The Exhausting Game Most Couples Are Playing (Bitesize) cover art

The Exhausting Game Most Couples Are Playing (Bitesize)

The Exhausting Game Most Couples Are Playing (Bitesize)

Listen for free

View show details
Our Resources:My Website: https://www.thedamngoodlistener.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/thedamngoodlistener/Linkedin: benjaminleppierLinks etc:Link for intelligent change https://www.intelligentchange.com/?rfsn=8339894.e05f4e7&utm_source=refersion&utm_medium=affiliate&utm_campaign=8339894.e05f4e7Use discount code: DAMNGOODLISTENER for 10% discountIf you enjoyed this episode why not buy Ben (or Kerry) a coffee, all donations, small or great, are gratefully received:https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/headtohearttransformMost couples come to relationship work with a list.A list of what their partner does wrong.A list of what needs to change.A list of disappointments, frustrations, resentments and unmet needs.And honestly, many of those complaints are completely valid.But the longer I do this work, the more I realise that most couples are trying to solve the wrong problem.Because often the relationship problem is not actually the relationship problem.The real suffering tends to come from the stories we attach to our partner’s behaviour.A forgotten moment becomes:“He abandoned me.”A distracted answer becomes:“She doesn’t care about me.”A conflict becomes:“I’m not important.”“I’m alone.”“I’m rejected.”“I’m unsafe.”And once these stories take root, the mind begins searching for evidence to confirm them.The mind becomes a private investigator.We stop meeting our partner and start meeting our story about them instead.Fear Is LoudOne of the central ideas explored in this episode is that fear dominates attention far more easily than love does.Fear feels urgent.Fear feels like survival.Fear barges into the room demanding certainty, reassurance and control.Love is quieter.Love waits to be invited.Most relationship reactions are not actually expressions of truth. They are fear responses disguised as certainty.“I’ll relax when you change.”“I’ll feel safe when you behave correctly.”“I’ll feel loved when you finally understand me.”People build entire marriages around this strategy, despite having very little evidence that it actually works.The Control TrapMuch of the conflict in relationships comes from trying to control discomfort internally by controlling someone externally.If I can get you to behave correctly, perhaps I can finally rest.But control is often fear wearing responsibility’s clothes.And underneath most controlling behaviour sits something much more vulnerable:fear of abandonmentfear of rejectionfear of not being enoughfear of being controlledfear of being unseenfear of being unimportantThis episode explores what happens when we stop trying to “win the case” against our partner and instead become curious about the fear underneath our own reactions.What Doing “Your Work” Actually Looks LikeDoing your own work does not mean becoming passive, silent or endlessly self-blaming.It looks more like:catching yourself building a court casenoticing criticism before it leaves your mouthfeeling the fear underneath the angerbecoming curious instead of certaintaking responsibility for your reactionssaying:“I’m scared.”“I feel rejected.”“I don’t feel important.”Instead of disguising those feelings as criticism, withdrawal, punishment or control.A central idea in the episode is this:Awareness interrupts automatic suffering.The Hardest QuestionPerhaps the deepest question explored is this:“Can I stop demanding that my partner removes my fear for me?”Your partner can support healing.But they cannot do your work for you.And strangely, this is not bad news.It is the beginning of freedom.Because the moment we stop trying to reprogram another human being into our emotional safety plan, we begin getting our lives back.Final ReflectionGreat relationships are not made of perfect people.They are usually built by two imperfect people becoming:more honestmore awareless defendedless controllingless afraidLove breathes in responsibility, not control.
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
No reviews yet