Intimacy—Accept No Imitations

How and What to Reveal
Writer Pat Love asks, “What is intimacy?” and then answers her own question, “Into me, see.” It’s not that to be intimate you need be transparent, or that every thought, feeling or story must be shared with your partner—but intimacy flourishes in a climate in which it’s safe to disclose parts of your experience that cut closer and closer to your private self.

Sometimes, though, a longing for connection can lead to disclosing too much too soon, or telling a new partner more than he or she is ready to know or needs to know. In some cases it leads to opening up too much about ourselves or people close to us, when discretion might be the better choice.

Consider following the Rule of Three: Let a disclosure come to mind three times before sharing it, rather than saying everything exactly as it occurs. Those things that recur are the ones that really belong to the relationship.

Remember, time is a necessary part of the intimacy equation. The thrill and power of the first weeks of a passionate relationship encourage self-disclosure and lots of sharing, but no matter how strong the connection, some things can come to light only after trust has been built.

Intimacy with boundaries
Few words in our language are asked to carry as much weight as intimacy. Do a quick web search with intimacy as your keyword, and you are guaranteed to find a wide range of articles and hundreds of books offering advice on how to find and keep it, or deal with not having it. Peruse some of these and you’ll often find confusion about just what intimacy is.

Often it is used as a synonym for sex. TV hasn’t helped. How often have you heard lawyers in courtroom dramas ask a cornered witness, “Were you…intimate with the deceased?” in a tone that’s clearly not asking about the level of emotional honesty and trust in the relationship!

The usual culprit is the confusion of intimacy with fusion, a boundary-less merging with a partner that erases differences. That kind of longing leads to the romantic inflations and disappointments that litter the path of relationships and fuel dynamics that subvert true intimacy—one partner’s fear of being abandoned countered by the other partner’s corresponding fear of being engulfed.

Appoint your partner ‘guardian of your solitude’
The great poet Rilke advised a young friend: “It is a question in marriage…not of creating a quick community of spirit by tearing down and destroying all boundaries, but rather a good marriage is one in which each appoints the other guardian of his solitude, and shows him this confidence, the greatest in his power to bestow.”

Rilke’s comments, applicable to all committed partnerships, point to the mutual respect and clear-eyed seeing that form the basis for genuine intimacy. It’s built by going through difficult doorways: the moment of risk before bringing up a hard subject or the challenge of listening with openness to some honest feedback we’d rather not be hearing.

The importance of trust
If your relationships lack intimacy, look to see where trust has been broken; that’s the hole in the fence that needs to be patched first. Ask yourself how you’ve contributed to the lowering of trust, not just in big ways but in the small ones that communicate our attitudes. Are you available to listen without comment, despite strong feelings being stirred when you have disagreements? Do you allow your partner to express him or herself fully? Do you attempt to elicit a fuller range of feelings? And when they’re expressed, do you actually hear them or do you dispute them? Do you respond as you wish to be responded to? Do you talk when you need to? Is your feedback, even if expressing a resentment, couched in the language of “I” or with a finger-pointing “you?”

Watch out for old baggage
Intimacy is particularly vulnerable to the unexamined influences of our earlier lives, to our search in our partners for an ideal parent or attempts to recreate failed strategies of the past. Authentic contact with significant others can replace those fantasy aspects with the power of genuine meeting.

Check for little pockets of unconsciousness that may be blocking you or your partner from contact. Do you find yourself sounding “just like mother or father?” Is your partner behaving “exactly the way my ex behaved,” or accusing you of doing so? Have you awoken with dreams that merge your partner with someone from your past? If so, a conversation with a counselor at The Center for Family Unity can often help sweep away those old cobwebs.

Rilke’s advice ends with a reminder of the connection between intimacy and a healthy ability to maintain what’s separate: “Once the realization is accepted that even between the closest human beings, an infinite distance continues to exist, a wonderful living side-by-side can grow up, if they succeed in loving the distance between them which makes it possible to see each other whole and against a wide sky!”

Eager to learn more about healthy intimacy?
Contact The Center For Family Unity
619.884.0601

New Marriage/Family Therapist Joins The Center for Family Unity

In an effort to increase the resources available at our facilities, MiriamTorresHS01-200x300The Center for Family Unity has announced the addition of Miriam Torres, an intern bilingual (Spanish/English) marriage and family therapist. She will be specifically assigned to working with couples, families, and individuals; providing relationship counseling with the aim to help them overcome emotional problems.

The inclusion of the Miriam Torres as a new marriage and family therapist is a strategic move to fulfill the mission of the Center for Family Unity by providing additional effective alternative counselor techniques, including equine and pet therapy.

“She will also be helping our clients navigate life changes and building on their unique strengths,” says 
Kellye Laughery, Director, The Center for Family Unity.

Miriam, who has been a parent educator for more than two years and offers parent consultation for behavior management and courses on parenting, also practices premarital counseling and works with traditional as well as alternative and blended families. She will be a great asset to the Center when dealing with co-parenting issues.

Speaking on her own behalf, Miriam says: “I couldn´t be happier to be part of The Center for Family Unity. I’ve known Kellye for a couple of years, and periodically running into each other at different trainings and events. I always liked her approach to therapy, admired her preparation, and felt identified with many things, like her interest in blended families. So when I finally got the chance to see where she works, I knew I wanted to be part of it.”

She further adds that The Center for Family Unity oozes warmth, safety, creativity, playfulness, kindness and inspiration, and that she feels very fortunate that she got the opportunity to work there, where she’ll be using an Emotionally Focused Therapy approach to help couples and families.

Miriam is trained in Couples Therapy at the Gottman Relationship Institute and is very passionate about positive psychology.  She is currently studying a PhD in Psychology-Expressive Art Therapy as well as Equine Assisted Therapy, (EAGALA.) The Center for Family Unity affords her the opportunity to use alternative methods to traditional talk therapy, like Expressive Arts Therapy, in her counseling sessions.  She will be an excellent addition to the Center as we continue to grow and improve.

5 Tips to Help You Decide: How Do you Know When You have Found “The One”?

I get asked this question a lot, so I have compiled 5 Tips to know if this
person might be “The One” for you. Selecting a spouse may be one of the most
important decisions you will ever make! This decision affects you and many
others in your life for years. The emotional destruction I have seen when families
are in turmoil and the harm that comes to the children breaks my heart.

1. Tip #1- Pray About It
No matter what you believe regarding the existence of there being what some
call a ‘soul mate,’ it is absolutely essential to pray over your relationship. God is
your best resource for attaining the answers and wisdom you need and seek.
Talk to Him about your hopes, dreams, desires, but earnestly seek after what His
will is for your life. It’s easy to ask God to give us what we want, but make sure to
ask and be willing to pursue what He wants for us. He knows us better than we
know ourselves, so His plan and will is always the perfect one. Jeremiah 29:11
says, ‘‘For I know the plans I have for you,’ declares the LORD, ‘plans to prosper
you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.’’

Seek His will, ask for His direction and wisdom, and be willing to accept whatever
that is. That takes faith, a listening ear, and a true understanding of and belief in
His promises and Word.

2. Tip # 2-Seek Godly Counsel
God gives us our support system to help us navigate the journey of life.
Everyone’s situation is different, but most of us have a family member, friend,
spouse or significant other, or pastor that we can go to for some godly advice.
It’s important to have people around us that are trustworthy, have a
relationship with Christ, and honest.

3. Tip# 3-Be Honest
One of the biggest problems that plague relationships is a lack of honesty.
Both parties are often on best behavior, which is fine, but at times it is taken
to the point of dishonesty. Instead of being an authentic version of
themselves, they pretend to be who they think that special guy or gal wants
them to be.

4. Tip# 4-Ask
Are you and the person you are dating a good match? Emotions come and go
and your vision is clouded by drugs and movies. Drugs: The endorphins and
dopamine that signals pleasure to your brain when you are in the romantic
phase of love. Movies: Each one of you holds a camera pointed at each other
with your version of “my perfect man or my perfect woman” movies playing.
You don’t hear the snoring, belches or sarcastic comments. You don’t see the
dirty clothes lying on the floor next to the clothes hamper or smell the burnt
dinner.

The best way to start answering that question is to start asking questions.
Explore your interests, hopes, goals, beliefs, etc. Ask questions like:

  • Where do you want to live?
  • What do you hope to accomplish in the next 5, 10, 15 years?
  • Do you believe that marriage is for life?
  • How do you envision the husband and wife roles looking like?
  • What are your favorite hobbies?
  • What do you hope to give and gain from marriage?
  • How many kids do you want?
  • How were you raised?
  • What type of parenting style do you ascribe to?
  • Do you think a wife should be a stay-at-home mom?

5. Tip # 5- Prepare
Preparation is such an important part of a successful marriage as well as
the process of deciphering if the person you are with is the one you want
to spend the rest of your life with. There are so many resources (like the
one you are viewing now) that are available to help guide you through the
various premarital stages of life.
If you are at this important stage of your life, don’t take a chance. Call today
and speak to a Family Unity Specialist @ 619-884-0601

How Can I Show My Spouse I Love Them?

Beautiful loving couple with heart isolated on white

One of the most important investments you can make in your marriage is finding the answer to the question “How can I show my spouse I love them?” The fact is that many spouses love their mate, but miss the mark when searching for specific ways they can make their mate feel well loved. It is confusing and hurtful when efforts to express love fail, just as it is confusing and hurtful when a mate does not feel well loved. Fortunately, it is possible for you to learn how to knock the ball out of the park in your efforts show your mate you love them. In addition, couples counseling in San Diego is available for couples that simply want to learn how to love their spouse better—even if they’re not in crisis.

Learning to Express Love

Most people learn to express love for their spouse based on three things:

  • how they like to be loved,
  • what worked in their past experiences,
  • and observing role models.

The media, lyrics in songs, and commercials all portray examples of how to love others. It is possible to fall short by copying even the best role model, because what you are doing is not the way your spouse prefers to receive your love.

A good starting point is to learn more about the five basic ways people prefer to receive love, and identify your spouse’s preferred method. Having that knowledge is what makes it possible for you to express your love, in the most powerful way, to your mate.  Many couples find reading Dr. Chapman’s book The 5 Love Languages to be one of the most valuable investments they ever make in their marriage.

Start by asking your spouse to show you the best way you can communicate your love for them. Listen to their response, and take notes. Inquire if the things you typically do make them feel loved, or if you are missing the mark. Their answers may surprise you,

Adult couple sitting on sofa at home drinking coffe, talking, smiling.

because they may interpret your efforts in a very different manner than you intended. For example, if you express your love to your wife with a gift of expensive lingerie, she may interpret the gift as a request for a sexual encounter. By the same token, if a wife expresses her love for her husband with a gift card to a home improvement center, her husband may interpret the gift as a reminder of things he needs to fix around the house. Well intended gestures to express love to your spouse can backfire, if you are unaware of your mate’s preferences.

A second way to show your spouse you love them is to treat them with respect.   This requires monitoring your communication to them and about them. Dr. Gottman’s research has shown that happily married couples treat each other with respect, affection, and empathy- like good friends. One very powerful way to love and respect your spouse is to make a rule you will not criticize them in public. Instead, speak highly of them in front of others. Resolve conflict gently and in private.

How NOT to Love

Contempt, sarcasm, mocking, and attacks on your partner’s character convince your spouse you do NOT love them. If you have a quick wit, and enjoy entertaining others with your comments, be careful your spouse is not the brunt of your jokes. If you want to show your spouse you love them, you will need to replace negative behaviors with behaviors that build into the marriage, and convey your love for them. The good news is that practicing small repeated changes in behavior can make a big difference in a marriage. You can learn more about positive behaviors, and how couples have transformed their marriages by reading Predicting Divorce to Preventing It.

A third way to show your spouse you love them is to learn how to fully forgive mistakes your spouse has made.  If your mate has done something you feel is “unforgivable,” it will continue to fester, preventing you from loving your spouse well.  Forgiving them fully will enable you to love them as you promised to do in your wedding vows.

To love and be loved is one of the most fundamental needs in life. The counselors at The Center for Family Unity are experienced in helping couples learn to express their love to their spouses, in ways their spouse feels well loved. We encourage you to call for a free 20 minute consultation to discuss how we can assist you in your desire to show your spouse you love them. We can help you with the practical application of this information to your own life, and assist you as you work through any stumbling blocks that are preventing you from expressing your love. Call us today at 618-884-0601