Category Archives: Couples

How Would You Know If You Were Being Emotionally Abused?

Emotional abuse 2

How would you know if you were suffering emotional abuse? Although we don’t always realise it, one of the most common forms of abuse is emotional although a lot of people don’t realise until it’s almost too late that they’re being affected by this. Maybe this is because it builds up over time and the victim often becomes desensitised to it. Even if it’s not intentional, insults, threats, humiliation are all parts of abuse and are often used to control another person.

Another aspect of such abuse is that it’s often minimised and although most of us learnt in childhood that “sticks and stones my break my bones, but names will never hurt me”, this isn’t true. This abuse gets right to the core of another person and attacks their sense of self.

It may include a pattern of one or more of the following abuses: insults, criticisms, aggressive demands or expectations, threats, rejection, neglect, blame, emotional manipulation and control, isolation, punishment, terrorizing, ignoring, or teasing.

Harassment, physical and sexual abuse, and witnessing abuse of others are also forms of emotional abuse, as is coercion.

Emotional abuse can take place anywhere: at home, at school, in relationships, and in the workplace. Contrary to popular beliefs that bullies are only found in the school yard, many bullies also exist in the workplace and in the home. People who appear happy and shiny on the outside can be very different on the inside. First of all, there’s –

  • The passive-aggressive colleague or partner – this is someone who passively expresses anger. This can be by repeatedly keeping you waiting or by constantly changing arrangements. The underlying message is that their life is more important than yours but there can also be a denial of feelings, back-handed compliments or sarcasm. If you live with someone like that, it’s easy to imagine that you’ve done something to upset your partner or colleague but, if questioned, they’ll say that they’re fine or “I’m not annoyed in any way”. You can spend many hours mulling this over, trying to work out what the other person is thinking or feeling. If a person can’t communicate in a straightforward way or uses sarcasm a lot, you                    might be dealing with someone who’s passive-aggressive.
  • The critic – criticism isn’t the same as advice and when you feel judged, no matter what you say or do, it usually has a big impact on your personal or working life. Someone who’s very critical often criticises the person rather than their actions. Although they may not call you names, they often insult your values and opinions, making disparaging remarks about what you say and feel, often because they want to have some control. The person may criticise your every move – for instance, by saying “Why don’t you ever…..?” or “Are you really going to wear that….?”. Does this ring a bell?
  •  The refuser – this is someone who refuses to communicate, engage in conversation or discuss feelings. They often refuse to admit that there’s a problem. This leads to negative feelings and it can seem as if there’s a barrier between you but it also often leads to you feeling guilt and maybe resentment. If the other person refuses to be honest and open with you, you may wonder why you’re in the relationship at all as it’s easy to become angry and frustrated.
  •  The narcissist – this is the person who behaves as if they know everything, is best at everything and usually tells you just how good they are. You can never measure up to this person as they put themselves above others and often lack insight and empathy. They might turn this around to you, saying that you ‘overthink’ things but who can make that judgement about you? They can easily jeopardise special occasions which include any anniversary or special day for you and if they feel hurt or rejected, they are capable of destroying everything around them.

 So, how can you handle this sort of abuse? One helpful thing can be to step back from the situation and trust your instincts and feelings about people. This is very hard if the person behaving like this is your partner because you’ve built up a life with them. However, it’s easy to minimise emotional abuse and think that the other person will change. They won’t – you will have to be the one to change as they won’t see the need to do so.

If you feel that there’s a chance for the relationship/friendship, try writing down what you feel and what they’ve said and give them one last opportunity to address it. If they still refuse to accept that there’s a problem, it may be time to step away for good.

I hope that you’ve enjoyed reading this blog and that if you’re struggling to find happiness or have other issues that are difficult to cope with, that you will come to see that there is usually a way out if we can find the strength to follow a new path.

Why Do We Hang Onto Toxic Relationships?

So just why do we hang onto difficult relationships?

Sometimes it seems as if we’re programmed keeps to desire love – for a lot of people, it’s almost as important to them as food and water. Is that why, even if we know that we’re with the wrong person, we blind ourselves to seeing that? Even when every part of us tells us that someone is wrong for us, we stay.

So why is that? What keeps us in a relationship, or friendship, even when it seems so difficult?

Maybe you’ve already experienced this with a prospective partner – you meet, you like each other, you meet for drinks or coffee, share a meal and before you know where you are, you’re a couple. You meet each other’s families, you know each other’s friends and to everyone else you seem like a perfect couple.

But underneath, it’s different – you don’t feel it’s at all perfect. They always have their phone with them but never reply to your texts, you make plans but they’re not followed through, you never know where they are and although they refer to you as their girl/boyfriend it doesn’t seem like that. They’re physical, you’re emotional; you like talking, they stay silent. If you challenge them, they say things like “well, I’m not really a texter. I prefer face-to-face conversations”. Although there’s nothing wrong with that, you can sense the dishonesty lurking there.

They only talk about themselves and aren’t interested in you most of the time…..and so it goes on with you always making the effort to be there for them but it rarely being reciprocated.

You tell yourself that you deserve better but do you really believe it? It takes courage to break off this sort of relationship that you may have become dependent upon in some ways and it may be that you’re not ready for that step yet. It could be one of the following as well:

  • Change is difficult and means doing things differently. If you break up, it will mean not having someone special in your life; there will be no phone calls, no-one to wake up next to and no-one to share the rent. These things can seem very daunting.
  • Most of us are quite emotional creatures – we’re complex and can often feel love and hate at the same time. This can happen when someone breaks your heart – you hate what they’ve done but you still love them and they will always have a special place in your heart.
  • We hate the idea of failure – we don’t want to give up on something that seemed so important and want to stick it out so that we don’t have to say that the relationship failed. Somehow, that seems to indicate that we made a poor choice of partner/friend in the first place and that’s hard to face up to.
  • Some people thrive on the drama of it – the yelling and screaming or the day-long sulking. There’s also something to complain about to friends – toxic relationships provide a lot to talk/complain about.
  • We think that we can somehow fix it, or fix the other person, but in reality it’s hard to ‘rescue’ someone, especially if they don’t want to be rescued. In reality, it’s often easier to be with someone who isn’t quite so complicated and who wants a more equal relationship.

So, it seems that we stay for a lot of reasons that are difficult to understand but some of those reasons are bound up with our lack of self-esteem, not wanting to be alone or the desire to feel needed by someone.

If you feel that some of the reasons you put up with less than you really want, it’s time to look at your own feelings of self-worth and discover how you can feel better about yourself. Once you’ve achieved that, you’ll be able to look at your relationship in a different light and judge whether you get enough out of it to stay.

Remember – “Relationships are like glass. Sometimes it’s better to leave them broken than hurt yourself trying to put it back together”. Anon.

Finding A New Partner

How hard is it to find a new partner, especially if you’ve just come out of a long-term relationship?

If this is what you want (and maybe you don’t at the moment, having decided that it’s fine to be on your own for a while), then you’ll soon notice that things have changed. A lot!

First of all, you need to decide what sort of person you’re looking for. Create a list and be honest. If you don’t want to get together with someone who has children of their own, admit it to yourself from the start. However, if you’re over thirty-five, this will severely decrease the number of people who will come into your sphere.

That brings me onto the need to be flexible which is in contradiction to the previous point but I want you to think about it. If you can be flexible in this and other ‘likes’ and ‘dislikes’, you may find that your life opens up no end. If you hate camping, it’s probably better to say so straight away but if caravanning doesn’t produce an anxiety attack, maybe there’s a compromise. The same goes for music and other interests.

You have a choice now whether to register online with a free dating site, pay for a more specialised service or hope that you’ll meet someone through your work or friends. Money will play a big part in this – if you can’t afford a monthly online site, you’ll need to choose one of the other ways. How did people meet one another years ago before computers and the internet? Usually at work or through friends/mutual interests. It worked then and sometimes it still works now.

If you go with the dating online site, you need to become quite savvy – it’s no use being really modest by putting things like “I’m just not used to this and not very good at it” – it’s putting yourself down and sounds really insecure.

However, boasting isn’t very attractive either – “I’m have a high-flying job and a Porsche” sounds pretty arrogant but confidence is fine so you could say “I cook a really good lasagne and am good for a laugh”.

Specific information can be good too – “I like looking at rainbows and one of the best I saw was when I visited Northumberland” gives a clue to the fact that you like travelling around a bit and is more interesting than “I like hanging out with friends”.

Don’t talk about any exes in your profile – it’s a real turn-off. Most people who are looking at your profile will realise that you have a past, as we all do; there’s time to talk about it when you meet face-to-face and preferably not at the first meeting.

Always put a photo on your profile – bite the bullet and make it a recent one as so many people have been disappointed at the first meeting to find the other person uploaded a photo taken twenty years ago!

Remember that playing hard to get doesn’t work any longer – waiting three days to reply may well mean that the other person has found someone else during that time.

If none of the above appeals, you can try the old-fashioned way of finding someone new through a shared interest, preferably where you can see them in the company of other people first. It will show whether they have any social skills, how they interact with people and generally whether they’re fairly likeable. You could find someone in the workplace or connected to your work in some way – there are lots of different scenarios but the old adage of finding love when you least expect it is as true as ever!

Ever Wish You Were More Assertive?

Do you often wish you were more assertive? Most of us have that feeling sometimes, especially if we’re feeling ‘put down’ by someone else.

First of all, let’s look at the definition of assertiveness – it involves standing up for your personal rights and expressing your thoughts, feelings and beliefs directly, honestly and openly in ways that are respectful of the rights of others. This means that an assertive person acts without undue anxiety or guilt.

Assertive people respect themselves and other people and take responsibility for their actions and choices. They also recognise their own needs and ask openly and directly for what they want. If refused, they may feel saddened, disappointed or inconvenienced, but their self-concept isn’t shattered.

They are not over-reliant on the approval of others, and feel secure and confident within themselves.

Assertive people give the lead to other people as to how they wish to be treated.

If someone is assertive, these are usually the messages that they communicate:

This is what I think

This is how I feel

This is how I see the situation.  How about you?

If our needs conflict, I am certainly ready to explore our differences and I may be prepared to compromise

The subconscious thoughts are ‘I won’t allow you to take advantage of me and I won’t attack you for being who you are’.

In counselling and psychotherapy, the goal with assertiveness is to communicate clearly, adult to adult:

There are verbal and non-verbal parts to this and they are:

Receptive listening

Firm, relaxed voice

Direct eye contact

Erect, balanced, open body stance

Voice appropriately loud for the situation

“I” statements (“I like”, “I want”, “I don’t like”)

Co-operative phrases (“What are your thoughts on this?”)

Emphatic statements of interest:

  • I would like to……
  • I understand…..
  • However…..
  • I suggest…….

Expressing yourself by:

  • Choosing the right time and place
  • Making notes beforehand – this may help
  • Being concise – do not allow yourself to nag or be sidetracked
  • Taking responsibility by beginning with “I”
  • Choosing your words – be careful not to insult, threaten or denigrate.
  • Be honest and positive but tactful. Criticise actions rather than personality

The following spoil communication:

  • Judging, blaming, criticising
  • Excessive inappropriate questioning – using closed questions
  • Interrupting, finishing sentences
  • Dismissing the other person’s concerns

So, the pay-offs from being assertive are:

The more you stand up for yourself and act in a manner you respect, the higher your self-esteem.

Your chances of getting what you want out of life improve greatly when you let others know what you want and stand up for your own rights and needs.

Expressing yourself directly at the time of negative feelings means that resentment is not allowed to build up.

Being less preoccupied with self-consciousness and anxiety, and less driven by the needs of self-protection and control you can see, hear and love others more easily.

With practice you will gain confidence in being assertive and this can take much of the distress out of life.

However, as with most things, there may well be a price to pay for being assertive and these can be:

That friends, employers or colleagues may have benefited from your non-assertion and may sabotage your newly developed assertion.

You are reshaping your beliefs and re-examining values that have been closely held since childhood.  This can be frightening.

There are no ‘tablets of stone’ to guarantee an elegant outcome of your efforts.

There is often pain involved in being assertive but don’t give up – in the end it will be worth it!

 

 

Taking Back Control Of Your Life

Controlling person 2Maybe you’ve become aware that someone in your life is trying to control you, albeit in very subtle ways. Controlling people want to know about every facet of your life and often push your buttons to get an emotional reaction out of you. They can then exploit what they see as your weakness and it seems that they have no respect for your (or other peoples’ boundaries).

This could be a partner, sibling, colleague or friend. If you’ve realised what’s going on, you’ll probably start asking yourself why they’re doing that and it may not make a lot of sense to you. This is especially so if you’re a live-and-let-live sort of person and can’t understand why someone would want to micromanage your life.

There are lots of different theories about why someone would even want to control you:

  • Fear of abandonment – they don’t feel really secure in their relationships and are often testing to see if they’re about to be betrayed.
  • Narcissists – who look to control their environment by whatever means necessary, making other people pawns
  • People who can’t control themselves turn to controlling others. A person who’s full of insecurities finds a positive sense of themselves from others because their own self-esteem is actually too low to do it for themselves.

However, these are theories and if you’re reading this blog, you may have your own ideas about why someone in your life is trying to control you. It can by mystifying, especially when it feels that they only do it to you. However, most controlling people choose whom they control very carefully, albeit subconsciously at times. In other words, they know who they can control and who they can’t.

If you’re a target for a controlling person, it may be because:

  1. You’re a good person with solid principles
  2. You’ve achieved something that the controlling person would like
  3. They admire a facet of your personality that they wish they possessed
  4. The controller wants something that you have

In addition, there may be an element of learned behaviour here – if you’ve been a bit of a scapegoat within your family, for whatever reason, a sibling or partner will take on the role when you’re an adult.

Whilst there’s almost always an explanation for the way a controlling person behaves, ultimately it doesn’t matter if it’s having an adverse effect upon you and the way you live. One way to put a stop to this is to put down some strong boundaries and stop the controller stepping inside them. Be assertive with them if they’re pushing for too much information that you feel is inappropriate. Their requests may seem innocuous but there’s often a reason for them asking certain searching questions and you don’t have to answer everything you’re asked. Saying to someone who’s controlling “why would you want to know that?” may well take them aback but nonetheless, it’s a reasonable question that deserves a reasonable answer.

Some of the saddest clients that I’ve met over the years are those who are quietly but very efficiently controlled by their partner or their parent. We tend to think of men being more controlling in general but this hasn’t always been my experience in the counselling room. A lot of women control their partners very subtly by withholding something like affection, sex or company which can make the other person feel very vulnerable, especially as they’ve had a parent who took on a similar role when they were a child or if they lost a significant person in their life in their early years. Women are often very good at controlling their children too – even when they’re adults, these young people have to report back to their mothers, make sure that their parent always knows where they are and they have to keep in constant touch. Sadly, these young people don’t even realise that this is happening and often say things like “we’re so close. I’m so lucky to have her to guide me in everything”. In reality, without knowing it, their mother is actually still choosing their friends, where they go and whom they choose as life partners (usually someone malleable!).

Of course, this can, and often does, apply to men who are equally controlling as well but in our culture, we sometimes tend to think that women are mostly the ones being controlled and this isn’t always the case by any means.

Controlling can also be manipulative which means that the person controlling others makes sure that they don’t do tasks that they don’t like but makes sure that they get done by others (“I don’t do driving/ironing/making tea”), thereby assuming that the other person does like doing the onerous tasks. Sometimes, sheer audacity makes sure that the controlling person doesn’t do anything they don’t like and the rest of us end up accepting it as being totally reasonable!

If you have realised that someone close to you is very controlling, ask yourself whether you want to continue in this way. If you decide that you don’t want them in your life any longer, there will be repercussions that maybe you’re not willing to deal with. Some controlling people have a lot of positive points too and that’s why you get on with them at some level or another. Therefore, you may not be willing to let that go. If the person is a close family member there will inevitably be a lot of ‘fall-out’ if you cast them out of your life and in any case, that may seem too drastic.

Whether or not you can work out why they feel the way that they do, if you’re not comfortable with it, think about what I wrote earlier regarding putting down boundaries – with most relationships, there are only so many ways to deal with things you don’t like and these apply whether the relationships are personal or professional:

  • Continue in the same way which means nothing will change
  • Leave the relationship whether that’s in your personal or professional life. This can apply to family members, friends or colleagues. However, it’s often easier said than done – most of us don’t want to walk out on family or on our jobs (financially and professionally the latter often doesn’t make sense)
  • Change the way you deal with it – the other person is unlikely to change whether they’re controlling, disloyal or bullying. Once you accept that, you will be able to find ways of making it work better for you. Be prepared for comments like “why have you started doing it that way? It’s always worked alright before”. Well, it’s worked for them, but not for you! Bear that in mind and you will be able to make changes that mean that your life isn’t being controlled by someone else.