There is one essential ingredient to all relationships. This includes love relationships and marriages, as well as relationships between parent and child, between siblings, in friendships, as well as in the workplace. It serves as a starting place and foundation upon which all other actions and behaviors follow. Can you guess what it is?
It's mutual respect.
Seeing the humanity and dignity in each other is a key part of having successful relationships. It means that you don't feel you are a better person than the other person. It recognizes that they are allowed to have separate and different feelings or opinions than you do. In fact, it's the differences which keep things interesting in relationships.
Mutual respect means you talk to the other person using a kind, polite, and respectful tone. You abandon sarcasm. You are honest and direct. You don't play games. You are skilled enough to let the other person know directly if you are upset with something that they have done. You don't yell, scream, belittle, or ignore the other person.
Withholding and shutting out a loved one or friend is actually one of the most destructive and hostile actions you can take. That behavior pattern, of ignoring and freezing someone out, is passive-aggressive, and extremely hurtful and unskilled.
Mutual respect in families means children are respectful of parents but also that parents role-model this mutual respect in the way they speak to their children. Teaching our children by example about how to create and maintain mutually supportive and respectful relationships is about the best training for life we can give them. They will needs these relational skills all of their lives. We hand them the blueprints for their future relationships.
Couples need to examine the blueprints they got from their parents. Were your parents mutually supportive and respectful? Or did Dad criticize Mom to the kids? Did Mom belittle Dad to her friends? How did their patterns unconsciously infiltrate your own behaviors and attitudes towards your partner? You can choose to rewrite the script in your generation, and not continue the multigenerational transmission of disrespectful behaviors flow through you to your own children.
Mutual respect in friendships means your friends don't have to be exactly like you. Neither one of you is always right. Your true friend can be different from you in many ways, but there is that sacred trust, understanding, and acceptance.
If a child you are in a relationship with is disrespectful, you can be an influence for good by teaching them how to do better. Make sure you are not role modeling or enabling the same primitive behavior.
Emotionally mature adults don't participate in disrespectful behavior as payback.
With an adult child who is being disrespectful towards you, it's important to discuss how and why you feel disrespected, and communicate effectively and calmly what you need them to do in the future to make you feel more respected. You also need to make sure your own expectations of a self-supporting adult child are reasonable, and that you also treat them with the respect they are due. (Hint: you don't get to pick who they date, for example.) Respect should operate both directions.
If you are in a relationship with an adult who is disrespectful towards you, it will not magically get better. You must shift internally and renegotiate the relationship terms, knowing that disrespect is unacceptable to you. Perhaps the other person respond to the truth of your observations, and be willing to change, and give up their disrespectful behaviors and tone with you. If not, you may need to require them to go with you to remedy the situation by going to counseling to break the old relational patterns and get support and skills for doing better.
If the other person is not willing or interested in changing their disrespect, you may need to alter or sever the relationship for your own well-being. It is not healthy to stay in relationship with someone who disrespects, belittles, and dishonors you. Every human being has a right to expect better.
In Gestalt terms, relationships between adults that have this disrespect have to be shifted from relating from a critical parent stance towards a partner as an errant child, to a more adult to adult way of relating.
Mutual respect means you don't just expect to be listened to, you also stop to listen from your heart to understand the other person. You don't play "victim" as if you are without any part in misunderstandings or upsets. You own your own part. You apologize when you are wrong and try to do better.
When you are cooking and leave out a key ingredient, like eggs in a cake, everything falls apart. It won't rise the way it should. The same is true in your close relationships. Don't forget the mutual respect, or you won't be creating anything of value. Anyone who isn't able or willing to learn how to respect you, just as you respect them, might be worth unloading or restricting their access to you. Mutually respectful relationships are your birthright.
Showing posts with label mutual respect. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mutual respect. Show all posts
Thursday, July 11, 2013
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
What Makes Families Happier?
I've been thinking about this question and discussing it with my own family since I ran across excerpts from a new book this week titled The Secrets of Happy Families: Improve Your Marriage, Rethink Family Dinner, Fight Smarter, Go Out and Play, and Much More (2013, published by William Morrow).
The author, Bruce Feiler, has some good ideas, and even backs them up with some recent research about families, children, and couples where he can. Here are some of his ideas that rang true with me as a family therapist:
1.
Happier families talk. They communicate with each
other.
2.
Happier couples, and families, celebrate each other's
accomplishments.
3.
Healthier families adapt to changes. Change happens.
You might as well embrace it!
4.
Happier families try. They put time and effort into
making family a top priority.
5.
Happier families do their best to eat dinner together
as often as possible. If not dinner, then breakfast, or a snack, or something
else is almost as good. Just do something! Feiler cites one cross-cultural
study showing the US ranking 23rd out of 25 countries when it comes to eating
meals together.
The article about Feiler’s book got me thinking about my own observations and reflections about other ways of helping create a happier life as a family:
1.
No family, just like no individual, can be happy all
the time. We need to be realistic about our expectations that families are made
up of individuals whose needs will differ at times. Conflicts will occur. Sibling
rivalry is normal. We need to be able to disagree respectfully, compromise at
times, and make repairs when needed.
2.
Mutual respect is key, between the adults, between the
children and adults, and between the children. We need to make room for
individual differences.
3.
Look for connecting points. Every week, we need to work
some into our busy schedules. These include hugging goodbye or hello, having
fun together in a shared activity, date nights, family game night, working on
projects together, bedtime rituals, shared meals, playing sports together, cooking
together, doing outdoor activities together, and making check-in points with
each other.
4.
Encourage each other. Most adults and children get far
more critical comments each day than positive ones. Happy families make a point
to express what they see in each other's behaviors that they like. This is
known as ‘catching your loved ones being good.’
5.
Happy families come in different shapes and sizes. Not
all happy families have two adults. There can still be a decision to be a happy
family even after the loss of parent by death or after divorce. I’ve seen it
happen. It’s a decision and a choice. Happy families focus on being resilient. In
fact, this makes you a good role model for your children, to be happy anyway, and
try to live the best life you can, despite challenges.
6.
Loyalty. Happier families have each other’s back, and
go direct with problems to the person they have the problem with, rather than
to someone else.
7.
Credibility. In happier families, people keep their
commitments. They do what they say they are going to do. The adults can be
counted on, both by each other, and by the children.
8.
There are clear rules, consistently enforced. There is
structure, but also some flexibility within that structure. The adults are the
architects of the family. The children are not in charge.
9.
Mix it up and have some high-energy fun together. It
might not be football, like the Kennedy clan, but doing some high-energy
activity together is bonding.
10. Everyone
takes out their own stress/trash. Every adult needs to learn how to deal with
their own stress and not bring it home to take it out on the family. Children
and teens need to be taught how to do the same. Just like we need to teach our
children to clean up after themselves, and not leave messes around the house
for others to clean up, think of stress in the same way. Do it yourself.
11. Make
it okay to ask for help.
12. Don't
be so child-focused that the adults ignore each other. It’s helpful for
children to realize that there are other needs in the family besides their own.
13. Apologize
when you are wrong. This makes it easier for your children to do the same.
14. Get
outside yourselves. Families are happier when they volunteer, or in some way
become aware of the needs of others. It puts things in perspective.
15. Warm
it up. Express affection with touch, hugs, a kiss, or a verbal or written “I
love you” as often as possible.
If these are some of the secrets of happy families, let’s share them! If your family life isn't happy, not much else matters.
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