Photo by Riccardo Annandale on Unsplash
It’s not rocket science and never
will be. Marriages thrive on connection as all relationships do. It’s wanting
to be together. It’s saying nice things to each other. It’s touching one
another. It’s helping each other out. And it’s giving gifts to one another. All
the love languages work together for connection-sake.
But when we don’t feel connected, and
especially when we crave connection, whether we realise it or not, we go to
maladaptive things to get connection. For me, it’s food. It’s something to
replace that comfort that connection gives me. If my wife’s too busy or too
tired for me, and I need her, I am tempted to find comfort in those things that
are bad for my health — for instance, carbohydrates at night! For me, it’s
admitting that I’m tempting to eat when I don’t need to, because I crave not
food but connection.
It’s not an excuse, it’s a fact of
that hole within us that needs filling. Intimacy with our partner, being
together, physically in proximity, being on the same page, is the sweet spot in
marriage.
For partners who do not want this,
who negate what their partner truly desires and craves, and who refuse to give
what their partner healthily desires, that partner will be punished. It’s just
the way it works. Whenever any of us is violated, and in these terms think of
the abuse of neglect, we do seek reparation through resistance — whether we’re
conscious of this or not, we punish our partners who do not give us what we
desire.
All we seek is a little connection.
And when we’re refused that connection the partnership, the marriage, loses out
big time. The partner refusing connection is doing a foolish thing. It always
backfires. Selfishness always does.
If there genuinely is reason why
connection is unattainable, it’s best to be honest and negotiate with the
partner who seeks this good thing. Give them some assurance that they’re not
being forgotten. Help them to understand why you can’t give them what they
healthily desire. Communicate. And even in communicating how you cannot meet
their needs at this time you will paradoxically create some form of powerful
and valuable connection.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.