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JUNE 3, 2021 | The Jewish Home
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OCTOBER 29, 2015 | The Jewish Home
Dr. Deb
Is It Over? By Deb Hirschhorn, Ph.D.
âI
am in so much pain,â she said. âI just canât go on another
day.â âIâve tried everything and nothing works, so what is the point of trying anything else?â he said. Youâre right; you shouldnât suffer. I donât believe Hashem wants us to suffer. What would be the point of suffering anyway? What gain is there? Life is too short. Weâre meant to feel excited by every moment weâre alive; excited at just breathing the air, feeling the sunshine, enjoying the rain, too. Weâre not meant to quake at the sound of our spouseâs footsteps. Weâre not meant to feel our eyes wanting to roll as our partner challenges, lectures, or attacks us. Weâre not supposed to swallow criticism just to keep the peace. Our kids arenât content to watch us fight or live like strangers in the same house; that is not the way to raise kids to savor life â and love. Weâre not created to âget throughâ our lifetimes and have nothing joyous to show for it at the end. âBut I tried so much in so many ways,â they replied. I understand. Let me explain the problems with the things youâve tried.
âI Tried Explaining âTil Iâm Blue in the Faceâ Many people believe that when you speak proper English and the other person is intelligent, all you have to do is explain your intent and â bingo! â problem solved. I wish. I remember a time, back when I was in college, a bunch of us were dis-
cussing what we would do if we were confronted by a robber with a gun. I thought I might âexplainâ how he would be ruining his life by keeping this up. Lots of luck. I learned quickly that explaining and logic donât work very often. Logic is good for the world of engineering, computers, rocket science, and research. And thatâs about it. It will not help when emotions are involved. And theyâre involved in just about every decision we make. (Thatâs why medical journals must report financial conflicts of interest for their published research. Even research scientists are prone to be swayed. In fact, any scientific âfactâ should be looked on with a jaundiced eye until all conflicts of interest are on the table, something apparently not happening in our current tekufa, but thatâs for another time and place.) According to Antonio Damasio, one of the foremost neuroscientists today, the emotional parts of our brains can be found all over the brain, not just in the amygdala or other parts of the limbic system. And there is no decision that can even be made without an emotional component. So, back to âtrying to explainâ: When you explain your feelings, that doesnât mean that your partner gets it. You would think itâs obvious, but itâs absolutely not. It can be the exact opposite. Many people are brought up in homes where emotions must be avoided at all costs. Perhaps such people were raised with all the fighting that I described above. Too much drama growing up leads the next generation to run the opposite way.
So that generation doesnât want to hear about feelings, especially bad ones. That means that when you try to explain how you feel, they are not listening, or even if they are listening, they literally canât relate to it because they know nothing about emotions. Shrinks like to call that âbeing in denial.â I prefer saying they simply donât know the language of emotions. To understand emotions, you have to immerse yourself in experiencing them, a very diďŹcult matter for people who have avoided them at all costs. So âexplainingâ doesnât work.
I Kept Telling My Spouse What I Wanted Now, weâve moved out of the realm of emotions and into the world of behavior. Behavior, you would think, is a lot easier. You simply change how you respond to things. Well, thatâs another âgood luck on that one.â If a person has spent their entire life yelling, do you really think they could stop just because you asked? There are lots of reasons why they would not stop. One is that many behaviors are on automatic. This is called âeconomy of mind.â Our brains donât have to ponder what to do when a stone gets thrown our way; we duck. Itâs automatic. But there are other reasons why a person might not readily change behavior. One big one is that people are scared of losing their sense of identity. When people say, âThis is who I am,â what theyâre really saying is, âIf
I changed that behavior, would I feel like myself?â They are scared that they would not. Itâs not that they canât make the switch. For many behaviors, there is a gap in time to think through oneâs actions; theyâre not automatic and shouldnât be. Yet, if a person is afraid that they wonât recognize themselves when they act differently, they just might resist. Then thereâs the insecurity problem. Lots of insecure people overcompensate for it by coming down hard on standing their ground. People like to call that ânarcissisticâ but when you peek beneath the out-there cover of the narcissist, they turn out to be insecure and will go to any lengths to hide that insecurity, especially from themselves. So they will fight tooth and nail to not make behavioral changes that they very well could make.
We Went to Therapy and Got Nowhere Couples counseling requires specialized training. The therapist certainly has to understand how to help the individuals in the relationship. But he or she also has to know how to understand what is going on in a couples conversation. Very, very often, the people in the conversation are hiding behind their defenses, so what you see and hear â right down to facial expressions and tones of voice â are defensive protector parts rather than the Self (soul) of the people. How do you get around that? I remember a long time ago when I was struggling with that very thing.



















