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Connecting Couples Podcast: Series: Pursuers and Withdrawers
Episode 1 Show Notes. We're back from our 6-month hiatus.
First 5 minutes:
How does this content impact your relationship (what growth will look like).
Minutes 5-10:
The goal is NOT that you switch roles- that pursuers would become withdrawers or withdrawers would become pursuers. A healthy goal is possibly that pursuers can understand their part and share their internal process more and that Withdrawers can understand their part and let their partner in on it more.
Escalation- when the relationship is under distress and one or both partners feel heightened emotion and strategies are quickly in play. Your body is sending you strategic messages based on how you are reading or assessing the interaction. Messages might be: I’m going to be left (abandoned) as a pursuer, or I’m going to be ‘in trouble’ and I’ll shut down as a withdrawer.
Minutes 10-15:
Couples who ‘don’t fight’ aren’t necessarily de-escalated. Not fighting might be a strategy that reduces conflict, but doesn’t always make us feel securely connected, or seen and heard.
De-escalation. Does NOT mean you will not fight. It means we can understand more what is happening, repair more, and are able to ask for our needs to get met in a way that our partner understands.
Statistic- couples often stay in distress for up to 7 years before asking for help from a therapist.
Once you get help, how can you tell if the help is making a difference. What will it look like when a couple is in a more secure place that is less escalated and more aware.
Minutes 15-end:
Growth that happens- now that I have awareness, there is a better chance for a good repair. My growth is reflected by my ability to return to a fight with the part I played and what my experience was (self-focused on own behavior and own motivations versus partners).
Connect Point: First identify (or remind yourself and your partner) what strategy you lean to in distress. Are you a Pursuer or a Withdrawer? Then, identify one or two of the moves you most likely go to and share YOUR typical moves with your partner. Let your partner share their own moves with you.
For more information about Chad and Angela, check out their website: www.therealimhoffs.com
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3131 ratings
Connecting Couples Podcast: Series: Pursuers and Withdrawers
Episode 1 Show Notes. We're back from our 6-month hiatus.
First 5 minutes:
How does this content impact your relationship (what growth will look like).
Minutes 5-10:
The goal is NOT that you switch roles- that pursuers would become withdrawers or withdrawers would become pursuers. A healthy goal is possibly that pursuers can understand their part and share their internal process more and that Withdrawers can understand their part and let their partner in on it more.
Escalation- when the relationship is under distress and one or both partners feel heightened emotion and strategies are quickly in play. Your body is sending you strategic messages based on how you are reading or assessing the interaction. Messages might be: I’m going to be left (abandoned) as a pursuer, or I’m going to be ‘in trouble’ and I’ll shut down as a withdrawer.
Minutes 10-15:
Couples who ‘don’t fight’ aren’t necessarily de-escalated. Not fighting might be a strategy that reduces conflict, but doesn’t always make us feel securely connected, or seen and heard.
De-escalation. Does NOT mean you will not fight. It means we can understand more what is happening, repair more, and are able to ask for our needs to get met in a way that our partner understands.
Statistic- couples often stay in distress for up to 7 years before asking for help from a therapist.
Once you get help, how can you tell if the help is making a difference. What will it look like when a couple is in a more secure place that is less escalated and more aware.
Minutes 15-end:
Growth that happens- now that I have awareness, there is a better chance for a good repair. My growth is reflected by my ability to return to a fight with the part I played and what my experience was (self-focused on own behavior and own motivations versus partners).
Connect Point: First identify (or remind yourself and your partner) what strategy you lean to in distress. Are you a Pursuer or a Withdrawer? Then, identify one or two of the moves you most likely go to and share YOUR typical moves with your partner. Let your partner share their own moves with you.
For more information about Chad and Angela, check out their website: www.therealimhoffs.com
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