filteredlist.com filteredlist.com filteredlist.com
Search:    Index Page >> About Us >> Privacy of Info >> ToS >> Place Your Link >> Submit Article   
Add Url
 

Outdoor & Sports

Hotels & Travel

Realty & Property

Government & Politics

Health & Hygiene

Technology & Science

Cooking & Drinking

Self Healing

Education & Reference

People & Communities

Home & Garden

Art & Creative

Computers & Software

Banking & Finance

Issues & News

Business & Commerce

Games & Play

Medical Care

Online Shopping

Teens & Kids

Jobs & Employment

Fashion & Lifestyle

Recreation

Automotive

 

Index Page › Teens & Kids › Relationship & Affair
 

Reading Your Partners Mind

 
Author: Dr. Linda Miles
 

When Ann came to see me, she was in the process of counting how many times in the past year her husband had turned on the television when she wanted to talk to himnot that she had ever told him she wanted to talk. She left him oblivious to her upset, while her resentment built at his failure to magically know what was on her mind.

When we are young it seems as if our caretakers magically know when we need to eat and what they must do to take care of us. Children have a family romance in which their parents are always wise and good. This is extended to the whole world via the culture of childrens stories, in which wonderful things happen to the good guys and the bad guys get their due.

The Prince comes. The slipper fits. They live happily ever after.

In adulthood this can become the expectation: that our partners should always know what we need without our having to tell them. When our partner fails to read our minds and to magically know our needs, resentment builds. We can take our partners blindness as a criticism of what we want or as a failure to do their part in the relationship. I have seen many couples who both believe that the other one knows, just knows, what it is they need and is withholding it for reasons of perversity or vindictiveness. This leads to a kind of passivity and watching in the relationship. We wait and wait for our partner to recognize us by doing for us the thing we feel they should know to do. We describe this, as it has often been called as, saving brown stamps. Meanwhile, resentment builds and we cease to be a proper participant in the relationship.

Our belief that there is a force outside of our lives magically steering it toward love and happiness is deeply ingrained; usually it is only given up as a consequence of repeated disappointments. Even when it is, we can still become involved in trying to be the perfect person ourselves, believing that our slimness or muscularity will exercise a magical attraction on others around us. Thus women become anorexic and men spend hours at the gym. These behaviors often represent an attempt to keep our belief in magic alive.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
What is a Red Flag
 
10 Crucial and Surprising Steps to Build Trust in a Relationship
 
Pucker Up! The Benefits of Kissing
 
Infidelity's Warning Signs
 
Relationship Advice: C is for Creation
 
Can You Become A Better Friend After Taking A Friendship Quiz?
 
The Importance of Female Clitoral Orgasm
 
The Day I Met You, An Interracial Love Story (Part 6)
 
Is the Solar System a Bubble Supporting Life?
 
Forgiveness and Forgetting
 
 
 
   Index Page >> Privacy of Info >> ToS
Copyright © 2008 www.filteredlist.com