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From
Relationship
to
Partnership
by Paul Brenner, M.D., Ph.D.
and Donna Martin, M.A.
Successful close relationship either
starts as, or evolves into, a partnership.
Unfortunately, many relationships end up
focused on differences and so are based on a
certain amount of friction, competition, and
tension. Our intimate live-in relationships
offer us a constant reminder of the work we
still have to do. If we are successful, we can
transform an ordinary relationship into the
precious gift of partnership.
How does a relationship move from the
early courtship phase, through the difficult
relationship phase, into a creative
partnership?
Courtship brings out our playfulness.
During this phase there is often an intimate
sharing, where even parts of our shadow are
sometimes exposed as we test each other's
degree of acceptance. Mixed in with these
hidden parts are our childhood gifts.
Attracted to similar qualities in each other,
we feel a sense of belonging -- a recognition
of a familiar face of love. In courtship, we
tend to radiate a youthful joy that friends
and family notice. We glow.
When courtship moves into marriage, or
other forms of live-in relationship, things
change. Living together recalls the family of
origin. The honeymoon is soon over, as the
unfinished business of the past turns fun into
work. Each partner may now begin to wonder,
Where did it go? Where the hell did the love
go?
The relationship can then deteriorate
into a chronic relationship, held together by
tension and only momentary reminders of
courtship feelings. Blame may arise, overt or
insinuated. As the unmet needs from childhood
again create dissatisfaction, the relationship
may sink to the level of a "he said-she said"
battle. Usually, the partners don't see how
they are projecting their childhood unmet
needs and their disowned (shadow) parts onto
their mates. Then, as if by magic, the mates
may even start acting out their partner's
projection. In chronic relationships, we end
up living with what we least like about
ourselves, because that is what we see in the
other person.
The work at this point is to surrender
expectations and attachments, and to stop
blaming. We can begin to move toward
partnership and truly meet each other for the
first time, as two unique individuals. As in
any relationship or partnership, disagreements
will continue to occur. There are times when
major disagreements are best worked out
separately, alone or with the help of a wise
friend or knowledgeable therapist.
The heat of an argument can obscure the
personal insights necessary for resolving a
conflict. Time apart often helps us not only
to recognize but to admit how we participate
in causing friction. With awareness, empathy,
and honesty, we can then reunite with our
mates more creatively.
As we progress with our individual inner
work, we move with greater and greater ease
from feeling disconnected to reunion. We start
to get more out of time alone and time
together. The relationship becomes a place to
play, to relish whatever is happening in the
moment, and to create works of love that serve
others. It becomes a partnership. In a
partnership there is a commitment to embracing
pain as well as joy. The real gift of
partnership is the discovery of play.
As we have seen, the childhood
experience of love and pain is difficult to
understand. In the attempt to create meaning
out of this paradox, the child can make wrong
assumptions that have long-term consequences.
One assumption is that certain gifts always
come at the cost of certain hurts or unmet
needs; another is that love hurts or that love
cannot be trusted. As a child, you might have
thought you were unworthy or unlovable. These
assumptions become the basis of your adult
reality.
Let's look again at the whole picture of
your childhood gifts and hurts. Look for
paradoxes: between the gifts, for example
(creating a kind of paralysis), or between the
hurts (creating a sense of victimization, no
matter what happens). Can you see the source
of some of your own assumptions?
If you experienced a repetition of
painful events in your childhood, powerful
memory patterns were probably stored for
retrieval at a later date. Any similar event
that matches even a trace of a given memory
can recall the entire emotional charge
associated with that memory! This phenomenon
is one source of post-traumatic stress
syndrome. Remembering emotional and physical
pain has been a key to our survival as a
species; unfortunately, this kind of instant
recall can be a real obstacle to intimacy. We
all make inaccurate assumptions at times, and
these distort our reality.
As children, if we had two separate but
simultaneous experiences, we tended to assume
that they were linked. We then came to expect
this combination to be repeated elsewhere in
life. If one part of the equation is missing,
we assume the other is missing, too. If one is
present, we assume the other is present. Our
gifts and hurts became fused, and are now the
source of our relationship themes and
patterns, especially in long-term
relationships.
Commitment, intimacy, and live-in
situations are reminders of our childhood
experience in the family. Here is where we
begin to sabotage our relationships. The most
common internal voice that comes up to help
re-create our family experience is the inner
critic, often projecting our shadow onto our
partner. This might be when we star telling
ourselves that we'd be better off alone.
Live-in relationships become chronic
when we blame the relationship for not giving
us what we want. We often use our intimate
relationships to perpetuate and justify our
distrust of love. We won't escape our past
until we begin to look at and question our
childhood assumptions.
We sometimes like ourselves more when
we're alone than when we're in a long-term
relationship. The paradox of this is like
saying, "you should be with me when I am
alone!" It may seem as though our partners
never see us at our best. However, if you have
someone in your life who can meet your needs
and you can avoid sabotaging the relationship,
then you have already started the work of
self-repair. In meeting your own needs, you
can now allow another person into your life
without the fear of losing your gifts.
You may discover that your family
patterns and childhood assumptions don't play
themselves out in intimate relationships as
much as in your work or with your kids. The
chronic relationship can rear its head in many
different arenas, and in many different ways.
Remember that what you see in your mate, your
children, and your coworkers may be yourself.
When you can begin to laugh at what once would
have angered you, you are on the road to
breaking unconscious patterns. This is true
freedom.
This
article was excerpted from "Seeing Your Life Through New Eyes", ©2000,
by Paul Brenner, M.D., Ph.D. and Donna Martin,
M.A.
Reprinted with permission from the publisher,
Beyond Words Publishing. For
info., visit
http://www.beyondword.com.
Info/Order
book
About The
Authors
Paul
Brenner, M.D., Ph.D., is an obstetrician/gynecologist and psychologist
widely known in the medical community as well as in the self-help field.
He directs the SafeReach Institute, an educational center promoting the
understanding of addictive behaviors. He lectures extensively throughout
the United States, Canada, and Europe.

Donna Martin, M.A. is a
counselor, therapist, trainer, and consultant from Kamloops, British
Columbia, Canada. She has worked in the field of alcohol and drug
addiction for many years.
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