Recreating the past
in marriage
Recreating
the past in marriage needed to impact the present relationship.
BY
STEVE GENGENBACHER
TODAY'S
CATHOLIC, San Antonio TX Oct 29,2004
"But, Steve, I feel
no connection with him," Betty said, a pained and distressed look covering
her face. (Names have been changed to protect confidentiality.) "I don't
know what to do."
Referring to Bill,
her husband, of 10 years, she said, "He's a good provider and father, but
we never' talk. He goes into his space and I go into mine. I get ready for
bed about 9:30, and I'm waiting for him to come to bed, and he's found the
Sci-Fi channel and falls asleep on the couch. I don't want to live like
this anymore. I don't want to feel this lonely."
Betty's story is probably
repeated, with minor modifications, a thousand times a day across this
country. Bill's reply would probably be along the lines of: "I don't know
what she expects of me. I'm doing my best. I'm tired when I get home. Work
has been really taking it out of me. I watch Sci-Fi because I enjoy it.
I don't bother her when she's watching something she likes. And I'm sorry;
I don't mean to fall asleep. I just relax and, bingo, I'm out."
To many people, Betty
and Bill would seem to have a problem with communication, or at least a
difference in what they each want from a marriage partner.
To some extent, both
conclusions would be right. What many people may not recognize is that
Betty and Bill's difficulties are rooted in something much deeper, more
pervasive and largely not in their awareness: "family of origin" issues.
Until these family
background experiences are adequately unearthed, explored and addressed,
no amount of training in communication or discernment about expectations
will be helpful.
The extremely powerful
reality is this: if any person does not know his or her partner's family
background, i.e., what it was like to live in his or her partner's family,
and does not comprehend from that information what he or she will need to
do or give their partner in a way that gives life to them (e.g., affection,
respect, laughter, etc.), that person gives his or her partner one of two
choices: die (emotionally, spiritually and/or psychologically) or leave
the relationship.
The greatest task
of marriage is to discover, for your own self and your partner, the two
or three very specific things needed for life, and then commit to doing
those things for each other. A serious pain occurs when each realizes that,
usually, whatever it is that his or her partner needs for life is exactly
opposite of what that person is naturally inclined to do, and probably elicits
much anxiety when it is done.
Three points are especially
important here:
The positive traits
of these caretakers don't pose a problem, since a partner acting out of
similarity with these positive traits creates safety and comfort for the
partner. But human beings are driven to bring some healing to the painful
dilemmas and events experienced in past family relationships. Each person
in marriage recreates the roles and interactions of the past.
If you would continue
listening to Betty, you would discover that she comes from a family in which
she experienced a father very disconnected from the rest
of her family. She
even describes her father in the very same way she describes her husband:
"He provided well, but he (her father) would come home from work, eat supper,
then plop on the couch and watch TV until he fell asleep."
In addition, she reveals
that he divorced her mother twice. Once when she was very young, and again
when she was in her teens, leaving her as the oldest to take care of her
younger siblings. It is no wonder she would be attracted to a man like Bill,
who, in her own words, is a good provider but not connected to her.
Of course, Bill's
behavior is also his unconscious creation from his family of origin. His
father and mother divorced when he was yet an infant (and he didn't see
his birth father again until he was in his 30s), and his mother left him
to be raised by his maternal grandparents.
The message he learned
from his family experience: he was never good enough and could never do
enough to be loved by the most important people in his life.
He would be naturally
attracted to someone who needed a lot of connection, which would be his
worst fear.
For him to be connected
in his family of origin was to always experience neglect, rejection and
failure to be acceptable/successful.
Betty and Bill are
perfectly suited for each other in some very painful and distressful ways.
Bill can't seem to be able to give Betty enough (successful/acceptable),
and Betty can't seem to get enough (connected/special). Neither is
"bad" or "wrong." Both Betty and Bill are "good people" who happen to be
perfect except for two basic flaws: they each are human, and they have a
past!
So Betty and Bill
are stuck, locked in an unconscious, unhealthy and hurtful pattern whose
origins are rooted in their experiences in their own families. It will
be the most difficult work in their lives for each to face himself or herself
in total and complete honesty about who: they each are, and how their pain
I from the past impacts their present relationship.
This, then, is absolutely
the most terrifying task in any marriage: to face one's own fears, because
facing those fears feels like facing death itself.
For Betty, disconnection
feels like death. For Bill, connectedness, which has always led to rejection
and denial (substitute "death" for either word), always leads to "death"
of self.
The task for them,
and every couple, is to create a safe and life-giving marriage, rather than
living in an unconscious and reactive relationship. To do so requires intense
self-reflection, fearless honesty, and great courage. Marriage is definitely
not designed for the faint of heart. Each is required to "die to self" so
that the other can live.
Return
to >