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MARRIAGE
It
takes a lot of courage to stay married. This point was really driven
home for me recently when I attended a two day marital therapy workshop
by U.W.’s John Gottman down in Portland...but more on that in a
moment.
For years,
I have been a family lawyer. I do divorce.
The field provides
more than enough good, lawyery-type issues. At a recent CLE, Tom
Hamerlink transfixed a room full of practitioners with his analysis
of child support in high income families (The child support guidelines
top out at combined net monthly income of $7,000. What do you do
at $9,000...at $19,000?). A brand spanking new Supreme Court decision
has once again analyzed - and killed - grandparent visitation. I
recently had a business valuation issue that had one expert throwing
uncharacteristic insults at the other...I thought they were going
to end up on the plains of Weehawken. Both had good arguments and
trial would have been interesting had the case not settled. The
point being - divorce law is often fun law...for the lawyers.
For the people
going through the process, it is a disaster. The ruptured bonds
evoke exquisite responses of betrayal, rejection and loss. For the
stay at home mom, there is the anxiety over financial security.
For the working dad, there is the sudden isolation which comes with
the loss of “family.” I don’t think people really understand the
wreck that divorce makes of their lives while they are contemplating
their exit strategy. While kids can certainly recover from, and
bloom after, the rupture of their parent’s marriage, in almost all
cases the transition is a grievous life tragedy for them.
So, given this
particular bias, and world view, it was with particular interest
that I went to Oregon to hear Dr. Gottman. For two days he lectured
an auditorium full of marriage therapists and, aside from the fact
that he is an extremely engaging, funny and organized lecturer,
the information imparted was valuable and worth sharing here. Some
of his nuggets which may fit into this limited space include:
- Research
indicates that, as a general rule, couples seek the assistance
of a marriage counselor six years after they detect serious marital
difficulties. Other surveys indicate that only 1% of divorcing
couples sought help in the prior year.
- Of
the kinds of disagreements couples have, 69% involve perpetual
issues that never get resolved. The couples who endure, engage
in an ongoing dialogue around these differences in personal values
or basic personality preferences (child-rearing; money; sex; in-laws;
togetherness vs. separate time; religious practice; spontanaeity
vs. need to plan, etc.) while those in trouble become “gridlocked”
in a cycle characterized by Gottman’s “Four Horsemen”.
- In
Gottman’s view, it’s not the disagreements that are the problem,
but rather the presence of any of the following four styles which
are inherently destructive to marital intimacy and trust: Criticism
(as distinguished from “complaining,” which may raise unhappiness
or anger, but which does not attribute a character flaw to the
partner); Contempt (reflecting a feeling of superiority over the
partner); Defensiveness (refusal to acknowledge any contribution
to the problem) and Stonewalling (emotional disengagement). Women
are more apt to engage in criticism; men, stonewalling. Gottman
stated repeatedly that while all four are problematic, it is contempt
which assassinates love. He noted that of the thousands of couples
he has assessed, contempt was never present in the good, enduring
marriages.
- Couples
who came to his U.W. clinic tended to fall into two categories:
The relatively brief (seven year) marriage characterized by a
volatile “attack and defend” style and the mid-range (fourteen
year) marriage, characterized by emotional disengagement and a
marked absence of joy, shared affection or humor. He noted that
novice therapists might be lulled by the absence of volatility
in these bonds, yet the dissipation of connection actually renders
these couples more difficult to treat than the “attack and defenders.”
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