Article

Relationship Intimacy

Topic: Peak PerformanceBy Marta Hatter, LCSW revelationcounseling.comPublished Recently added

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 1,316 legacy views

Legacy rating: 2/5 from 1 archived votes

Relationship Intimacy

We are created for relationship. All of us balance two conflicting drives-the desire for attachment, and the desire to avoid pain. We need to attach, bond and connect to be whole and content. But in relationships, problems occur- some of which are painful. What are we to do in this dilemma? How to experience relationship intimacy when closeness involves pain. Some of us use walls or defenses to avoid pain, and in doing so rob ourselves of relationships. When we get close to people we will experience community, giving, receiving, love and we will also experience problems.
A quality relationship is not a relationship without problems, it is a relationship that handles problems well. What comes naturally when conflict occurs is often damaging. Turn away from what comes naturally and learn about interactions that increase emotional intimacy. Responding well in conflict often requires a deliberate approach of intentionally managing the problems in healthy ways. Reciprocity occurs in bad conflict-the cycle feeds itself. Reciprocity also occurs in managing conflict well-the cycle feeds itself in the constructive direction.

Constructive Skills to Develop- Empathy, Humility, Dependability, Awareness, Responsibility.
• Empathy-I get out of myself and imagine what it is like from your perspective, whether or not I understand your view.
• Humility-I give up the need to be right. Yes, really give it up.
• Dependability-I am aware of my shortcoming, and follow-through with a determination to correct my words, and/or actions. Lining up what I do with what I say.
• Awareness-the ability to step back and see my immaturity, insecurity, “buttons.”
• Responsibility-It bothers me when I am aware of being wrong. This conscience is healthy as I have become more aware. Admit my faults, apologize and take action to bring about repair.

Learning these skills and practicing them helps us to manage our relationship conflicts in a nurturing, honest and mature way. Resolving conflict well increases relational intimacy. This is a characteristic of a quality relationship!!

Article author

About the Author

Professionally, Marta is active in the National Association of Social Work, the EMDR International Association and the American Association of Christian Counselors. She previously served as a Consultant to the Orange County Rescue Mission, and as a Licensing Examiner for the Califo
ia LCSW Oral Examination.
In addition, Marta also provides online counseling for cross-cultural workers, humanitarian aid workers, and missionaries from Califo
ia who are living and working abroad.
Marta has spoken at area churches and professional conferences.

* “God’s Plan A: People” Mariners Church, Irvine
* “From Victim to Victorious” Calvary Chapel, East Anaheim
* “Adolescents and Adolescent Therapy” First Evangelical Free Church of Fullerton.
* EMDR; A Portrait of the Mind-Body Connection, American Association of Christian Counseling World Conference. Nashville, Tennessee

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

Oh, What a Year It Was! I recently shared with our Best Life Design Community, an exercise by Dan Pearce of Single Dad Laughing (http://bit.ly/fGL6t0) shaking up the New Year’s resolutions process. Instead of listing everything he wanted to happen in the New Year, Dan created a future memory at the beginning of the year about how the year progressed. We encouraged our Community to write their own 2011 in review, so it’s only right that I get the ball rolling and share mine. Here it goes…

Related piece

Article

“You know what they say,” Pete said. “You’ve got to play the full 60 minutes if you want to win.” Steve began, “Let’s get started. Did everyone write some game plans for their highest priority goals?” Pete replied, “ We haven’t had time yet, Steve, but we’re going to do it this week.” Steve ...

Related piece

Article

So here he was, stuck in the office instead of watching his son play hockey. Meanwhile, Steve was out playing street hockey for three hours a day with his kids. What weighed more on Pete’s brain was that street hockey used to be the love of his life now, it was just a nuisance. Although he’d ...

Related piece

Article

I came across a video this week that features a new technology that captures people’s attention in a novel way. It’s worth watching simply to take a look and ask how you might use it in your business. But its value far surpasses this. In this video, Sir Ken Robinson, makes a powerful call for a paradigm shift in education. This struck me at a deep level, given my raising of 3 kids (including one we home schooled for a couple of years to provide him more of what he needed at the time) and my work on behalf of lower opportunity kids in the non-profit sector.

Related piece