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Where do you start? What goes first? — 16 Comments

  1. Hi, my boyfriend and I are having a timeout from each other for a month as both of us think we are not the best fit for each other. I realise that we still have feelings for each other and still wish to work out. He has just graduated and places his career above anything else and i feel neglected sometimes and emotionally unfulfilled at times. Is there a way to work things out?

  2. Good question.
    Here's some thoughts. I see several problems. As you are working on your reactivity (lizards going nuts to protect you), you have to also work on your lizards' reactions to memories. One reaction you both may have to is “doing it wrong.” Every system must include the ability to learn, which is also a relaxed attitude to “doing it wrong.” One of the nightmares of parenting is that way older people can accidentally brainwash a kid into a visceral (read “lizard”) fear of doing it wrong. I think you want to learn to embrace mistakes and enjoy doing better and better.
    You may want to check out my paper on Controllers.
    Second, I suggest you share with each other on the long term goal of being sources of safety to each other, so that when you slip, you can reaffirm you commitment.
    I recommend that you address becoming reliably Empathic with each other. Check out The Road to Empathy.
    And lastly you might want to start working on Caring Days and Caring Behaviors. Does wonders.

  3. Hello Al. Me again asking your for your invaluable advise. My GF and I have separated after bitter and quite frankly abusive fights. I came to the realization that I am unfairly responding with my “fight or flight” due to my experiences. My lizard doesn't want to get hurt again. I have read your article on safety and I am glad to say I want to move into that direction. I have asked to he to initiate a different relationship (following your advise that you can change a relationship without changing your partner) because I do love her. My question is this: I know she will be watching my every reaction and that makes me very, very uneasy. I am afraid to make a mistake and that makes me even more tense. What can I do to make her feel safe when both of us are that tense?

  4. Great question. Learning to use TimeOuts correctly involves lots of trial and error. Glad you are working on it, Lisal.
    The sound of your question, to me, is that you were not taking a TimeOut at all, but were threatening him in an effort to make him talk with you. Sounds kind of pushy. I'm pretty familiar with this as I used to be really pushy. Boy, that doesn't work!
    TimeOuts are to provide “safety valves,” a break in time in a relationship so that you can stop panic driven interactions and increase thoughtful problem solving time. While panic often arises when an unsolved issue is around, panic will never solve the issue, I believe. Thus a TimeOut is always for a period of time (2 hrs, overnight, a week). I've never used one until someone does something. I think, the way you wrote it, sounds a bit like bullying. Not sure. Let me know if it worked?
    That said, I suggest you look at the whole issue of Reliable Membership and the Testicle Principle to wrap your thoughts around the problem of “pushing people.” I believe it is vital to discuss, dialogue about issues, but I never got there by being pushy.
    The trick, I've learned, is to come across as “inviting.”
    Anyway, that is what comes to mind, reading your query.

  5. I told my husband I wanted a time out until he wanted to discuss an issue. He felt this was using time outs as a punishment. What are your thoughts.

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