RELATIONSHIP CONFLICT AND TRIANGULATION
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If there is conflict in your relationship and you have difficulty reaching a resolution, you may be caught in a rigid pre-defined role with your partner. To break out of this dynamic and work towards a healthy connection, you will need to change the way you handle conflict.
Triangulation:
Triangulation refers to the concept of drawing in a third person to help cope when there is conflict in the relationship. Triangulation can offer relief and stability.
However, triangulation also has the potential to cause turmoil in relationships and cause an escalation in the conflict.
While everyone experiences and engages in triangulation at some point and some form, not all triangulation is bad or unhealthy. It is critical to recognize and avoid unhealthy triangulation.
An unhealthy and unsustainable dynamic develops when triangulation involves the roles of a victim, a rescuer, and a persecutor. Oftentimes this unhealthy dynamic develops the energy that draws the individuals in such a way that the resolution of the conflict is forgotten.
The Roles:
The Victim, the one who feels victimized, helpless, weak, ashamed, hopeless, powerless, etc. The victim feels stuck and is not able to enjoy life, resolve issues, or make decisions.
The Rescuer, the one who feels responsible towards the victim and guilty if she/he does not help the victim. The rescuer is the enabler and is stuck focusing energy on the victim rather than on themselves.
The Persecutor, the one who is authoritative, superior, controlling, oppressive, rigid, etc. The persecutor blames the victim for the conflict.
The Play:
These three roles help create a basic conceptualization for the dysfunctional relationship roles that develop in conflict. The individuals in the triangle may assume different roles which change and shift over time or as the conflict changes.
There may also be a development of dysfunctional patterns in broken triangles and multiple dependent triangles. Often there is black and white thinking and actual conce
s may be forgotten within a dynamic of upset and confusion.
When individuals who already have a propensity for particular positions are drawn in a conflict or issue, they naturally fall into the role they have a predisposition for.
Engaging in this role fulfills an often subconscious need within them, and in spite of the dysfunction of the triangulation, they continue to engage in their role.
The victim being persecuted will seek out a rescuer. The rescuer will meet some need within themselves by playing the rescuing role. The persecutor will feel righteous and blame the victim.
The victim will say “I’m helpless”, persecutor will say “I’m right”, the and the rescuer will say “I’m good”. The rescuer perhaps has the most obscure motive as she/he has a mixed motive of feeling good that someone is dependent on them, and they are able to help. It may be that the rescuer actually enjoys their position and doesn’t want the conflict to really resolve.
The Escalation:
The play and dynamic of this victim, rescuer, and persecutor triangle soon becomes an end in itself and overtakes the original problem and any corrective solutions.
Escalation includes changing roles as the victim might strike back and attack the persecutor, who in turn feels like the victim, and seeks out their own rescuer.
In another scenario, the victim might blame the rescuer for not doing enough, or for doing too much, and the rescuer might then feel like the victim, also finding their own rescuer.
Either case there is now the involvement of a fourth person creating an overlapping triangle and shifting positions.
While this kind of triangulation continues there is no healthy position.
The Way Out:
Do not engage- Refuse to participate as a victim, rescuer, or persecutor. Find your balance and express your true beliefs and position on the issue. Maintain your position with strength and compassion. Focus on the solution.
Do not retaliate- If the other individuals in the triangle play their parts, refuse to respond with the position they have cast you in. Instead, firmly express yourself from your position.
Create an equal partnership- Engage with your partner as an equal rather than a superior or inferior.
Practice healthy, compassionate, and direct communication: Resist the urge to vent to a third person in the case of relationship conflict. Speak to your partner directly or seek professional help/ couples therapy.
Accept differences- Accept that your partner may have a different opinion or preference then you and seek a compromise that works for the both of you.
Assert yourself- Instead of blaming, punishing, manipulating, or using passive aggressive or passive-aggressive methods, be assertive. Take responsibility for your position and say what you want to. Keep clear boundaries, say no when you want to.
Show your vulnerability- Take the responsibility to problem solve. Instead of feeling victimized, seek healthy solutions and take steps to change the situation.
Support and empathize, but do not take over- Do not assume the responsibility to take over the issues and the care of another person. Provide input and assistance when requested, but do not take on responsibility, guilt, or obligation where it is not due.
Post originally published at https://www.couple-care.com/blog/relationship-conflict-and-triangulation/
Article author
About the Author
Founder of https://www.couple-care.com, specializing in Couples Retreats and Couples Therapy, Dr. Patel has a Doctorate in Marriage and Family Therapy, a Masters in Marriage and Family Therapy, and a second Masters in Human Development. With over 15 years of psychotherapy experience, and having researched Love in Contemporary Life, and Conflict Resolution in Relationships, she brings this research, insight, and experience to her work with couples.
Her commitment to her clients is to help identify their patterns and the relationship’s core problems and to equip them with the tools and practice required to shift toward health. She offers a safe, non-judgmental environment to work on changing negative communication and healing from emotional wounds, resentment, contempt, lack of intimacy and compassion, and the impact of childhood or past trauma.
Her approach is evidence-based, basic yet powerful because it leads to compassion – a key ingredient for creating a positive change. Goals include providing a new perspective on the relationship, new individual insights on self and partner, and the tools to effect and maintain lasting change.
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