If you are in the mood for a little discouragement, read Eli Finkel’s view of marriage. Finkel teaches at Northwestern, so he has all the
proper credentials. And yet, he seems to have conjured up the notion that
marriage, that venerable institution, has now become a place for two people to do psychotherapy.
Worse yet, he entitled his article: “How to Fix the Person
You Love.” Naturally, no one noticed that in another, canine context,
“to fix” means “to neuter.”
One feels genuinely sorry for anyone who thinks that their
spouse is their therapist—or perhaps they married their therapist—because, God
be our witness, marriage is not designed to give you complete self-actualization. Has anyone ever considered that marriage has a communal purpose, that it serves a community and that it was not designed for your own personal self-indulgence.
What does Finkel mean by self-actualization? Glad you asked:
Achieving
personal growth is an arduous process. A life characterized by the pursuit of
self-actualization trades satiation and contentment for hunger and yearning.
The path from the actual to the ideal self passes through anxiety, frustration
and humiliation. It’s no different when our spouses are helping us get there.
Finkel is offering the secular version of an experience of
spiritual transcendence. The religious version was associated with mysticism
and is a proud part of Western religious tradition. If that is your
goal, you should not see a coach. You should find a confessor, as did St.
Teresa of Avila, and use him as a guide. This might correspond to what
some therapists offer. It has nothing to do with coaching.
If large numbers of Americans believe such swill, we are
doomed. The social fabric cannot long survive when people hold such a gross
misconception of marriage.
Marriage is not therapy. It should never become therapy. You
do not marry someone to help him to achieve spiritual or emotional transcendence.
Unless you are wallowing in a grotesque form of solipsism,
you know that marriage is about your responsibility to other people. Nowhere in
his essay does Finkel consider that spouses have responsibilities to each
other, that they have responsibilities to their children, and that they are
engaged in a cooperative enterprise. Married couples work together. If one
decides to make of the other a reclamation project, the marriage is in serious
trouble.
Finkel suggests that the old model of a
marriage, where it was about running a household, went out at around 1850. This
is a patent absurdity and does not deserve much attention.
Meanwhile, back at the therapeutic marriage, Finkel believes
that a spouse can only help a spouse by being critical and dismissive. Really?
We do understand, because we are semi-enlightened, that some coaches are hard
on their teams. They are especially hard on young team members. In basic
training a drill instructor is hard on the raw recruit. As we saw on Saturday,
a Chinese schoolteacher can be very demanding and authoritative toward a
three-year-old.
Hopefully, you did not marry a three-year-old or an
overgrown adolescent. Everyone knows by now that when a coach is too critical he
will demoralize his players. A demoralized player is not going to bring his
best game. If he believes that his coach does not believe in him the player
will not improve. He will continue to meet the coach’s expectations and play
poorly. We are dealing with a fairly obvious truth here: if you want someone to
improve, you should show confidence in his ability to play better.
This does not mean that you cannot point out errors, but for
the most part these must be errors that the player can recognize himself. Presumably,
a raw recruit cannot recognize his errors, so his drill sergeant will point
them out, clearly and precisely. The recruit cannot really be demoralized,
because he has not yet earned any self-respect.
But, what do spouses really want of each other? If they
think their spouses need fixing, why did they marry them? Marrying someone for
whom he or she might become signals bad judgment.
Marriage should not be seen within a therapeutic bubble. For
one thing, who decides who is the therapist and who is the patient? What if the
person who is tagged as the patient believes that the person who takes him or
herself for the therapist should be cured of his or her pretense to being a
therapist? What if each spouse wants to be the therapist? What if each wants to be the patient?
How well spouses relate to each other depends in some part
on the way they function in the outside world. Does one spouse set about to
coach the other spouse toward greater career success? Surely, that is not the
same thing as full self-actualization.
It would be interesting, though also fruitless. If one
spouse is selling insurance and the other spouse is a chiropractor, neither one
can reasonably offer words of wisdom about how to improve job performance. In
truth, most spouses will resent suggestions from someone who does not
understand their business.
Finkel suggests that your spouse can either make you feel
loved or be critical of you. Again, this is off the mark. How about making your
spouse feel respected? How about feeling pride in your spouse’s achievements?
How about developing a relationship of trust in someone you know you can always
rely on? How about loving your spouse because he or she is an excellent parent
to your children? These moral dimensions of marriage are the most important
dimensions, so Finkel ignores them.
He also ignores the difference between roles of husband and
wife. Being thoroughly modern and politically correct he speaks of
two neutered beings seeking spiritual transcendence. He has nothing to say
about the household division of labor or about the division of parenting responsibilities.
As for Finkel’s two options, they are both wrong:
In the
face of this truth — that the modern ideal of marriage is, though alluring,
highly demanding — we have two options. The first is that we ask our partner to
play only one of the two roles: either making us feel loved and valued for the
person we currently are or making us feel motivated to grow into the person we
can potentially become.
This is not an ideal. It is a way to undermine marriage. The
two roles in marriage are husband and wife. The two parenting roles are Father
and Mother. Duh?
Finkel suggests that we can opt for comfort or for ambition.
Here he stumbles on a truth:
Perhaps
we’ll conclude that we would rather have a comfortable life than an ambitious
one, or vice versa, and we can look to our spouse to help us achieve that type
of life. Or perhaps we’ll decide that we want a life of both comfort and
ambition, but that we’ll look to different people to help us achieve each of
those goals. Maybe our spouse will make us feel loved and safe, but we’ll count
on a close friend to help ensure that we never get so comfortable that we stop
striving. Such a distribution of responsibility is sensible, because the skill
set that makes somebody effective at nurturing us is often quite different from
the skill set that makes somebody effective at motivating us.
Of course, one can be ambitious in one’s work and
comfortable at home. In traditional marriages, women made comfortable homes
while men manifested ambition in the world of work. Nowadays these roles have
been confused, but still, a woman who is seeking work/life balance wants to
have the time and the energy to make a comfortable home for her family.
Hopefully, that is not yet a crime. And a man who has some ambition will not
only provide for his family. He will provide well enough to allow his wife to choose
how much time she wants to spend with her children.
As for a wife who is trying to motivate her husband to work
harder and better at his job, criticism does not work. Confidence is the better
course.
Consider this: when critical and hectoring wives succeed in
remaking their husbands, said husbands are often so
thrilled with their new being that they will run out to share it with other women.
A new woman will only know his new self. His wife can always
remind him of his pre-reclamation self. If he gave in to her criticism, he will
probably not want to stick around to show her that she was right.
3 comments:
The sentence, "When all you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail." comes to mind.
Stuart: Finkel believes that a spouse can only help a spouse by being critical and dismissive.
I don't think that's exactly what Finkel was saying. I think he was recognizing the difficulty in helping anyone grow in maturity. Again the concept of "external self-awareness" is involved here.
The word "criticism" itself isn't describing objective reality, but an interpretation.
Feedback is a more neutral word, and it may contain pure observation, but even so any feedback can still be heard as criticism if you're already in a fight with your own self-critic, or if a truth about you is too shameful to speak about.
http://stuartschneiderman.blogspot.com/2017/05/true-self-awareness.html
And Tasha Eurich tried to show a way to the middle ground on feedback:
"Not everyone will tell us the truth. Don't ask unloving critics. Don't ask uncritical lovers. Ask people who you know have your best interest at heart, and who are willing to be honest when you ask."
Ideally a spouse should quality, at least if she knows you well enough to not trigger the things you prefer to stay in denial over.
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