There's no doubt about it: every conflict in every relationship involves two people with two different perceptions, and every solution requires two partners to arrive at a single shared perception. You can't repair a damaged relationship by yourself, and you can't change your partner into someone else. Does that mean the situation is hopeless? Absolutely not!
In Reconnecting, Dr. Joseph Luciani, the celebrated author of the renowned Self-Coaching series, introduces a proven, practical method you can follow to encourage your less-than-cooperative partner to join you in a meaningful healing process, even if you have to take the first steps on your own.
Dr. Luciani begins by helping you evaluate your own level of insecurity and, using his Self-Talk technique, do something to improve it. He shows you how to use Self-Talk to become a catalyst for change in your relationship by eliminating your contribution to the problem. You'll identify your own personality patterns and use Self-Talk to let go of personal baggage, stop listening to what hurts you, and see the problem as a whole.
Next, you'll learn how to apply Catalytic Self-Coaching to your relationship. You'll find out what it means to create a relationship vacuum, and you'll start working with Self + Self = Us Portraits. You'll also discover how to risk trusting each other and to begin coaching each other away from destructive habits and toward a more truthful and loving relationship.
This eye-opening and life-changing guide offers constant support on your journey toward a more loving and rewarding relationship. You'll find plenty of prescriptive advice to help you make sense of your own personality patterns and cope with the anxiety and depression that often accompany difficult relationships. Dr. Luciani's success stories of patients who have changed their lives will help you realize that you're not alone and there is hope.
Complete with a valuable discussion of the essential principles of successful relationships and how to put them into action every day, Reconnecting is the resource you need to break free of destructive habits and create a new, more secure relationship that brings you the companionship, commitment, trust, and true love you need.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
JOSEPH J. LUCIANI, PH.D., is the author of the bestselling Self-Coaching series and a clinical psychologist who has been in private practice for more than thirty years. He is a frequent lecturer and guest on national TV and radio, and the author of Self-Coaching and The Power of Self-Coaching.
There's no doubt about it: every conflict in every relationship involves two people with two different perceptions, and every solution requires two partners to arrive at a single shared perception. You can't repair a damaged relationship by yourself, and you can't change your partner into someone else. Does that mean the situation is hopeless? Absolutely not!
In Reconnecting, Dr. Joseph Luciani, the celebrated author of the renowned Self-Coaching series, introduces a proven, practical method you can follow to encourage your less-than-cooperative partner to join you in a meaningful healing process, even if you have to take the first steps on your own.
Dr. Luciani begins by helping you evaluate your own level of insecurity and, using his Self-Talk technique, do something to improve it. He shows you how to use Self-Talk to become a catalyst for change in your relationship by eliminating your contribution to the problem. You'll identify your own personality patterns and use Self-Talk to let go of personal baggage, stop listening to what hurts you, and see the problem as a whole.
Next, you'll learn how to apply Catalytic Self-Coaching to your relationship. You'll find out what it means to create a relationship vacuum, and you'll start working with Self + Self = Us Portraits. You'll also discover how to risk trusting each other and to begin coaching each other away from destructive habits and toward a more truthful and loving relationship.
This eye-opening and life-changing guide offers constant support on your journey toward a more loving and rewarding relationship. You'll find plenty of prescriptive advice to help you make sense of your own personality patterns and cope with the anxiety and depression that often accompany difficult relationships. Dr. Luciani's success stories of patients who have changed their lives will help you realize that you're not alone and there is hope.
Complete with a valuable discussion of the essential principles of successful relationships and how to put them into action every day, Reconnecting is the resource you need to break free of destructive habits and create a new, more secure relationship that brings you the companionship, commitment, trust, and true love you need.
There's no doubt about it: every conflict in every relationship involves two people with two different perceptions, and every solution requires two partners to arrive at a single shared perception. You can't repair a damaged relationship by yourself, and you can't change your partner into someone else. Does that mean the situation is hopeless? Absolutely not!
In Reconnecting, Dr. Joseph Luciani, the celebrated author of the renowned Self-Coaching series, introduces a proven, practical method you can follow to encourage your less-than-cooperative partner to join you in a meaningful healing process, even if you have to take the first steps on your own.
Dr. Luciani begins by helping you evaluate your own level of insecurity and, using his Self-Talk technique, do something to improve it. He shows you how to use Self-Talk to become a catalyst for change in your relationship by eliminating your contribution to the problem. You'll identify your own personality patterns and use Self-Talk to let go of personal baggage, stop listening to what hurts you, and see the problem as a whole.
Next, you'll learn how to apply Catalytic Self-Coaching to your relationship. You'll find out what it means to create a relationship vacuum, and you'll start working with Self + Self = Us Portraits. You'll also discover how to risk trusting each other and to begin coaching each other away from destructive habits and toward a more truthful and loving relationship.
This eye-opening and life-changing guide offers constant support on your journey toward a more loving and rewarding relationship. You'll find plenty of prescriptive advice to help you make sense of your own personality patterns and cope with the anxiety and depression that often accompany difficult relationships. Dr. Luciani's success stories of patients who have changed their lives will help you realize that you're not alone and there is hope.
Complete with a valuable discussion of the essential principles of successful relationships and how to put them into action every day, Reconnecting is the resource you need to break free of destructive habits and create a new, more secure relationship that brings you the companionship, commitment, trust, and true love you need.
Becoming a Catalyst
Catalyst: an agent that causes change or action
Suffering without hope is intolerable. Sometimes after hours, in the quiet of my office, I can still hear the anguished voices:
"Don't you realize that your need to watch porn every time we make love makes me feel so cheap? I feel rejected when you watch other women. Don't I turn you on anymore?" "Stop pretending there's no problem. You can't even look at me anymore. It feels like we're on different planets, different worlds apart ... What happened to us? Is it me? I just don't understand." "You've become so nasty; you're not the person I married. I honestly think you hate me. I can't go on feeling this miserable." "How could you do this to me? How could you sleep with her? Obviously you have no respect for me or our relationship. Believe me, if I had a gun in my hand right now, I think I would use it on you! Or her!" "I'm so confused. I just don't know if I love you anymore. Maybe a separation would help. It's not that I don't care about you ... I just need time. I can't take the constant bickering ... I just can't take it. I'm sorry ... so sorry. It's not you, it's me."
All of these statements came from couples I've counseled, and, as you might suspect, they represent a small fraction of the different notes that make up the sad song of relationship chaos. Since you're reading this book, you too are probably suffering and looking for relief. I wrote this book to give you hope. But hope by itself is too passive, too uncertain ... so, more than hope, this is a book about change. Positive change.
If you've ever felt like any of the patients quoted above, or whatever concerns you may have about your relationship-however confused, bogged down, or distraught you may feel at this moment-I want you to know that there's a realistic solution: a Catalytic Self-Coaching solution that doesn't require anything more than an open mind and a willingness to explore the riddle that your relationship has become.
So if you're in a problem relationship-one that's slipping, becoming more troubled, less loving, and more confused-I have one question for you: how come you're the one reading this book and not your partner? Don't make any excuses; the simple truth is that you're the one who decided to do something about your struggling relationship. Not your partner. And you are the reason I wrote this book. Sure, in a better world, it would be great if you and your partner would share the responsibility for change. But in the real world, most struggling relationships become asymmetrical; one partner becomes the problem solver and the other the problem avoider. (You may be tempted to see your partner as the "problem maker," but for now, try to suspend this belief until we discuss the dynamics of your relationship.) Since you're doing the reading right now, let's designate you as the problem solver. And if your partner isn't happy with this designation, then by all means share the book-having two problem solvers in one relationship is great. But as you're about to find out, it's not a necessity either!
From the start, let's face one undeniable law of relating: struggle does not take place in a vacuum. Every struggle involves two partners with two unique perceptions. And every solution includes two partners with one shared perception. This book makes no claim that you can fix or change your partner; only your partner can do that. What I can promise is that you can become a catalyst for getting your less than cooperative partner to join you in a meaningful healing process, even if you have to start this process alone.
As I mentioned earlier, if you're reading this book, chances are you've voluntarily assigned yourself the role of problem solver. If you're willing to accept this as a necessary, albeit temporary, burden, then this book can help. But don't look at this undertaking as a burden. Instead, try to see it as an attempt to protect your investment. Whatever your reason-whether it's children, years together, shared assets, pets, or fear of dissolving the relationship and facing the unknown-I think you'll agree that you have much more to gain if things work out than if they don't. And let's face it, does it really matter who initiates the process if in fact you wind up reclaiming the love you've lost? It's not a contest, it's your life.
Pain: The Bright Side
Although your situation is unique, all relationship struggles have one thing in common: pain. It doesn't matter if you're feeling unloved, unable to love, abused, neglected, or just plain confused-pain is pain! And it stinks! But there is a bright side; pain can be a great motivator. Whether it's going to the dentist to finally get that long-needed root canal taken care of or spending the money to replace those worn-out running shoes that leave you limping after every workout, pain instigates change.
Misconception 1: In a Struggling Relationship, Only One Partner Suffers
You might assume that since you're the only one who actually wants to do anything to save your relationship, at least for the moment, you must be suffering more than your partner. Not true. Just because your partner may not be showing any outward signs of pain or distress, don't think there isn't a fire burning in the cellar.
It's not unusual for a struggling partner to bury his or her feelings in insulating-avoidant behavior. This can include emotional withdrawal, excessive diversion (TV, compulsive hobbies, and so on), flirtations and affairs, overeating, substance abuse, workaholism-in fact, just about anything that masks the pain and conflict by creating a buffer of distraction or distance. For other partners, the problem isn't avoidance. It's violence. The flip side of avoidant behavior is hostile-aggressive behavior. This category includes such distasteful behavior as yelling, nastiness, obnoxiousness, physical and psychological abuse, passive aggressiveness, and demeaning, hurtful personality attacks.
Whether it's aggressive or passive, avoidant or insulating, the motor that drives this shabby behavior is pain. Although you and your partner may experience and express your pain differently, in a stumbling relationship, no one is spared. Pain is an equal-opportunity experience.
Misconception 2: You're Unloved
Another equally common misconception is that an uncooperative, seemingly unaffected, avoidant, or aggressive partner doesn't love you. (I'll be defining love in a later chapter.) Although some behavior, such as aloofness, lack of concern, or any form of hostility, may leave you convinced that things are hopeless, this may be far from the truth. Avoidant and aggressive behavior typically has nothing to do with lack of love and everything to do with your partner's attempts to sidestep vulnerability. Let's face it, if instead of being loved you expect to be rejected, you're going to do what comes naturally-protect yourself. It's human nature. You are not going to risk the emotional vulnerability inherent in loving if you don't feel safe. Neither is your partner.
Control: The Bottom Line
Understanding your relationship struggle doesn't need to be complicated, not when you are able to identify the root of all strife. The driving biological forces in nature are said to be the avoidance of pain and the seeking of pleasure. I'd like to add another equally compelling drive to this list: we humans abhor losing control and do whatever we can to regain it. From the time we are infants, we meet chaos with a reactive attempt to control the situation. The Moro reflex, which is present for a brief period after birth, demonstrates this natural instinct. If an infant falls rapidly, the child's arms and legs will mimic the grasping response of a young monkey clinging to its mother as she climbs through the trees. From an evolutionary standpoint, this is known as a vestigial behavior pattern-one that reflects our evolutionary past. From our first moments on earth, we have instinctively responded to danger by protecting ourselves from harm and trying to regain control.
I mention all this so you can understand the powerful forces at work when people feel threatened. Whether the threat is real or imagined makes no difference. If you feel threatened, abandoned, neglected, or unloved, you will do what comes naturally-you will try to gain control over those chaotic feelings. Sometimes you may do it constructively by talking, discussing, and trying to resolve the problem. Sometimes you may do it destructively, by avoiding, attacking, or otherwise protecting yourself from perceived harm. Destructive or constructive, you're only trying to feel less out of control.
When there's turbulence in a relationship, each partner tries reflexively to regain some control over the floundering situation. Every relationship struggle reflects some combination of three basic controlling strategies. Depending on the degree of security or insecurity, each partner will adopt one of these reactions:
1. Constructive. Trying to talk, understand, or get some help. 2. Avoidant. Retreating into a turtle shell of protection and avoidance. 3. Aggressive. Becoming hostile and aggressive: "If I push you away, you can't hurt me."
The optimum approach for resolving problems and reclaiming love is for both partners to be constructive-a constructive-constructive approach. A mutually constructive approach is the eventual goal of this book. Unfortunately, we don't always begin with the optimum.
When neither partner can be constructive, and instead both of them wind up embroiled in patterns of avoidance or aggression, they're more likely to find themselves talking to a divorce lawyer than to each other. Why? Because in these three defensive combinations, avoidant-avoidant, avoidant-aggressive, aggressive-aggressive, there's very little room for healing. Both partners are backed into their mutually exclusive corners, shielding themselves from harm and clearly not able to trust or love.
When at least one partner takes a constructive, Catalytic Self-Coaching approach, even if the other one is aggressive or avoidant, a positive resolution is not only possible, it's likely. I come back to you, the designated problem solver, or, as I'll begin referring to you throughout the book, the catalytic partner. Since you're doing the reading, then by definition, you are engaging in a constructive approach. Regardless of your partner's attitude, as long as you are employing a constructive approach, Catalytic Self-Coaching becomes an option.
Eyes Wide Open: Seeing Both Sides
In over thirty years of working with couples, I've seen time and again that there are always two sides to a story. I can't think of a time when one partner came into a session admitting, "It's all my fault. I'm a terrible, uncaring lout and I'm the sole reason we're having trouble!" Stop thinking that your job is to show your partner the proverbial light, the truth, or the reality. Instead, start recognizing that there are two lights, two truths, and yes, two realities.
I can hear you now: "What, are you saying I should excuse my husband's rotten, obnoxious behavior?" No, not excuse it, but you will need to understand it; just as your obnoxious husband might need to understand why you're less than receptive to his romantic overtures. From this point on, don't judge your partner's behavior by what you see or feel; try instead to recognize that what motivates and drives destructive behavior is the instinctual attempt to gain control. Another way of saying this is that you need to know that your partner-for whatever reason-is feeling out of control and just doing what comes naturally: defensively trying to survive.
I'm reminded of a TV set we had when I was a child. It had a two-inch screen (this was an early 1950s vintage set) with a four-inch magnifying glass. Although the magnifying glass gave you a more expansive view, it also distorted the images. This is what happens with defensiveness. You may think you're seeing the bigger, clearer picture, when in fact what you're seeing isn't accurate, it's a distorted view. Only by removing defensiveness, which like my TV has a magnifying and distorting effect on your problems, can you begin to start seeing the real picture. At first you may be squinting to see what's going on, but in time, without distortion, you'll move up to a sixty-inch, widescreen view of what needs to be done.
Why Is Change So Hard?
Newton's first law of motion states that objects at rest tend to stay at rest and objects in motion tend to stay in motion. In other words, objects-and people-tend to keep on doing what they're doing. The tendency to resist change, or inertia, is completely natural. Since you're in a struggling relationship, no one has to tell you the meaning of the word stuck. Being stuck is having relationship inertia.
Let's cut to the chase. This is a book about change, about overcoming your relationship inertia with or without your partner's help. There are many reasons why people change. I'm sure you've known people who have lost weight, stopped smoking, started exercising, and become better partners; people who have actually changed. I'm equally sure you know people who have plodded along in endless ruts of "I just can't lose weight," "I don't follow through on my exercise," or "My wife and I haven't had sex in five years." For over thirty years it's been my job to figure out why some relationships thrive and become lifelong successes, while others are filled with personal unhappiness, inadequate communication, faulty perceptions, and broken hearts. Why do some people manage to change while others don't? What's the secret? The secret is that there is no secret. But as with any riddle, if you can't see the solution, can't understand it or employ it, it might as well be a secret.
If you're about to become the catalyst for change in your relationship, you're going to have to answer this riddle. I'm going to show you how to do that by teaching you why people change, what specifically in your relationship has to be changed, and how you can use coaching to achieve change. Understand these three components of change-the why, what, and how-and you'll be in a position to do some serious coaching. The what and the how of changing your relationship will be dealt with extensively in upcoming chapters. For now, I'll begin your Catalytic Self-Coaching education by introducing you to why people change.
Why People Change
People and computers share many similarities. One of them is related to what in the computer world are called cookies. A cookie is a small file that a Web site embeds in your computer to store information about you (such as Web pages you've visited, items you've put into an online shopping cart, your user name, password, and so on). The Web site retrieves this information to identify you (or your preferences) in the future. Essentially, your computer gets to know your Web browsing habits and learns to anticipate your Internet behavior. This is efficient.
Like computers with embedded cookies, humans are programmed with biological cookies called habits. The ability to form habits is a valuable part of our human programming that allows us to become more efficient organisms. When we do something long enough, we begin to shift from intentional behavior to a more automatic, reflexive kind of behavior. If you want to see a demonstration of this phenomenon, reach down and tie your shoe. Your hands tie the knot with practiced precision and speed; this is habit.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from Reconnectingby Joseph J. Luciani Copyright © 2009 by Joseph J. Luciani. Excerpted by permission.
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Hardcover. Condition: new. Hardcover. Reconnecting A Self-Coaching Solution to Revive Your Love Life "Reconnecting is an extraordinary book that can end needless relationship struggle and frustration. Dr. Luciani's approach is to empower you to become a catalyst for change and healing. Regardless of the nature of your struggle, if you read this book, you will be in a position to direct the love back into your life and reconnect with the relationship potential that you once knew." -Joe Franklin, legendary TV and radio personality "An enlightening and hands-on approach to exploring change in relationships. This remarkable book gives us all another opportunity to create better partnerships and benefit from the process. Dr. Luciani facilitates personal change in a clear and concise style." -Janice Grossman, former publisher of Seventeen and New York magazines What kind of animal are you? Are you a tiger or a turtle? How about a peacock? Maybe a little bit of everything? In Reconnecting, you'll find out how your animal personality and your partner's lie at the center of the conflicts that plague your relationship. These animals represent habits of behavior we use to defend ourselves and hide our insecurities in relationships. Understanding them and breaking the habits that are characteristic of your personality type are key to transforming your relationship from a constant series of struggles into a loving partnership. Dr. Joseph Luciani explains how to put Self-Coaching to work to break these habits and make your relationship better, even if you must begin the process on your own with a reluctant partner. With clear, prescriptive advice and analyses as well as stories of Dr. Luciani's work with couples who successfully overcame bitter conflicts and developed loving committed relationships, this unique and invaluable resource is a powerful tool for anyone working through relationship issues. Read Reconnecting and discover how to start rebuilding your relationship today. New in the internationally bestselling Self-Coaching series--a powerful program to end relationship struggles Dr. Joseph Luciani's successful Self-Coaching books have equipped readers with the skills necessary to eliminate anxiety, depression, and insecurity in order to thrive in their lives. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability. Seller Inventory # 9780470325056
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