The Legacy of Divorce
In our counseling practice with men
and women who have grown up in families
that have never been divorced, we have
observed much fear of commitment to a
long-term relationship or marriage. Relationships
are scary, they tell us; and as for marriage,
look at their parents' lives -- daily
disasters. In terms of conventional wisdom,
you would imagine they grew up in bitter
divorced households rather than in "intact" families.
For all too many men and women who have
lived in households where Mom and Dad
stayed together unhappily, the high divorce
rates are being used as excuses for avoiding
any long-term commitment or marriage.
Why try to engage in a committed relationship
if it's bound to fail? After all, the
Census Bureau confirms that one out of
every two marriages ends in divorce.
And if you were married once, you stand
double the chance of getting divorced
if you married again.
They have also taken for granted the
family imprinting they received about
staying together permanently ("Look
at what it did to my mother and father").
They feel that marriage inevitably fosters
a barren existence. They never questioned
while they were growing up whether or
not marriage meant only what they saw
their parents living through, and they
never reflected in their adulthood that
better relationships could exist.
On the other hand, in our research with
the many men and women participating
in our adult children of divorce groups,
we have found -- what even surprised
us both -- a primarily upbeat view of
long-term commitment and marriage. Not
because they wanted to replicate their
parents' relationship, but in spite of
it. While growing up, the adult children
of divorce (who are currently involved
in successful long-term relationships)
were able to disassociate themselves
emotionally and intellectually from their
parents' marital problems. They viewed
themselves as observers, not as participants,
of family wars. This enabled them to
learn from their parents' disastrous
relationship rather than repeat it. The
quality they possessed was one of the
forms of resilience that enabled them
in their adulthood to become winners
instead of losers in long-term relationships
-- with or without a marriage license.
These adult children of divorce (ACDs)
have the ability to consider themselves
as outsiders. It seemed to come naturally
to them to view their parents' relationship
problems as jigsaw puzzles, and that
they had to seek out the missing pieces
to make sense of those puzzles. And the
crises they experienced, both before
and after their parents' divorce, made
them see their family situations as opportunities
to rethink the meanings of commitment
and marriage. Their outsider point of
view enabled them to do so.
Creating Positive Relationships
The adult children of divorce who have
successful long-term relationships can
attribute that reality to their taking
personal responsibility to make positive
things happen in their life. No cop-outs,
no fault-finding in others to excuse
one's own fears and inadequacies. They
refused to play the role of victim that
they saw one or usually both of their
parents play out on a daily basis. Consequently,
while it was important to discover what
these ACDs avoided in their own relationships
that their parents didn't avoid, it was
equally necessary to explore and define
the ways in which they took personal
responsibility for making their long-term
relationships work well.
Here is what ACDs report as helping
them to build positive relationships.
1. Respect Each Other as Separate Individuals
These ACDs were determined to value their
partner as a separate individual and
regard him or her with courtesy and decency,
validating what he or she had to say
about any issue even when not necessarily
agreeing with a point of view that might
differ from their own. "My parents
were pleasanter to an acquaintance, a
salesperson, a fellow worker, or a friend
than they were to each other. They used
four-letter words just on each other,
and I used to say that when I grew up
I'd never be like that." This is
the kind of statement we frequently heard.
2. Value Each Other's Differences
They learned to appreciate each other's
differences and showed each other the
space and time to develop their own interests
and abilities as well as what they had
in common. "We learn from each other," an
ACD told us. "My wife has taught
me to appreciate nature and earthy things
because I grew up in the city streets
of Chicago. On the other hand, I've been
able to acquaint her with art museums,
poetry, and foreign films, which she
never was exposed to before. And she
likes them very much. Our differences
have added spice to our relationship,
rather than poison like they did with
my parents."
3. Make Relationships as Equal as Possible
"
In these times, my wife works a full
day, just as I do, so it's only right
that I share the housework with her.
I make more money than she does, but
she has an equal right to make important
decisions with me. I didn't marry her
because I could dominate her by making
more money, I married her because I loved
her, period." A common thread exists
in all the ACDs we counseled, and that
is this need to make a relationship as
equal as possible if it is to succeed.
They had witnessed the gross inequality,
the eternal one-upmanship in their parents'
marriage and saw these practices led
to divorce.
Dysfunctional couples lack
the awareness of how and when to cooperate
with each other. They are like two ships
passing in the night, misunderstanding
each other until a time develops when
their two ships collide into a divorce.
In these dysfunctional relationships,
a husband and a wife are trapped into
mistaking suggestions for improving the
behavior of one's partner as criticisms
and complaints. The tone in which these
statements are made is usually tainted
with anger and resentment. The bottom
line is that both the husband and wife
feel attacked, put down, and criticized
as if each were a little child. It's
as if Big Mamma or Big Daddy is laying
down the law and you are being forced
to comply with your partner's demand.
They have not treated each other as equals,
but as a person one must dominate to
get one's needs met.
4. Cultivate the Power of Forgiveness
The belief in the need to practice forgiveness
and to apologize to one's partner for
any harm that is done was imprinted
in all of the ACDs who have successful
relationships. Here is the consensus
of their thinking, which is the exact
opposite of what their parents did
while they were growing up. Past hurts
recalled, remembered slights and putdowns,
cruel acts done in anger, harsh words
that cut like a knife -- these were "normal" events
they saw their parents create while
they were growing up. They later learned
their parents weren't "bad" people,
but did hurtful and harmful things
to each other because they didn't know
how to avoid such actions. They never
forgave themselves or each other or
decided to take the next step of learning
how to eliminate their destructive
behavior so it wouldn't be repeated.
The ACDs who have successful relationships
learned what not to do by observing
their parents' angry behavior. For
many of these ACDs forgiveness meant
forgiving their parents for their hurtful
behavior and using their power of forgiveness
in their own relationships to successful
effect.
5. Differentiate Between your Partner
as a Person and His or Her Behavior
One of the way-stations on the road to
these ACDs' parents' divorce was their
inability to understand or practice the
message that their partner was not the
behavior they disliked. When spouses
repeatedly use unkind words to each other,
brainwashing occurs as if it is directed
against the person rather than the behavior
that is disliked. The truth that you
can hate some of a person's behavior
but still love the person was unknown
to the parents of today's ACDs. Consequently,
each felt any criticism was an attack
on their personhood.
In the long run,
instead of eliminating the behavior they
disliked, they eliminated each other
from their lives by getting divorced.
The successful ACD learns from this defect
in their parents' relationship and makes
every attempt to avoid it happening in
their own relationship. He or she would
be quick to say to one's partner, for
example, "Look, I love you, but
I don't like the amount of money you
spent on that computer gadget you just
bought without consulting me." This
focuses the issue on the problem to be
solved, namely how much money should
be spent, rather than labeling one's
partner as a selfish person, which would
sound like an attack against the person,
leaving the issue of solving how to spend
the family's income hanging in the air.
6. Seek Outside Problem-Solving Help
ACDs in successful relationships tell
us they never hesitate to seek outside
help from a marriage or relationship
counselor when they are faced with what
seems to be irreconcilable differences.
They would tell us, "Our parents
always believed it was a sign of personal
failure if they would reveal to outsiders
that they couldn't solve their marriage
problems. So they never solved these
problems and got divorced. It's a strong
person who goes to a counselor -- not
a weak one. How dumb it would be if you
had a heart attack and wouldn't go to
a doctor because you thought you should
fix your own problems. Well, it's no
different if you believe you have a broken
heart because things are going badly
in your marriage. That's also dangerous,
because it can cause depression which
can make you physically ill.
So it's
only sensible to go to a counselor to
give you some insight on how to resolve
the problem you and your partner are
facing -- going together because you
don't go to get divorced but instead
to get rid of the behavior that's liable
to cause you to divorce."
7. Confront and Overcome Unfinished
Business from Childhood
Successful ACDs don't hesitate to seek
out professional help with the problems
in their interpersonal relationships
when it is needed. However, there are
many unresolved problems in all people's
lives -- problems from childhood -- whether
one grew up in a divorced or a non-divorced
household.
Many of the ACDs in our groups
went to counselors before as well as
after they were involved in a relationship
and found that counseling was enormously
helpful in resolving unfinished issues
from the past that were still plaguing
them in adult life.
They contended with negative inheritances
from their dysfunctional family backgrounds
such as incest (not only girls by a father
or a relative, but also boys had been
attacked). Some discovered they had an
Attention Deficit Disorder which had
been left undiagnosed.
Another major concern was attempting
to resolve problems by violent means.
Such men and women grew up seeing their
parents physically abusing each other.
It appeared they used violence against
each other as a way to attempt to solve
their marital difficulties even though
this behavior intensified their problems.
Consequently, a number of ACDs grew
up unconsciously believing such behavior
between two people was "normal." When
they discovered it was abnormal, they
sought out and received professional
help to eliminate this behavior from
their lives because they had consciously
decided years ago they would never act
in this manner when they grew up. Once
they were in touch with the unconscious
programming that triggered them to replicate
their parents' antisocial behavior, they
were able to establish new, nonviolent
methods to solve their problems.
8. Practice Tolerance Instead of Judgmental
Behavior
ACDs have an unacknowledged advantage
over the men and women who grew up in
a non-divorced household: they are exposed
to a far wider variety of lifestyles
because once divorced, their parents
moved in different directions, different
neighborhoods, or cities; associated
with different individuals; and became
involved in new relationships.
When their parents lived together before
divorcing, these ACDs usually had little
exposure to our multicultural society.
Many heard their parents voice negative
statements about people of other ethnic
groups, immigrants, homosexuals, the
unemployed, and poor people in general.
The divorce gave many of these children
a fast education in tolerance that otherwise
might have taken them forever to learn.
The same parent who bad-mouthed the unemployed
and the poor could (and not too infrequently
did) become one of that same put-down
group. The area an ACD might live after
their parents moved away from their old
neighborhood might be mixed with people
from various ethnicities and backgrounds.
The ACDs found out that those "others" were
good people with whom they could become
friends.
A parent might change his or
her sexual preference from being attracted
to a person of the opposite sex to one
of the same gender -- and the ACD may
find that new lover of one's parent likeable
and friendly. And if a parent remarried,
the stepparent might be a compassionate,
generous person. "It takes all kinds
of people to make up this world. I'm
not God to pass judgment on them -- but
my parents did before they divorced,
and all it got them was a divorce!" That
about sums up the way many ACDs view
the world.
Effective Communication
It is only when you and your partner
treat each other as equals -- deserving
to be listened to with respect -- that
a positive resolution of family concerns
and disagreements can be accomplished.
Here's how:
Understand that the way in which you
say something will determine whether
or not your partner will even hear what
you have to say. For instance, a wife
tells her husband: "You never hang
up your clothes before we go to bed.
Why do I have to do it for you all the
time?" Then her husband responds: "You're
always spending too much money. You buy
a dress and wear it once. Do you think
I'm made of money?"
These are legitimate
issues that need to be respected and
attended to, but neither of them is dealing
with these issues. All they're responding
to is the sound of each others voices:
the harshness, the attack quality, the
righteous indignation, and the judgmental
criticism that are implicit in their
communication with each other.
Consequently,
they feel they have no alternative but
to attack back because they feel their
positive sense of self is threatened.
Arguments like this escalate to charges
and countercharges and are exchanged
until both the husband and wife are exhausted.
Nothing has been solved, and resentment
festers. They have not heard the content
of what their partner wants to discuss
-- they're only hearing what they believe
is criticism of their person. In other
words, the way in which they talked to
each other prevented their issues from
even being heard.
To be heard, talk in a normal tone of
voice and point out you are not criticizing
your partner, but wish to draw his or
her attention to an issue that concerns
you. Your partner will then listen to
the issue because he or she now knows
you are not criticizing but are concerned
about a problem he or she would like
to discuss. Respect your partner as an
equal when differences of opinion exist
between the two of you. You will then
be able to evaluate in a fair way the
validity of your partner's concern. Even
if you agree to disagree, do so respecting
each other as having an equal right to
his or her opinion.
Above all, never
attack your partner as a person. It's
important to state you may disapprove
of your partner's behavior, but do not
disapprove of him as a human being. The
danger phrases always to be avoided are: "You
never..." and "You always..." These
phrases are character attacks that seem
to focus on behavior but really are heard
as an attack on one's sense of self.
So it's not what you say to your partner
that will get yourself heard, it's how
you say it. In a good marriage, everything
is open for discussion and resolution
when a husband and wife respect the way
they talk to each other. |