Post by anne12 on Mar 28, 2022 8:50:29 GMT
How to help your ambivalent partner to regulate under conflict (Stan Tatkin):
Remember that ambivalents are developed a little bit better than avoidants, when it comes to relaiting. They talk a lot, they have a view of the world that is based on meaning and emotion. They want to be close and cling, but when they get closeness, they can push you away.
They can wait for you to get close to them, instead of reaching out for what they want,for what they want.
They can be sarcastic, mean, angry ect.
They respond well to aproching, touch, hug.
They do not shift very well from beeing with you to being alone, they have a hard time with separations and renunion.
They miss you, when you are gone and when they see you again, they can get angry (remember this is just a a reflex, and nothing personal!).
They expect you to think, that they are a pain in the ass, and they are afraid that you will drop them out of nowhere, when they relaxes into the relationsship. (Stan Tatkin)
Once preocuppied ambivalents are truly committed you may see the following tendencies emerge more strongly - how to work with your partner:
Ambivalents, like the rest of us, are subject to becoming more extreme versions of themselves once in a comitted relationsship. This has to do with breaching that final level of commitment to where our partners are now also family. We all carry around inside of us memories of how we were treated in childhood, and how we observed our family members treating each other. These templates are more flexible and less evident in our relationships with our friends and co-workers. Once someone enters into the realm of true family these templates are often re-activated in powerful ways and they tend to amplify our natural tendencies learned as children.
Fear abandonment, even in ways that seem more minor. Ambivalents experienced inconsistent parenting, such that they were sometimes coddled and given lots of attention but then sometimes unexpectedly rebuffed or pushed away and even shamed for being "too needy" or "too much". They intuitively expect the other shoe to drop and expect to be rejected. This gets worse with commitment for the reasons mentioned above. Your partner may start reacting to you leaving, even if you are just running some errands, causing you to feel bewildered and frustrated.
Know that departures can be triggering for them and leave with an extra dose of love.
Let them know that you are going but will be thinking of them while you are gone and look forward to seeing them when you get back. Give them a hug before you leave. Send them a text (doesn't have to be fancy, a heart or smiley face will do) while you are out. Think of them as a kid who gets nervous when their mom or dad are suddenly unavailable. They need reassurance around both departures and reunions.
Can get prickly when you reunite after being apart.
Again this can be VERY confusing for their partners, who have no idea that the separation was stressful. They come home from running some errands to an ambivalent partner picking a fight. Remember that they fear you leaving and when you do they may feel a surge of anger at being left. Since they tend to have trouble letting go of the past they may think about this the whole time you are gone. Then when you get back, wham! they let you have it. THEY DON'T DO THIS CONSCIOUSLY OR ON PURPOSE. Please, please, keep this in mind. It is no picnic for them either. No one likes to feel upset, so if your ambivalent partner is being cranky or downright mad remember that what is underneath that is emotional pain. They are hurting.
One of the most fool-proof ways to soothe a ambivalent partner is to hold them. They usually melt under touch. They also tend to love eye-contact. So hold them, gaze lovingly into their eyes and tell them that they can depend on you to never abandon them. Let them know that you know that they don't like it when they are alone and tell them you missed them! This, along with a good warm hug, usually works wonders on a cranky ambivalent partner.
Can ramp up their emotional intensity, especially if you are avoidant. [/b]Remember the opposite styles amplify each other. So if you are avoidant, after marriage or deep commitment you will tend to move away a bit. This is likely to bring about protest behavior from your partner. It may be more clinging or it may be more frustration and accusations about how aloof you are. Or both. Try to remember that an ambivalent person is like a fussy baby. They make a lot of noise and you may be inclined to simply leave rather than deal with the fuss. But just like a crying baby they need your help, love and soothing. They tend to calm down MUCH faster than their partners think. So moving in, using touch, soothing words and eye contact can usually get an ambivalent person to get some emotional equilibrium pretty quickly.
Even if you are not avoidant your partner may get extra emotional after the deep commitment. Be prepared for this and don't blame them or tell them they are crazy. They are expressing their fear that you are not going to connect to them. Ambivalents need a lot of connection and get more dramatic and emotionally messy when they don't get sufficient connection. Sadly they often unconsciously drive people away with their "fussiness", depriving themselves of the connection they need to get calm again. So know this and help them. It will pay you back tenfold in that you will not only have a more calm partner but you will have a partner who is eternally grateful to you for knowing what they need and giving it to them. Like avoidants ambivalents are often misunderstood. Your job is to not fall into that trap, to know them and take care of them.
May "spoil" things you try to do for them. This one is bound to make you feel crazy but remember they are not doing it intentionally. They want to be happy, just like any person does. However, since they have a childhood history of having the other shoe constantly dropped they anticipate being disappointed. So if you do something nice for them they may just turn around and "spoil" it somehow. If you take them out to dinner they may complain about the restaurant. If you buy them a gift they may tell you it's not their style, or the wrong color, or whatever. While the natural reaction to this would be to tell them to take a hike, you need to remember that they are acting from childhood pains.
Tell them how much you love them and that you know they have been disappointed in the past. Tell them you don't want to disappoint them and you are open to hearing what they need from you. Don't take it personally when they try to spoil a gift or kindness. I know it's a tall order but you will be healing a deep and very painful wound from their childhood. Which is really, in my opinion, what marriage is all about. And that's a two-way street, so when you heal your ambivalents painful childhood issues they will do the same in return. And once wounds are healed you will see a lot less of this behavior, so it pays dividends forward.
Tend to respond with a negative a lot of the time. So if you propose a vacation to the beach they are likely to tell you the five reasons that's a bad idea.
Don't bite. Just let them know that you know that they tend to find "what's wrong with the picture" before being willing to see what might be right. Tell them you are going to overlook their first response and give them another chance. If your partner is good with humor, you can say something like "OK my beautiful nattering naybob of negativity, now that you have gotten all the no's out of your system, can we revisit the idea?". Then flash them a loving smile. When used with love and kindness humor can be a great way to re-boot an activated partner.
May get really preoccupied with being "too much" or "too needy". Remember that they had childhoods where people alternately showered them with attention and told them they were too much and rebuffed them. So they are naturally afraid of overwhelming people. Paradoxically this leads to a lot of anxiety, which can make them more emotional, more clingy and more negative. Which has the unintended consequence of making their parter get exasperated with them!
Be on the lookout for your partner feeling judged as too needy or overwhelmig. They may misinterpret signals like you looking away during a conversation or sighing when they tell you something they need. Be careful to let your partner know they are NOT too much for you and that you have no intention of leaving them. Help them feel safe and secure and you will find their anxity will actually diminish!
May have trouble ending an argument or letting it go afterwards. They have trouble with endings, even arguments! They may keep it going because closing up something feels in a way like loss. They may also hold on to hurts from the past to act as a bulkhead against being vulnerable towards you in the future, which they fear will be rewarded with more hurt!
Help your partner let go in an argument by reminding them that while there may be a part of them that tends to hang on, their body and mind deserve relief. Hold them tight at the end of a rough conversation and reassure them that if they let go they are not going to be setting themselves up for additional injury.
Remember that ambivalents are developed a little bit better than avoidants, when it comes to relaiting. They talk a lot, they have a view of the world that is based on meaning and emotion. They want to be close and cling, but when they get closeness, they can push you away.
They can wait for you to get close to them, instead of reaching out for what they want,for what they want.
They can be sarcastic, mean, angry ect.
They respond well to aproching, touch, hug.
They do not shift very well from beeing with you to being alone, they have a hard time with separations and renunion.
They miss you, when you are gone and when they see you again, they can get angry (remember this is just a a reflex, and nothing personal!).
They expect you to think, that they are a pain in the ass, and they are afraid that you will drop them out of nowhere, when they relaxes into the relationsship. (Stan Tatkin)
Once preocuppied ambivalents are truly committed you may see the following tendencies emerge more strongly - how to work with your partner:
Ambivalents, like the rest of us, are subject to becoming more extreme versions of themselves once in a comitted relationsship. This has to do with breaching that final level of commitment to where our partners are now also family. We all carry around inside of us memories of how we were treated in childhood, and how we observed our family members treating each other. These templates are more flexible and less evident in our relationships with our friends and co-workers. Once someone enters into the realm of true family these templates are often re-activated in powerful ways and they tend to amplify our natural tendencies learned as children.
Fear abandonment, even in ways that seem more minor. Ambivalents experienced inconsistent parenting, such that they were sometimes coddled and given lots of attention but then sometimes unexpectedly rebuffed or pushed away and even shamed for being "too needy" or "too much". They intuitively expect the other shoe to drop and expect to be rejected. This gets worse with commitment for the reasons mentioned above. Your partner may start reacting to you leaving, even if you are just running some errands, causing you to feel bewildered and frustrated.
Know that departures can be triggering for them and leave with an extra dose of love.
Let them know that you are going but will be thinking of them while you are gone and look forward to seeing them when you get back. Give them a hug before you leave. Send them a text (doesn't have to be fancy, a heart or smiley face will do) while you are out. Think of them as a kid who gets nervous when their mom or dad are suddenly unavailable. They need reassurance around both departures and reunions.
Can get prickly when you reunite after being apart.
Again this can be VERY confusing for their partners, who have no idea that the separation was stressful. They come home from running some errands to an ambivalent partner picking a fight. Remember that they fear you leaving and when you do they may feel a surge of anger at being left. Since they tend to have trouble letting go of the past they may think about this the whole time you are gone. Then when you get back, wham! they let you have it. THEY DON'T DO THIS CONSCIOUSLY OR ON PURPOSE. Please, please, keep this in mind. It is no picnic for them either. No one likes to feel upset, so if your ambivalent partner is being cranky or downright mad remember that what is underneath that is emotional pain. They are hurting.
One of the most fool-proof ways to soothe a ambivalent partner is to hold them. They usually melt under touch. They also tend to love eye-contact. So hold them, gaze lovingly into their eyes and tell them that they can depend on you to never abandon them. Let them know that you know that they don't like it when they are alone and tell them you missed them! This, along with a good warm hug, usually works wonders on a cranky ambivalent partner.
Can ramp up their emotional intensity, especially if you are avoidant. [/b]Remember the opposite styles amplify each other. So if you are avoidant, after marriage or deep commitment you will tend to move away a bit. This is likely to bring about protest behavior from your partner. It may be more clinging or it may be more frustration and accusations about how aloof you are. Or both. Try to remember that an ambivalent person is like a fussy baby. They make a lot of noise and you may be inclined to simply leave rather than deal with the fuss. But just like a crying baby they need your help, love and soothing. They tend to calm down MUCH faster than their partners think. So moving in, using touch, soothing words and eye contact can usually get an ambivalent person to get some emotional equilibrium pretty quickly.
Even if you are not avoidant your partner may get extra emotional after the deep commitment. Be prepared for this and don't blame them or tell them they are crazy. They are expressing their fear that you are not going to connect to them. Ambivalents need a lot of connection and get more dramatic and emotionally messy when they don't get sufficient connection. Sadly they often unconsciously drive people away with their "fussiness", depriving themselves of the connection they need to get calm again. So know this and help them. It will pay you back tenfold in that you will not only have a more calm partner but you will have a partner who is eternally grateful to you for knowing what they need and giving it to them. Like avoidants ambivalents are often misunderstood. Your job is to not fall into that trap, to know them and take care of them.
May "spoil" things you try to do for them. This one is bound to make you feel crazy but remember they are not doing it intentionally. They want to be happy, just like any person does. However, since they have a childhood history of having the other shoe constantly dropped they anticipate being disappointed. So if you do something nice for them they may just turn around and "spoil" it somehow. If you take them out to dinner they may complain about the restaurant. If you buy them a gift they may tell you it's not their style, or the wrong color, or whatever. While the natural reaction to this would be to tell them to take a hike, you need to remember that they are acting from childhood pains.
Tell them how much you love them and that you know they have been disappointed in the past. Tell them you don't want to disappoint them and you are open to hearing what they need from you. Don't take it personally when they try to spoil a gift or kindness. I know it's a tall order but you will be healing a deep and very painful wound from their childhood. Which is really, in my opinion, what marriage is all about. And that's a two-way street, so when you heal your ambivalents painful childhood issues they will do the same in return. And once wounds are healed you will see a lot less of this behavior, so it pays dividends forward.
Tend to respond with a negative a lot of the time. So if you propose a vacation to the beach they are likely to tell you the five reasons that's a bad idea.
Don't bite. Just let them know that you know that they tend to find "what's wrong with the picture" before being willing to see what might be right. Tell them you are going to overlook their first response and give them another chance. If your partner is good with humor, you can say something like "OK my beautiful nattering naybob of negativity, now that you have gotten all the no's out of your system, can we revisit the idea?". Then flash them a loving smile. When used with love and kindness humor can be a great way to re-boot an activated partner.
May get really preoccupied with being "too much" or "too needy". Remember that they had childhoods where people alternately showered them with attention and told them they were too much and rebuffed them. So they are naturally afraid of overwhelming people. Paradoxically this leads to a lot of anxiety, which can make them more emotional, more clingy and more negative. Which has the unintended consequence of making their parter get exasperated with them!
Be on the lookout for your partner feeling judged as too needy or overwhelmig. They may misinterpret signals like you looking away during a conversation or sighing when they tell you something they need. Be careful to let your partner know they are NOT too much for you and that you have no intention of leaving them. Help them feel safe and secure and you will find their anxity will actually diminish!
May have trouble ending an argument or letting it go afterwards. They have trouble with endings, even arguments! They may keep it going because closing up something feels in a way like loss. They may also hold on to hurts from the past to act as a bulkhead against being vulnerable towards you in the future, which they fear will be rewarded with more hurt!
Help your partner let go in an argument by reminding them that while there may be a part of them that tends to hang on, their body and mind deserve relief. Hold them tight at the end of a rough conversation and reassure them that if they let go they are not going to be setting themselves up for additional injury.