|
Word Count: 1602 Strategies for Surviving Holiday Dinners, Family Events, and Other War Zones
Excerpt From The Relationship Handbook: How to Understand and Improve Every
Relationship in Your Life by Kevin B. Burk
No matter how well we may have weathered our basic training, nothing can
fully prepare us for the front lines of family gatherings. We’re in the thick of
it, dodging live ammunition, and fighting the urge to return to our old,
reliable patterns that helped us to survive while we were growing up. We may
have mastered our relationship skills in one-on-one relationships. We may have
improved our romantic relationships, our professional relationships and our
friendships. And we may have even improved our family relationships—one family
member at a time. But when we’re sitting around the holiday dinner table or
socializing at a wedding reception with our entire family, it’s an entirely
different experience.
For one thing, when we’re with our entire family, we have to juggle a number
of different relationships at the same time. Our attention is divided at best,
and for many of us, our awareness deserts us completely after the first major
skirmish. We feel like we’re surrounded and have to defend ourselves from sneak
attacks. We often feel that retreat is not an option. When we are cornered, we
often believe that the only way that we can survive is to fight our way out, new
relationship skills be damned.
While most people assume that General Sherman was referring to the Civil War
when he stated, “War is hell,” in fact, he was referring to a particularly
memorable Thanksgiving dinner with his family. This also explains why he could
send his troops into battle without a second thought, but that the very mention
of cranberry sauce would reduce him to tears.
Bearing this in mind, here are some essential tips for surviving your next
family gathering.
TIP #1: GO EASY ON YOURSELF!
The first, and most important survival tip is to remember that navigating and
surviving family gatherings takes exceptional skill and often quite a bit of
practice. We will not be able to transform our entire family dynamic between the
salad course and the pumpkin pie. In fact, we may not be able to change our
family dynamic at all—and it’s important that we accept that we don’t need to.
It’s not our responsibility to help our family members resolve their issues.
We’re only responsible for resolving our responses to their issues. Our
objective is to maintain our own safety and validation accounts, focus our
awareness, and survive the family event reasonably unscathed.
However, maintaining our awareness while we’re relating to our families takes
practice! We must go easy on ourselves. We may react when we would rather
respond. We may be drawn into old arguments. Whatever happens, we need to accept
that it is perfect. We are doing our best, and that’s all we can ever ask of
ourselves. And remember that our awareness that we’re acting out an old pattern
is, in itself, a change in that pattern! As we develop our awareness, we will
spend less time caught in our old patterns. Over time, our awareness will help
us to make lasting and permanent changes in those patterns.
TIP #2: GO EASY ON YOUR FAMILY
This piece of advice is equally as important as going easy on ourselves, but
it’s often a bit more challenging to follow. Essentially, we must be willing to
forgive our relatives for everything. We must be able to accept that they only
ever did the best they could at any given time. We need to begin to recognize
and relate to our families as people instead of as family members. We need to
begin to know them for who they are, and not simply for who they are to us.
When we embrace the truth that even our family members are individualized
aspects of All That Is, our relationships with our families will shift
dramatically. Our family members are some of the most powerful teachers we will
ever encounter in our lives. They also tend to be the most accurate and powerful
mirrors for us, which, of course, is why we often find it so difficult to love
and accept our family members unconditionally. In order to love our family
members, we would also need to be able to love and accept ourselves.
Even so, we can love our family members unconditionally and still only choose
to sit down to eat with them once a year.
TIP #3: USE THE BATHROOM AS A SANCTUARY WHEN NEEDED
When we are aware that we feel triggered by a family member, we can simply
choose to excuse ourselves and visit the bathroom. The bathroom is the one place
that we can be assured of our privacy, and we can stay there as long as we need
to. We can use the bathroom as a sanctuary where we can regain our composure and
gather our strength so that we feel safe enough to return to the battle. If any
of our family members are indelicate enough to comment on how much time we seem
to be spending in the bathroom, we can always plead an upset stomach or a weak
bladder.
TIP #4: LOSE THE BATTLE TO WIN THE WAR
We have to be very clear about our objectives in terms of our family
relationships. If our ultimate goal is to improve our family relationships, we
have to be willing to stay focused on the big picture. The most difficult lesson
for most of us to accept is that in order to win the war, we have to be willing
to lose the battle. Our long-term objective is to feel more safe and more
validated in our family relationships. To reach this goal, we must help our
family members to feel safe and validated. In order to do this, we must be
absolutely clear that we are capable of meeting our own safety and validation
needs.
We often experience our families as competitive environments. Our old
blueprints tell us that there’s a limited amount of safety and validation
available, and that we must compete with the other members of our family to meet
our needs. We insult and snipe at each other because we can only feel safe and
validated if the balance in our accounts is greater than the balance in everyone
else’s accounts. The more we care about earning other people’s approval and
validation, the more vulnerable we are. When one of our family members makes a
comment designed to make us feel less valid, we do not need to defend ourselves.
We can recognize that this person is asking to be validated, and we can validate
them. Sometimes, this means letting them think that we are less successful,
accomplished, and generally wonderful than we truly are.
We must be willing to lose every single family argument we encounter. Letting
our family members win the argument allows them to feel safe and validated. As
long as we remember that we create our own safety and validation, and we do not
need to compete with our family members, we can lose the argument because it
will help us to win the war. We must let our family members believe that they
are right about whatever the issue is, no matter how blatantly wrong they
actually are.
We know the truth. That will have to be enough for us.
TIP #5: ALWAYS, EVER, NEVER
If we want to relate to our family members as they are now and not as we
remember them being in the past, we must eliminate three words from our
vocabulary: always, ever and never. In the lexicon of family “discussions,”
always, ever and never are relationship air-raid sirens. They signal that an
attack has been launched and it’s time to duck and cover. Specifically, we must
avoid some of our favorite statements in our family relationships such as, “You
always behave this way,” “When have you ever supported me?” and “You never give
me any credit.” If we find ourselves using any of these words in a similar
context, it’s a red flag that we’re focused on the past and not on the present.
Likewise, when our family members use these words about us, they’re relating to
us as we were, not as we are.
As soon as we become aware that we are using these words, we must stop. It’s
likely that our use of these words has made our family member feel unsafe and
invalid. We can apologize for having used one of these words, and acknowledge
that we have been unfair. Something about the current discussion has triggered
an unpleasant association for us. If appropriate, we can rephrase the statement,
keeping it specific to the present.
If we’re on the receiving end of always, ever, never statements, we can
choose to respond, rather than to react. In the middle of a family get-together,
the wisest choice is often to deflect the statement, perhaps even acknowledge
that the statement may have some validity when applied to the past, and then
change the subject. If the discussion has uncovered an old wound, the wound will
still be there for us to heal at a more appropriate time and in a more
appropriate environment.
About The Author
Kevin B. Burk is the author of The Relationship Handbook: How to Understand
and Improve Every Relationship in Your Life. Visit
http://www.everyrelationship.com for a FREE report on creating AMAZING
Relationships.
This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it
|