“I just want my partner to understand me”

“I just want my partner to understand me”

In my practice, I hear many couples say, ” I just want my partner to understand me.

Who wouldn’t want that? You tell your partner things, they truly get what you say and you feel understood. And vice versa: your partner shares their deepest feelings and thoughts with you, you receive what they say, and everyone in the end feels understood – and loved.

It doesn’t always work that way though, does it?

In my practice I’ve noticed many reasons why couples don’t feel they have the understanding relationship that they desire. Or, why they don’t feel as understood as they wish they did.

I have also found a powerful shift in thinking that can change this.

Imagine this conversation between two partners:

Partner A: What you just said felt offensive to me.
Partner B: Offensive?? You need to toughen up. I always have to walk on eggshells around you.

Those partners are on now their way down the rabbit hole where no one feels understood. These types of exchanges happen all the time.

But what if the partners acknowledged this simple principle:

One partner does not have to agree with what the other is saying.

Think about it. You probably disagree with some things your partner says. You are two different people, so you won’t always see things the same way. That is not the problem. The problem is what you do with that difference.

You might argue that you are right. Or, you might cave in and agree with your partner in order to keep peace, at the risk of building resentment. Neither approach works very well.

Let’s imagine a different conversation using the principle above:

Partner A: What you just said felt offensive to me.
Partner B:  Oh? I didn’t mean it to come across that way (representing Partner A’s truth).  Why did it feel that way to you? (eliciting Partner A’s truth, and then holding it without defensiveness).

Here’s the bottom line. Your goal should be to represent your point of view, but to make room and hold your partner’s point of view as well, even when you don’t agree with it. This takes practice, skill, effort and motivation.

In return, you and your partner can reap some prolific rewards.

Learn to create and sustain a loving and understanding relationship with your partner. Join Michelle Joy, MFT, for the next Couples Communication Workshop.

For more information or to register, click here.