Relationship Issues
Admitting that you have a seemingly unsolvable problem with your primary or one or more important relationships is the first step. The next step is to determine the exact nature of the problem. The symptoms are usually relatively easy to identify and describe frequent conflict, silence, veiled or overt criticism, emotional or physical withdrawing, fruitless pursuing, excessive alcohol use, emotional or physical affairs, pornography, stonewalling, mutual disrespect, infrequent intimacy, little or no affection. The causes are of course a lot harder to determine and may require the help of a professional, impartial coach who is specifically trained in systemic approaches to interpersonal issues.
The hunt for the real causes of a serious relationship problem is further complicated by this question: is it me or is it the other (who is causing the majority of the problem)? Based on my experience in working with relationships, the responsibility is usually shared by all parties. By definition, relationships involve at least two people. It is logical that, by action or by omission, all parties are contributing to make the relationship dysfunctional. In a sense, the parties are both principal actors and scriptwriters in their play and thus co-create nearly every bit of the situations, circumstances, reactions and difficulties that they are experiencing.
The pain and the hurt are mutually inflicted. It should be possible to realize what’s happening, review the script, change it into something more effective and more enjoyable, and put a stop to the patterns of mutual destruction. Unfortunately, though, without outside help the scriptwriters sometimes appear to lose their ability to rewrite the play and are seemingly condemned to play the same painful scenes over and over again. Does this describe your situation?