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Safety and The Lizard: The Essay — 38 Comments

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  2. Well, I think I just don't have the patience. I am very frustrated this morning because he still refuses to do caring days, only half-heartedly does caring behaviors (and gives me a very limited amount to work with…only 2 or 3 that I could realistically do every day) and now last night he called a timeout, which would be great if he seemed to be actually interested in working on the realationship together as a whole…but he apparently is just interested in the timeouts. So I am very angry today because he can call the timeout but he won't do the other stuff. I feel like he'll just pick and choose the parts of this work that he wants to do and the other stuff he'll ignore even though I've explained to him how important it is to me. I do realize it was a good step to call the time out, but he didn't give me a warning so all of a sudden I am cut off for 15 hours. Because of this, I ended up screaming some last minute crap at him and walking out of the room. 🙁

    • I hear your frustration. Getting someone to do what you want is quite a set of tricks. Everyone the world over is faced with this problem. Well, what to do?

      I think I would shift from focus on the Caring Behaviors, as it seems to be a sticking point for him, and a powerful frustrator for you. I would start looking around for other lessons you can learn that don't involve him so much. After you've made progress in those other areas, perhaps you can come back to Caring Behaviors.

      I imagine a couple of areas you can focus on.

      • My first thought is that he doesn't trust your efforts as being genuine. Trust is a biggie. Remember, his Lizard cannot forget the past. If you've participated in threatening behaviors somewhere along the line, his Lizard is just waiting for you to do it again. I would visibly and vocally show that you are learning patience. I would visibly and vocally show that you are working on giving up any threatening habits – a la "screaming."
      • I would probably shift to focusing on communication and learning to peacefully listen to "anything" he says.
      • I would work on becoming an expert in Validation. I like the phrase, "new to me", that says, "If he won't understand you, understand him."
      • I would imagine your love account with him is currently overdrawn.  Rebuild it.

       

      Or not. Tis all up to you.  It only takes one.

  3. Hi Al,
    I've tried the caring behaviors list with my partner as a first step and it's just not working. He has made me a list of 6 things and only one or two are things I can do every day (the other things either require us to be doing something we don't do every day or require me to spend money which we only have the budget for doing 1-2x a month). I have asked him several times to please add to the list because I am struggling to come up with something to do every day but he doesn't. This morning he told me that adding to the list is one of the "biggest stressors in his life right now." He seemed agreeable to doing these things with me to better our relationship when I showed him your site, so I don't understand what is happening. He says it is too hard to make a list asking me to do things for him. Meanwhile, I gave him a list of about 20 things. What should we do?

    • Hi Ally,  I think I've written about how this situation is normal.  One person has bunches of caring behaviors and the other has almost none and getting more is really hard.  

      I think you are running into Diversity, head on, and might not have expected it.  He's really different from you in the area of "receiving."  And I, too, had a very difficult time coming up with Caring Behaviors for me.  So my guess is that as you are seeing his "difference", you are also running into an area where he's been hurt in the past. 

      My guess is that all babies are born ready to be receivers, but some are taught to "quit that" and only take care of others.   Over time he, with your help, will have to reacquire his abilities to receive and be selfish.   An old truism is that "You can't be generous, if your partner can't be selfish."  

      So what comes to mind is that you need to expand you understanding of people, to include your partner's wonderful sentence "biggest stressors in his life right now."  He's making sense.  Listen and Understand and Validate.  

      But also keep working, slowly, at Caring Behaviors.  May take some time.  So also I suggest you Practice Patience.

       

  4. Good question and good point. Yes, it is a bit like saying that if someone is tense, it is their problem. That may seem harsh, but I believe a) it is practical on two levels and b) can be easily said more gently.
    Practical levels: I believe that up to about age 7 or 8, we humans are designed to live with others who provide safety for us. In a safe nurturing group of caretakers, our brains develop well without damage. After age 8 we are progressively more and more responsible for our own protection and nurturing. I think this is part of our genetic design. I think it is also all about developing self-responsibility. If our caretakers do their job “well,” during childhood we will have been both a) protected and b) witnessed how they severally display self-responsibility and support each other. We will have been protected while we learned how to do it ourselves.
    The second practical point I see focuses again on the Safety paper and the structure of the brain. I believe it is the “lizard” who wants safety on its terms. It wants that to be reliable. Anything else “scares” the lizard. The only agency that can reliable take care of the lizard is the cortex that surrounds it. I, as an outsider, cannot protect my child from the nightmares it experiences. I can help, but the only one who can reliably do the protecting is that child's cortex.
    Thus, when I say, “Hm. you seem tense…. and that is your problem,” I believe I am practically being accurate.
    Conversely, if I say, “I am sorry for causing your tension,” then I believe I am both inaccurately representing the situation, promising a false hope, and delaying 'your' recovery to a state of relaxation. If you are waiting for me to “make you safe,” you may have a long wait.
    Now, how to go about being helpful and gentle in this situation? I think the challenge is in the last part of your line, “that is your problem.” While perhaps accurate, it also easily can include a tone of dismissal which by itself can be frightening (to their midbrain's need for connection). So the goal is to affirm the boundary (“It's your stuff”) and maintain the connection (“How can I help?”)
    A friend of mine wrote a brief article that summarizes this situation. I posted it under the title “Your Stuff is Never My Fault”.

  5. Sorry to be a bother, but I have another question on becoming a source of safety. I have read the article on Safety and trust for I think the 20th time I think. You mention in it that one of the things we should do is avoid blaming ourselves for the partner's tension and put them in charge and take responsibility for doing what works for them. Is that not like saying “you're tense.. that's your problem”?

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