Voicelessness and Emotional Survival
Couples Counseling: Is Better Communication Enough?
"What we have here is a failure to communicate."
You may remember (if you are at least middle-aged) this signature line from the
movie "Cool Hand Luke."
And if you've been in couples counseling, you've probably heard it spoken in some form or fashion by your
counselor.
The problem is: for most couples, the line is a myth.
Forgive the pop culture blasphemy. But truth be said, couples are
communicating all the time. They use "hidden messages." Hidden messages are the "between-the-lines"
communications that fly back and forth in a relationship. They are often more powerful
than
messages directly spoken. To the trained ear, they are most revealing.
O.K., you say, "What we have here is a failure to communicate--directly! We're talking
about a semantic difference..."
Nope. There is a delightfully romantic notion (often seen in movies) that if people only spoke
their minds and hearts directly, all would be well. I have treated many couples, and I have
almost never found this to be true. If unhappy couples were able to speak their
minds and hearts directly (i.e., made the hidden messages clear), each party would know
where the other stands, but neither would necessarily be happier. Indeed, we learn to
communicate indirectly in order to hide the true feelings that might be seen as socially
inappropriate or destructive. We are all, more or less, politicians when it comes to relating to
people, even those closest to us.
Does this mean that unhappy couples are doomed to be miserable forever? Hardly. But the
solution is never as quick and easy as the popular magazines
suggest. What determines success in
couples counseling? Here's a brief list:
- Each party must be willing to learn what it is they are asking for and why. This can be complicated. Often
wishes and needs have deep
familial/historical roots, and are all but invisible except to a therapist. For example: "I asked you to do
the dishes, and you didn't do them" may bear the emotional weight of: "You don't listen to me,
no one has ever listened to me--I don't know if I have ever had a place in anyone's life." And
the slightly sarcastic reply, "I'm sorry, I forgot" may bear the emotional weight of "These are your wishes, your
needs. What about me? Who, in my life, ever paid attention to me and
what I wanted?"
- Each party must learn to understand and take responsibility for the hidden messages they are sending. People must recognize that they may be saying the "right thing," but
sending contradictory messages that better reflect longstanding historical wishes/needs/feelings.
- Each party must be willing to share what they discover about themselves (painful personal
histories, unfulfilled childhood needs, the ways they protect themselves)
and encourage the other to do likewise.
- Each party must be willing to continue all of the above after counseling ends.
From this list, one can see that couples counseling requires commitment,
toleration, and respect for one's partner. Above all it takes
patience. A better marriage requires more than improved
communication: it takes genuine insight. Meaningful changes do not
occur overnight because discoveries about self take time. But the outcome
of couples counseling is well worth the effort. There is no better way to
know your partner, to be known, and to deepen a relationship.
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