How To Self-Soothe Your Way To More In Marriage
To become acquainted with oneself is a terrible shock. ~ Carl Jung
Marriage, or any committed relationship, has the ability to bring excitement and passion into our lives. At the same time however, as the relationship progresses and more roadblocks and perpetual issues arise, we may begin to feel distant from our partner.
Think back to when you first began your current relationship.
It’s likely that you believed you had found the answer to life’s problems, you’d found a partner to share in life’s journey, you’d never again be alone, and it would be smooth sailing from here on out. It’s equally likely that if your relationship was based on these assumptions, it wasn’t long before you were sorely disappointed that your partner failed to live up to your expectations.
Here’s a truism for Simple Marriage: if you look to another person to provide fulfillment, you will begin to focus on the failings of that person as the cause of your own disappointment.
In every important relationship, you’ve brought your own legacy of fears, anxieties, and unresolved problems – so has your partner. As the relationship progresses, it’s often uncomfortable to come to terms with your own baggage. So much so, that when you’re unable to look within yourself, you’ll attribute the problems to your partner rather than accepting the fact that your partner is just being themselves and likely has the best of intentions.
Whenever you’re uncomfortable about something your partner says or does, it helps to realize that your discomfort may derive from a source you’ve yet to examine within yourself – a control issue, a jealousy, an insecurity or fear, etc.
This is part of your growing up – becoming emotionally mature. One key to emotional maturity involves the art of self-soothing.
When you blame your partner for your discomfort, this tends to create distance within an emotionally committed relationship. This distance then, creates a feeling of further discomfort. The trick to dealing with this dilemma is to learn how to soothe your own emotional pain.
Which in turn, can open the way to more passion and closeness in your relationship.
Here’s a few suggestions that will help:
- Don’t take your partner’s behavior personally. Even if your partner doesn’t make all the changes you’ve made, don’t take it personally. If you and your partner are having a conflict, try some inwardly focused relaxation techniques. Focus on your breathing. Stop talking and try to slow your heart rate. Lower the volume of your speech and work on relaxing your body. In other words, you take care of you.
- Keep the current conflict in perspective. Think about past instances of the same type of conflict. What resources did you use in the past for dealing with the conflict? Think about how discomfort will surface again in the future – and if you learn now how to deal with it, you will be better off in these future instances.
- Control your behavior, even if you can’t regulate your emotions. While you may have difficulty in controlling your emotions, especially in the face of a conflict, you can have control over your behavior. Prevent yourself from saying and doing things that you will regret later. Tell yourself: “I don’t have to take action on my feelings.”
- Stop the negative thinking. Thoughts drive your feelings and behavior. When you find yourself engaged in negative thinking, make the change to more positive thoughts. Accept what is happening – then calm down.
- You may have to break contact temporarily with your partner until things cool down. When you are engaged in a conflict, you may need some time to get in touch with your self again. Look on this as a time-out, not a separation. Tell your partner that you need some time alone to calm down and that you can discuss the issue better later, after both of you have had some space from each other.
- Self-soothing does not involve substance abuse, the abuse of food, or emotional regression. You need time to confront yourself and understand what your part in the conflict may be. This does not mean hiding out, sleeping, binge-eating, or the use of drugs or alcohol, which are all ways to avoid self-confrontation.
The ability to validate your own perceptions, feelings, and self-worth, and soothe your own heartache and anxiety when the inevitable marital disappointments, frustrations, and misunderstandings occur opens the door for the relationship, and both of you, to experience more. Your “relationship with yourself” determines how you’ll handle the good and bad times of life.
Paradoxically, the better you are at soothing and validating yourself, the less you need your partner to “be there” for you and the more you can “be there” for others. Likewise, you can let yourself be influenced by your partner, taking their needs and opinions into consideration without feeling like you’re weakening your own position or interests in the process.
Your ability to self-validate and self-soothe is absolutely vital to maintaining long term passion in marriage.
Adapted from David Schnarch, Ph.D.
8 Responses to “How To Self-Soothe Your Way To More In Marriage”
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OK, This all sounds great and actually identifies my wife on the money. So, How do I tell her about this without her thinking that I am saying she is crazy. Keep in mind I have not been home in 6 months and wont be for a long time still to go due to the fact I am in Iraq. She is going through things of mine from the Army and is accusing me of things that just are not there. But all I can do is try to reassure her. I am not there in person to make my case. She thinks negative all the time. I dont think that she has turned to any vices (alcohol,food) She has been watching some lousy tv shows that are for drama only and seems to think that some of those things are real like all the cheating. It does not happen. We are always on the go always working every day of every week for the entire time that we are here. I wish that those tv shows would be just taken off the air because they are geared just for women and to create drama. How do I tell her that she needs to grow up emotionally and still stay married?
@ Chris- Thank you for your service to our country! I appreciate the sacrifice you and your family makes for others you don’t even know. God Bless you and yours! Stay safe.
@Corey- I have often wondered about self soothing with food. If I were to say that I self sooth by listening to soft music, looking at beautiful art, touching soft fabrics, or lighting scented candles, what would you say? Would that be a good thing? If it is, then why is self soothing with a cookie a bad thing? It is just another sense. I’ve always wondered about this. Where is the line?
The truth is we all medicate and soothe in some form or fashion. I’m a great lover of cookies, but if I must run to them every time my anxiety spikes, I’ll likely not be running to fast carrying all the added pounds. The same applies to anything else we use, healthy or not. When I must use something outside myself (besides God – although I believe He resides within us as well as around us) in order to soothe my anxieties, I set up a potential problem. What happens when my Ipod isn’t around, the art gallery is closed, or the candles are all gone? I still need to turn inward and face the anxiety within – it’s still the best way to grow up and emotionally mature.
Great article!!!
Keep up the great job!!!
I love these… very helpful!!!
@Chris ~ I wonder if you could send her the link to the post and tell her how much you’ve been appreciating this site, because it helps you focus on building a great marriage and how much she means to you ~ and that you found this particular post to be so helpful for your own growth and desire to grow in the marriage, that you wanted to share it with her, since you have to learn how to self-soothe, being that you are so far away physically from her, and maybe these ideas can help both of you during this very challenging time of your military service. (Which, by the way, THANK YOU!!!) Perhaps she would be receptive to reading this from the perspective that you are presenting it as something you are learning about yourself. Worth a try? It may also help her to get some support through your local church or a group of other military wives…
These are all really good points!
As a relationship expert (www.ChoiceRelationships.com), I would like to add that couples need to know that conflicts are bound to happen. But here’s the good news: there are skills they can learn so that they can handle them better. When they do, their partnerships fare much better. I offer a free teleseminar, “The 7 Tools to Manage Conflict Communication in Your Relationship.” To hear it, go to: http://choicerelationships.com/teleseminar_resources.
Corey
You are wonderful, a light in darkness!!
Could you define self-validation? Its meaning is rather unclear to me.
Thank you Ken.
Self validation is the ability to know who you are and who you’re not yet, with or without confirmation from others. It’s what you believe and know to be true about you.