Five Towns Jewish Home 9-17

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OCTOBER 29, 2015 | The Jewish Home

SEPTEMBER 17, 2021 | The Jewish Home OCTOBER 29, 2015 | The Jewish Home

Dr. Deb

Why You Need to Do Marriage Counseling Alone By Deb Hirschhorn, Ph.D.

S

ome smart aleck recently told his wife, “I don’t need therapy. I’m a therapist!” He isn’t, but even if he were, who understands themselves so thoroughly that they can catch the bad moods before they take over, recognize their triggers at the moment they’re happening, and soothe their inner children when they react because of those triggers? Who, in short, has so much self-leadership that they could do all that and have themselves figured out – without hurting anyone’s feelings – within minutes of the bad moment coming over them? I can tell you that Dr. Schwartz says in his newest book, “No Bad Parts” (I recommend it), that he himself meets daily with all his parts just to be sure they’re functioning as helpers to him, enhancing his day, rather than taking over and destroying his grip on self-leadership. And for years he’s had a colleague who acts like a chavrusa to be sure he hasn’t missed something. Now, why would Dr. Schwartz himself, the big guy, miss something? The answer is because that is exactly the nature of parts. Our parts have been doing their jobs for a long, long time. And one of those jobs is to

keep us from feeling pain. They do that through ignoring it, distracting ourselves from it, minimizing it, analyzing and rationalizing it, and even pooh-poohing it. In other words, if it’s human to not want to suffer, then why would Dr. Schwartz himself, or any other therapist, or any person, actually, not use these valuable (though mistaken) tools for dealing with their pain? They wouldn’t. Which is why it takes a lot of thought, reflection, and introspection to catch moods (i.e., parts) taking over before they actually succeed. And why it might in addition take a more objective observer to help. So what does this have to do with marriage help? I don’t have to tell you what havoc is wreaked when you get triggered by the person you’re married to. You’ve most likely experienced any or all of these: • Feeling unloved • Feeling like a victim • Feeling mistreated • Feeling angry • Feeling scared or anxious • Feeling depressed or hopeless • Feeling frustrated • Feeling along, misunderstood

• Feeling neglected • Feeling misjudged And so much more is possible, right? These feelings could have been triggered by something your spouse did. But the bad piece of the story is that then your reaction can trigger them back. And it escalates from there. Whether it’s excessive fighting or feeling like roommates or like “ships passing in the night” as someone once remarked, the bad feelings engender worse ones. So how do you get rid of the bad feelings? According to IFS (Internal Family Systems), you don’t. You don’t want to get rid of parts of yourself. They are all parts of you that came to your aid and assistance when you needed it most in your life. They always mean well, even the very disruptive ones that make people say and do things that are dangerous. Those, too, are kids inside of you, many as young as five years old. So, of course, their behavior’s no good. But they are good. They are the well-meaning children still living within us all and often making big mistakes out of not knowing what

else to do. Now picture a therapy room with a couple trying to be grown up and mature but not at all succeeding because each has triggered some child parts of the other: The part that stomps out of the room, the part that coldly uses logic you can cut with a knife (ten-year-olds can be very good at that), the part that cries, and the part whose heart has turned to steel. Exactly how far will that therapist get? Not very. It is for that reason that the first step in marriage therapy has to be each person • Recognizing the parts that unexpectedly turn up • Knowing when and why in your life that part was needed to come to your aid in the first place. • Valuing and appreciating the roles that these parts have played for you, however misguided. (Remember, they’re kids.) • Having the desire to be in Self, a state of inner peace, wisdom, seeing the big picture, and knowing just what the right path should be. • Having the ability to get back into a state of Self when the parts hijack us.


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Articles inside

Open to See by Rivki D. Rosenwald Esq., CLC, SDS

2min
pages 174-176

Your Money

3min
pages 172-173

Jewish Heroes in World War II by Avi Heiligman

4min
pages 166-167

The Aussie Gourmet: Sukkos Soup S31 TJH Speaks with Cookbook Author Sina Mizrahi

17min
pages 150-153

Poland’s Unrelenting Dedication to Jew Hatred by David Billet

4min
page 165

We Must Also Remember 9/12 by Marc A. Thiessen

4min
page 162

Notable Quotes

6min
pages 158-161

Some Good Food by Sina Mizrahi

4min
pages 154-157

Biden Needs to Turn the Page from a Painful August by David Ignatius

4min
pages 163-164

Parenting Pearls

7min
pages 148-149

Sukkos the Easy and Healthy Way by Cindy Weinberger, MS, RD, CDN

7min
pages 146-147

The Wandering Jew

12min
pages 118-125

Why You Need to Do Marriage Counseling Alone by Dr. Deb Hirschhorn

6min
pages 144-145

Community Happenings

52min
pages 82-109

Delving into the Daf

5min
pages 116-117

Rabbi Wein on the Parsha

3min
pages 112-113

Centerfold

5min
pages 110-111

Israel News

14min
pages 58-67

Global

17min
pages 50-57
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