began to suspect the problem. Panic causes a Clinger to activate. Panic causes an Avoider to shut down. Frantic but active people can choose among different solutions. Shut down people stand still and freeze. Just try to get a frozen person to lead you! This will not work.
Zoning Out
I am used to one technique of the Lizard when it freezes. It shifts the blood pressure in the brain so that the person just drifts away or “zones out.” When a child is being violated, this reaction saves its sanity. The child feels nothing. When on the battle field a soldier, under extreme pressure, just disconnects. That was shown in the early part of the movie, Saving Private Ryan, by the episodes of silence during the D-Day invasion. I began to connect this zoning out with Avoiders. When a couple comes into my office, I typically speak to the Avoider first. I find this person by speaking to the person who did not make the appointment. Clingers, I have found, make the appointment about 95% of the time. For the last three years, if I get the impression that the person I am speaking to is really an avoider, I ask this question. “This might seem like a funny question. Do you ever find yourself in front of your partner, they are speaking, and you have just gone blank? Can’t think of anything? Don’t even know what they are saying?” In these three years, 70% of these people have looked a bit startled, and then said, “Yes. Often.” Some describe it as happening many times a day when they are together with their partner. Often they tell me that they have told no one about this before, and that it has been a problem since they were little kids. I usually tell them that what I believe they are experiencing is probably low blood pressure in part of their brain and that this protective dropping of blood pressure is normal. I also say that we will deal with it later in our sessions together.
Clingers must do the first work
The challenge to fix this problem of Reliable Membership is for the team to create TimeOuts for the Avoider (on demand) and create reliable connection for the Clinger. But the Avoider overloads, goes into Zoning Out and paralysis, and cannot “demand” or even request the TimeOut. They cannot even ask nicely at first. They just shut down. (At least not at first.) If we Clingers are respectfully waiting for them to become "responsible" and to ask for a TimeOut, we may wait till the cows come home. I have found this out. I have studied this. Check it out for yourselves.
Avoiders begin to overload, slip further into overload and finally arrive at full overload. They may know this is going on, but most often they are not aware. We, Clingers, may not see it going on. There is no blinking light on your partner’s head that says, “Overload in 2 minutes” or “Now overloaded.” We Clingers typically become aware some time after our partner is zoned out for some seconds or minutes.
Thus to fix this problem, Clingers are the only ones left who can do anything, and, omigosh, “aloneness” is their biggest fear! Still they are looking for a solution. Clingers get caught between their biggest fear (abondonment) and the opportunity to make progress in their relationship. So this is the time, oh you Clingers, to call a TimeOut for your partner, and then go take care of your need for connection while your partner is recovering from Overload.
(By the way, I found that it doesn’t do any good to verbalize the idea that you are calling a TimeOut for them. “Boy, you look like you need a TimeOut!” doesn’t work. Try, “This is getting heavy for me. Let’s take a 1 hour TimeOut.” This, I found, works.)
If you regularly call TimeOuts in behalf of your partner, i.e. when they "seem" to need it, they will tend to believe/trust that you can give one and then maybe they can call one. Then one day, and I remember the day it happened to me, your partner may say, “I am gonna need a TimeOut in 4 minutes.” On that day, I suggest you crow and jump for joy, because your huge pain is in suddenly finding yourself alone, and now your partner is helping you to avoid it. Your partner is giving you a warning ahead of time, which you can respond to. Your partner is being predictable.
The Clinger Tasks
Give your partner more TimeOuts than they need. Your goal is to use your energy, panic, and wisdom to keep your partner out of Overload. As long as they are out of Overload, all other problems in the relationship are solvable by either one leading – or both. When your partner is in Overload, no one can do anything productive. When the Avoider is in Overload, it is your job to do what it takes to bring them back. It is good to quickly recognize when your partner is in overload. The quicker the better. Also, I have learned that it is wise to begin to recognize when your partner "might" go into overload and anticipate it. Hint: learn how to, pleasantly, give your partner more space than they need. You will begin to see them coming toward you – which is what you want. The second thing you must do is KEEP YOURSELF OUT OF PANIC in the presence of your partner! Your Panic probably cues them into overload. I cannot stress this enough. Learn to recognize the clues to when you are “losing it,” get away from your partner. Do things that calm you down (at least 20 minutes) and then come back. Boy, is this hard! This situation will not seem fair to you. It isn’t fair. But this works.
The Avoider Tasks
I think it is good to help your Clinger partner understand what this situation is like for you. Tell them. They may not believe you at first. Hopefully this article will help you. I think it is good to not blame yourself for becoming overloaded. This is a normal Lizard brain behavior, when it thinks it is dying. This is Freezing. It is protecting you the best way it knows how. I think it is good to validate your partner’s frustration – when you can. “Hey, I sure see your frustration when I zone out. Now, I can’t do anything else, but I see how that must hurt you, and I bet it seems unfair.” Practice planning ahead. Learn to anticipate your overloading, and call a TimeOut before you need it. I, a Clinger, recall the first time my partner said, “I can listen to you for another 4 minutes, and then I will need a couple of hours of TimeOut.” It was wonderful to hear her give me a warning. My suggestion is that if you think you can handle your partner’s enthusiasm for 10 minutes, call a TimeOut in 5 minutes. Give yourself some leeway.
What about Switching Sides?
It is very common for some couples to switch position. Some days, or months, or about some subjects, one is the Clinger and the other is the Avoider. And then they switch. Guys are often Clingers around sex, and Avoiders around most everything else. Sometimes a “normally” clinging partner will get exhausted and will switch sides and walk away. The Testicle Principle still works. It is the Clinger who does the leading, the initial work. This is what I have figured out. Good luck.
I'm not entirely sure whether I'm the chaser or the avoider. I would have said I was the avoider but I'm beginning to suspect that I'm the chaser- or possibly at some point our roles reversed. My husband of 4 years began to let me know he wasn''t happy with our marriage a few weeks ago. I immediately went into salvage mode and tried to arrange things for us to do to make us revive that spark. Over the past few years I noticed when he became needy I would push him away. In fact it disgusted me when he got clingy. However all my efforts to rekindle that spark seem to have failed because tonight he packed some things and went to stay with a friend saying he needed some space. He has already called twice and I have decided not to answer even though it is really hard. Am I doing the right thing?
Ah. Omygosh do I hear you! My heart reaches out. This sounds like a lot of pain. Well, my mentor used to say, “You are either going to have a nice day, or you are gonna learn something.” So I guess it is your turn to learn some.
As I was thinking of your letter, I also began to wonder how many others are, at this moment, in the same kind of pain – even maybe the same amount of pain. I see a lot of people and this is a very common problem. And I was trained to make guesses.
So my guess is at at this very moment somewere around 600,000 people in the USA are in the same situation. By the way, that includes both you and your parnter – this guy in the hole. That is my best guess. You are not alone, though you probably feel alone.
As I have written elsewhere, “chasing” never works. But it is remarkably hard to give up doing it. I have done plenty of chasing in my years. Foolish stuff.
My suggestion is to do more than say “I am done with chasing.” I doubt that you are. What I would work on is learning to handle your kind of panic. Read the Lizard paper and make friends with your own internal panic mechanism. Take care of it – cuz other people won't – unless they are trained.
I guess I would remember to honor yourself for trying so hard, for being so stubborn in trying to get that wonderful dream of love. And I would not give up that dream, no matter what. (However, you might take a rest for a while.)
Good luck.
I was engaged to an avoider. Recently, he kept telling me that he “turned off a switch” and can't get back to being happy with me. When I created space, he would tell me how much he loved me and wanted to marry me. When he returned from a trip, he told me that he wasn't happy – very inconsisent and tortuous for me. I told him to pack his bags and leave. He has now crawled in his little hole avoiding everyone and drinking to forget. It doesn't seem fair. Any thoughts on what to do? I have decided not to contact him again even though we bought a home together. I have put it up for sale. His lack of committment is disappointing and he is not the man I fell in love with. He is avoiding everything which is frustrating for the “chaser.” I am done chasing.
Deja Vu. The same thing happened to me too at around the same time. My all around avoid-er and live in BF decided that he needed “space” to figure things out on his own. I wish he was clingy in the sex department, but that's what triggered it this time.
Two days before Valentines I come home with 2 bags of stuff from the sex shop and ask if he has any ideas of how to spice up our sex life. It snowballs into how he can never make me happy and wants to be able to go out drinking with the guys and not have to tell me when he'll be home.
So now I've got a new apartment and am doing the whole no-contact thing, half that he'll come back around and half hoping that he'll fade in my memory so that I can move on to a guy who doesn't treat me like I'm invisible.
Oh God! I have spent the last while reading thru all of your articles and recognised myself and partner throughout all of it…the clinger and avoider -these episodes of disaster have happened twice before up to a week at atime because he needed space.. and again not learning!/realizing my patterns, even with therapy! I have done it agin, and he has now stated we are not seeing one another “at this time”.. I am in a sate of terror like you stated, can't think, sleep, eat, all of the above scared to death this is it between us-.. I WILL DO all of what you have suggested from this moment on, and if God's willing, it will come back together, that's all I can hope for… thank-you for your work, it's helped me tonite somewhat.. L.S.