T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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834.1 | | ULTRA::ZURKO | The quality of mercy is not strained | Thu Oct 19 1989 13:04 | 12 |
| > Can counseling really make a difference ?
If counseling is the same as therapy, it has made a difference to me. But I
wanted it to. It also makes a difference in how I treat Joe, which makes a
difference in his life.
I'm not sure how well I can speak to the issues of trust. I have loved people I
would _not_ share a checking account with! Trusting someone I love, but who
cannot control cash, with my emotions, but not my money, seems like an entirely
consistant thing to me. But perhaps you are talking about a kind of trust for
which this parallel does not help.
Mez
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834.2 | don't hurry | SA1794::CHARBONND | It's a hardship post | Thu Oct 19 1989 13:31 | 14 |
| re .0 >Can I make a difference....
Yes, but make it clear that a) you want to b) you're trying to
and c) you need at least a little cooperation from her.
We all need to trust someone. *Be* the person she can trust
and wait. If she expresses mistrust, be patient, pressure
will make it absolutely impossible for her to trust you.
Lost trust/ability to trust is the hardest thing to regain.
Time and absolutely trustworthy friends are the only cure.
Good luck
Dana
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834.3 | takes patience, love, understanding and luck | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | The trigger doesn't pull the finger | Thu Oct 19 1989 14:11 | 18 |
| You can make a difference but she has to let you. She gates whether your inputs
are monitored or ignored. Having been in a similar relationship once before,
I am afraid that you are not in a good position unless she decides she is
ready to heal.
It sounds like things are deteriorating, or at least they have and are now
maintaining a steady state. One thing that you must realize is that all of
your love and support may not be enough for her. She may have to lose you to
spark her into healing herself. I'm not sure what finally happened to my former
SO, but despite my help, she got worse before the relationship dissolved.
I don't mean to depress you at all. I would like you to realize that the ball
is essentially in her court. You are in a very difficult situation. I hope you
have the strength to work at it with her until the situation corrects itself.
Good luck-
The Doctah
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834.4 | | CISM::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Thu Oct 19 1989 14:27 | 19 |
| TRUST is so very important in a relationship.
I believe you truly CAN make a difference in your wife's life.
You will eventually become the source of strength and security as she
learns [slowly and little by little] to trust again.
I suggest that you need to be patient, and very, very strong for
her. The counseling is an excellent beginning on this journey,
but I don't believe it can solve everything. It can only offer
some tools and guidance for problem solving.
One last suggestion: Never, NEVER give up who/what you are, if
you are happy with what you see in the mirror. You can continue to
be supportive and loving without losing your identity.
Look inside your heart. You'll find the answers there.
Peace & Strength,
marcia
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834.5 | I Don't Mean To Preach | USEM::DONOVAN | | Thu Oct 19 1989 14:31 | 10 |
| The only person that you can change through councelling is you.
You can learn how to communicate (both ways). You can learn how
to understand and tollerate.
Bot you can NOT change the way someone else thinks. I'm certainly
not negative about councelling. I went and it helped me feel great
about being me. A person will only change if and when he wants to.
Kate
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834.6 | YOU CHOSE HER FOR SOME REASON | CARTUN::WALKER | | Thu Oct 19 1989 16:14 | 38 |
| Dear anonymous friend:
I wish I could talk to you in person.
Like your wife, I, also, came from a very dysfunctional family. I
didn't believe in love (especially in verbal expressions of love).
Therapy has been truly helpful for me -- especially the most emotional
therapies: one called re-parenting in which the goal was to establish
a parental-like connection with first a female and later a male
therapist, and go through the growing-up stages again; and
co-counseling, which I've spoken about a little in this file. I think
therapy *can* work, but as most noters have replied, it's really in her
ballpark. It's still a mystery to me why people like your wife hang
around those who are still hurting her: I suppose it's related to a
real attempt on her part to work through the pain, but I don't think it
is working *at all* for her.
What's a mystery to me about you, however, is why you have allowed her
to effect your friendships, [egads! even your hairdresser], and your
family relationships. It seems to me that you, too, need to do some
growing. I *know* about the strength of neurotic people; but I think
I'd say something to her like, "I love you dear, but you're a bully."
I was married to a man, now on his fourth marriage, whose position in
all his marriages has been that he is fine, healthy, loving, and there
is something wrong with his wives, and why can't his love cure them.
He has convinced most people around him of this "truth" also. I had to
get far away from him before I saw that he had never dealt with his
mother's giving him up to her own mother, supposedly at her new
husband's insistence, or with his lack of a father. HIS pain he
doesn't know anything about, but he is an expert on theirs.
What I am saying here, is that taking a position that "I'm fine, but
I'm not so sure about you," is poisonous. YOU CHOSE HER FOR SOME
REASON, and "love" is too limited an explanation.
Briana
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834.7 | Wow, what a thing to say! | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Thu Oct 19 1989 16:59 | 53 |
| She married someone whom she trusts "less than zero"? I suspect
her family has eroded her self-esteem so much that she now seeks
out punishment. She chases after a family who hurts her, and she
marries a man she doesn't trust.
Do your attempts to win her trust anger her? Because in this scenario,
she NEEDS to feel your potential betrayal. Does she belittle you
for being a "wimp" when you bend over backwards trying to be a nice
guy? I don't think she wants a nice guy. She wants someone who
will validate her belief that all people are scum, or at least all
the people willing to pay attention to her. She "wouldn't belong
to a club that would have her for a member". It's a comfortable
feeling. You never have to reach out to anyone because you've decided
no one's worth it. I know. I've been there.
But that doesn't help you much, does it. A little classical
conditioning may work here.
Start with little things that seem to generally make her happy. It's
the feeling of, "this makes me feel good" that you need to cultivate
in her but first she has to recognize what that feeling is and get
comfortable with it. As long as you associate it with things and
not people, it will be "safe" and she'll be free to feel joy.
A favorite dinner cooked just the right way - a book by a favorite
author - a houseplant - cashmere against her skin - whatever you have
noticed brings her true joy is what you need to start with. But
don't include yourself, i.e. don't say "look what *I* did for *you*.
Let her find the things, experience the pleasure by herself. AFter
a while, and only your sensitivity will tell you when, you can begin
to include yourself in those good feelings, i.e. you can hand her
a goodie and wait for her response.
In this way, you can help her learn to associate joy with people but
not too much too soon. Once she discovers what you're doing, you've
lost.
And also give her lots of room. Don't always be the one to express
the closeness in your relationship. Wait, and give her time to
discover she wants to express it, too.
And lastly, watch out for vague accusations. Ask her for specifics.
She doesn't trust you *how*? That you'll run off with someone else?
That you'll abuse her like "everyone else"? That you're not really
the person you "pretend" to be? What would it take to gain that
trust? Would she trust anyone, ever? Is she just as un-trustworthy
or does she think she's the only "good" person on the planet? Should
you not trust *her*?
Just please don't start blaming yourself if she never gets "cured"
because none of it is your fault. You can't "save" her, you can
only love her, do your best, and save yourself.
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834.8 | Some advice from one who's been there | TLE::D_CARROLL | On the outside, looking in | Thu Oct 19 1989 17:27 | 30 |
| Wow. It's tough. I just wanted to comment on one thing...
You say you hve broken off outside friendships for her. I will assume (for
lack of further information) that part of her distrust is in the form of
jealousy, and that you broke of your outside relationships to help ease
her jealousy.
Don't do that! I've been there, and demanded this from men. (Well, man,
actually.) It might feel to her like she can't trust you to be with other
people without her there - it is true, she might feel better if you are
never in that situation. But simply eliminating the *situation* that
she doesn't trust you in doesn't make her trust you more. And in the long
run, there will *always* be situations where you *could* betray her trust,
and she had to learn that you can be in them without betraying her, rather
than you voiding them.
Better instead to slowly work with her to trust you with these outside
relationships - giving them up will only hurt you, and won't help her to
develop trust!
(In my jealousy I demanded that he stop seeing *any* females other than me.
And so I was calmed, and felt everything was settled. But it meant that
every trip he went on, everywhere he would be exposed to a new situation
with new females, was a threat. It wasn't until *I* learned to trust him
in the situations that were threatening, rather than forcing him not to be
in them, that I could feel comfortable all the time.)
Good luck!
D!
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834.9 | try this | WMOIS::C_SNOW | | Thu Oct 19 1989 21:57 | 10 |
| Hi,
You could look into Springhill in Ashby. They do weekends with
coupls or singles. It would be a place where she could go and find
her feelings and let go of some of them. It might help if she felt
better about her self.
good luck
Cec
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834.10 | no easy answers | SELL3::JOHNSTON | bord failte | Fri Oct 20 1989 10:11 | 32 |
| Let's see now. A lot of this will be repetition, but...
Can you help? I think my answer would have to be 'Not directly.' As
has been said before, your wife's 'cure' is in her hands, not yours. So
if effecting a cure is your goal, you are in for a ton of grief. But
help can take other forms. Are you trustworthy? I suspect that your
answer is 'yes.' If you are right and she can learn to trust you, then
you will have helped.
Speaking as one who finds trust hard to give, I don't encourage to you
to try to 'win her trust.' Attempts in this direction have always made
_me_ very wary. Just love her. Just be you.
I also second the person[s] who said that giving up your own friends
and family relationships for her can't really help. She needs to learn
and to understand that they take nothing away from her. Again, this
cannot be forced -- reassurance from you and time can do this.
I sense your frustration that she turns constantly for love and
acceptance to the very people who have killed trust in her -- her
dysfunctional family. Sadly, this is so common as to be trite. She
loves them...or at the very least she desparately _wants_ to love them
and be loved by them. If you can reflect for her the goodness she has
within herself, she may choose to see it and to make the choice to
self-validate and to live her own life.
To you I can only offer many warm thoughts and the hope that you will
do what is right for you. You should not live her pain. If you can
accept her in her pain and stay strong in loving and nurturing, you are
very special indeed.
Ann
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834.11 | People can Heal... | DECXPS::ZBROWN | | Fri Oct 20 1989 14:10 | 27 |
|
I hope maybe from my personal experiences that I have gone threw
and still am will be of some help to you. I don't know if
your councelor has discussed this with you but just to let you
understand "Why" your wife goes back for more pain is this is
a well learned feeling for her. It is very undersatandable
that she is frightened to change to something she knows "Nothing"
about. Even though it hurts her she can deal with that because
she has been dealing with it all her life.
"Trust" is a very strong word and is very important so as
to life a healthy and happy life. This is also one of the most
hardest to learn if it was taken away and crumbled in your
face. There IS a reason for not trusting. She may be throughing
it a little out of paportion (sp) but there is always a reason
for a feeling that a person has. I agree with some past replys
that it is up to her, but you can help by understanding what
is going on and learning about feelings. I would recommend
separate conceling and then together. It is very important
that you stay strong and take care of your self and she will
learn that from you, but agian she has to want to learn that.
I hope this helped a little.
Zina B
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