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***"How Can I Get Him To Stop Hurting Me?"

Topic: Relationship AdviceBy Margaret Paul, Ph.D.Published Recently added

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________________________________________ Are you aware of the system you have created with your partner that may be causing you pain? ________________________________________ I have worked with couples for 44 years, and one thing I can tell you for sure: relationships are a system, and each partner has an equal part of the system. People come together at their common level of woundedness – their common level of self-abandonment. In many relationships, each partner is very aware of the other person's end of the system, but completely unaware of their own end. They tend to trigger the other person's wounded self with their own wounded self, but they often don't recognize their own wounded self. Here is an example of this: Allison asks: "How do you suggest telling someone they're doing something that hurts your feelings and to ask them to stop? My husband recently accused me of finding a way to blame my depressed feelings on him. He believes that I wake up in the morning feeling depressed and then try to find something to pin it on. My experience is that if he says something that bothers me and I don't say something right when it happens or if he tells me I'm being defensive and I shut down, that I often wake up feeling resentful the next day, but when I tell him that I'm upset he gets defensive and tells me I have a problem." I'm going to take each part of this question separately, to exemplify the common self-abandonment in this system. "How do you suggest telling someone they're doing something that hurts your feelings and to ask them to stop?" In a loving relationship, each person can simply say to their partner, "When you do that or say that, it hurts me." When there is loving and caring between them, they each want to know what hurts the other and they will be motivated to not do the hurtful thing. However, if you have to ponder how to tell your partner he or she is hurting you, then something else is going on in the system. "My husband recently accused me of finding a way to blame my depressed feelings on him. He believes that I wake up in the morning feeling depressed and then try to find something to pin it on." What's evident here is that Allison is depressed, but is not taking responsibility for how SHE is treating herself that may be causing her depression. "My experience is that if he says something that bothers me and I don't say something right when it happens or if he tells me I'm being defensive and I shut down, that I often wake up feeling resentful the next day…" Here Allison is explaining how she is NOT taking responsibility for her feelings. Instead of either speaking up for herself in the moment or compassionately going inside to take care of her feelings, she abandons herself by getting defensive and shutting down. Then she wakes up resentful due to not taking loving care of herself. She believes she is resentful toward her husband - that she is a victim and he is causing her feelings, rather than that her inner child is resentful toward her for not taking loving care of herself. "…when I tell him that I'm upset he gets defensive and tells me I have a problem." Here she is blaming her husband and denying that he is accurate in the fact that she is blaming him. She is telling him she is upset to make it his fault. Then he responds from his wounded self, getting defensive and telling her she has a problem, rather than taking responsibility for his pain at being blamed and/or moving into an intent to learn with her. In this system, neither are taking loving care of their feelings, both are defending themselves and blaming the other. Both are equally in their wounded selves. Here is what I would say to Allison: "Allison, instead of focusing on what to say to your husband, why not focus on taking loving care of your own feelings? If you were to do this, it would completely change your dysfunctional system. You can't stop him from saying hurtful things – you don't have that control – but you do have control over your own intent to love yourself or abandon yourself by blaming him. Learning how to love yourself through your Inner Bonding practice will change everything, because his behavior toward you may be reflecting how you are rejecting yourself."

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About the Author

Margaret Paul, Ph.D. is a best-selling author of 8 books, relationship expert, and co-creator of the powerful Inner Bonding® process - featured on Oprah, and recommended by actress Lindsay Wagner and singer Alanis Morissette. Are you are ready to heal your pain and discover your joy? Click here for a FREE Inner Bonding Course, and visit our website at www.innerbonding.com for more articles and help. Phone and Skype Sessions Available. Join the thousands we have already helped and visit us now!

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