Here it is, another fine piece of advice about
relationships. And about how therapy culture advice causes more trouble than it’s worth. It’s from Susannah Breslin, posted on The Frisky.
Given that every therapist and every advice columnist tells
women to talk about their issues with their male significant others, you can
feel fairly confident that this is bad advice. You can feel even more confident that it is good for the business of therapy.
Breslin opens with a few words about the influence of the
therapy culture:
For as
long as many of us can remember, we’ve been told that if we’ve got a problem,
particularly a relationship problem,
the answer is to talk it out. Go to a therapist and talk to a shrink about your
issues. Boyfriend or husband acting distant? Well, you better talk to him about
that. Not sure what to do about a problem in your life? Get on the phone, send
an email, heck, Twitter it while you’re at it. It’s all talk, all the time. But
what if sometimes, particularly when it comes to relationships, and especially
when it comes to men, you may be better off not talking about it at all? Don’t get me wrong. I’ve been
brought up in the Let’s Talk About It era along with everyone else. I’ve
watched all the talk shows, and I’ve been in talk therapy, and I’ve had a
string of relationships in which I was hellbent on talking about whatever
relationship issue needed airing out. I get that, a lot of the time, talking
works. It takes what’s hidden and makes it public; it allows people to feel
like their inner conflicts are being heard; and oftentimes it bridges the gap
between two people looking to connect.
The problem with this advice is that women are far more
comfortable talking things over than men are. Thus, believing that conversation
will solve a problem requires a man to play an away game. In conversation, women
have home field advantage.
Instead,
many relationships in tough times become a tug of war in which the woman tries
to get the man to talk about his
feelings, and the man, who may be disinclined for a variety of reasons
in that direction, withdraws from her desire to talk, talk, talk about it….
Recently,
a study concluded that when a couple talks about relationship issues, men
get more anxious and
women relax. If that’s true, what good does talking about the problem do — for
men? And where’s that gotten you?
Breslin notes that men and women are different. They
communicate differently. Thus, if a woman wants to communicate with a man she
would do better to play Frisbee than to demand an in-depth conversation.
Men are different. They communicate
differently. We all know that. Let’s start acting like it. I believe men don’t
believe what you tell them — they believe what you do. Instead of talking the issue to death, try anything but talking. It doesn’t
have to be a lifetime commitment to silence, but what would it hurt to
experiment with the concept? Have sex. Play Frisbee. Cook a meal. You might
find that turning your relationship into a safe haven from relationship
discussions will lessen your need to have relationship
discussions at all.
"Men are different. They communicate differently. We all know that. Let’s start acting like it. I believe men don’t believe what you tell them — they believe what you do. Instead of talking the issue to death, try anything but talking. It doesn’t have to be a lifetime commitment to silence, but what would it hurt to experiment with the concept? Have sex. Play Frisbee. Cook a meal. You might find that turning your relationship into a safe haven from relationship discussions will lessen your need to have relationship discussions at all."
ReplyDeleteWell, that only took the better part of a century for educated women to realize what would be self-evident to anyone born prior to 1900.
Perhaps one person in any relationship is more willing to express subjective problems, not always the woman, and there's a sense of control, and the other is always on the defensive, being instantly responsible for those problems. And you hear men joke around about how their wife is always right, which is a humorous way of saying "It's not acceptable to have a my own point of view spoken aloud." So men stay quiet for good reason, not just because they don't have the neural connections to evaluation a situation and express it verbally. Defensive skills are just more peaceful, and once practiced, it must be harder to step out and switch sides.
ReplyDeleteI am SO happy that neither Polly nor Ms. Hax was mentioned.
ReplyDelete