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Five Reasons Why Talking Is Better Than Walking.

12/07/2011 By Ian Tomlinson

Is your relationship proving a real challenge? Ever had the urge to just leave it and never go back? The desire to run away from problems is a common human experience. Many people decide that they do want to leave a relationship and sadly, sometimes relationship breakdown and divorce happens. In this article I want to explain why I think talking about these feelings can be another way to deal with them.

    1. If you believe the ideas in Imago theory then we are attracted to a certain type of person that fits with an image, or imago, of our perfect mate. This is constructed from the good bits and bad bits of our primary caretakers. So our Mum, Dad, Uncles and Aunts are all in there along with others that may have been important to us such as teachers, grandparents, siblings or even close family friends.
      If you dump your partner then you are highly likely to just go out there and find exactly the same type of person again, experiencing exactly the same type of problems. You may as well sort these out sooner rather than later with the partner you have now!

 

    1. By talking rather than walking you are putting the energy back into the relationship. When you walk the energy goes with you making it even harder to sort your problems out.

 

    1. Love ain’t supposed to be easy! All relationships go through their ups and downs. By sticking with your partner through the downs you will grow closer and experience a deeper connectedness during the ups. Falling in love is easy, staying in love is a decision.

 

    1. Walking away may well be part of your own internal process. In TA terms we may link this to script. By staying you will be learning a new way of doing things and challenging that negative script belief.

 

  1. There are lots of ways of talking to each other. You may feel that talking to your partner is a waste of time because they just don’t listen. It’s likely that they have exactly the same feelings about you! Find your nearest Imago Relationship Therapist and learn Imago Dialogue. It’s a different way of talking where both partners feel listened to and it increases the possibility of deep connection. “Getting The Love You Want” workshops are a great way to find out more about Imago and begin to understand your relationship better.

Can you think of times when you felt like walking out but you stayed? How did it turn out? Let me know in the comments section below.

Filed Under: Couples Counselling Tagged With: arguments, couples counselling, couples therapy, relationship counseling

Five books that could change your life!

05/07/2011 By Ian Tomlinson

5 books that could change your lifeThere are many books out there on therapy, self-help, counselling and personal change so how do you know which ones are worth reading and which ones are best avoided? Personal recommendations count for a lot and I often get asked what books to read. Some of the following five books have been recommended to me and I have happened upon others by luck, chance or good fortune. I see it as my turn to pass on those recommendations, or that luck, to you.

The five books listed here have changed my life for the better. That sounds dramatic but it’s true. I’ll explain how each one has changed my life during the brief review of each book.

If you click on the book picture it will take you straight to amazon if you wish to have a look at it there. I will declare upfront that I have an affiliate link set up but the link is really only there to speed things up for you and to allow me to display a graphic of the book on my site without breaching any kind of copyright.

 

Born to Win: Transactional Analysis with Gestalt Experiments This is the first book I ever read on Transactional Analysis and as such it holds a special place in my heart. It was the start of my Transactional Analysis education and it contributed greatly to me becoming a TA psychotherapist. My first therapist recommended it to me and he also introduced the concepts contained within the book to me during my therapy sessions with him. The whole process led to a paradigm shift in the way that I saw the world and stresses, anxieties and jealousies that I had had since I was a child melted away. Having therapy had such a profound impact on my life that I chose to train as a therapist from that moment on. I think this was also so I could better understand for myself just how therapy works and how I could use it to help other people’s lives change for the better.

Born to win is a well written book with clear explanations of TA theory. I still remember reading it and having those “ahhh, that’s why I do that!” moments. It’s less textbooky than TA today and there are plenty of exercises in there to encourage you to try the theory out for yourself. If you are having TA psychotherapy then understanding the theory does help. I think it sometimes speeds the achievement of your goals up because it provides a framework to hang ideas on to. This would be a great book to start that learning process off.

Achieving Emotional Literacy by Claude Steiner.  This is a special book for me because it helped me understand how to become more emotionally literate and it explains stroke theory brilliantly (a stroke is a unit of recognition, like “hello” or a wave or a kick up the backside). I have already reviewed this book more fully in a previous post so if you want to read a pretty detailed account of this book then go read that post here. Suffice to say I love this book and I see Steiner as a bit of a guru. He’s kind enough to give it away free too so now you have no excuse not to read it!

The Happiness Trap: Stop Struggling, Start Living by Russ Harris.  Speaking of guru’s, whilst being trained in TA I met a great guy trained in CBT and Acceptance and Commitment therapist working with substance abusers in Manchester. He introduced me to ACT and it fit brilliantly with my interests in TA, Buddhist philosophy and mindfulness techniques. The Happiness trap by Russ Harris was the first book I read on the subject, and of all the ACT books I have now read, most definitely the easiest to read.

The book explains how you can use Acceptance and Commitment Therapy to reduce stress, anxiety and depression. It makes really good sense and gives practical tips on managing your negative thoughts, reducing your urges to carry out unproductive behaviour and setting values based goals that you can achieve now rather than results based ones that only give temporary fixes of satisfaction. ACT techniques encourage the giving up of struggle and the acceptance of all of our feelings. This book is so well written you don’t need to have any therapy knowledge to get loads out of it.

The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen Covey.  This is a book that I stumbled upon initially in audiobook form. I liked it so much I ended up buying a paper copy too so I could browse more easily through it. I deliberately mention it after “The happiness Trap” because it has many of same principles in common. Some of the best work I have ever done in creating a strong team and a vision within that team was stimulated from reading this book. It’s not a therapy book, it guides you through the process of deciding what you want in life (values based in the same way as ACT), prioritizing what really matters and explaining how you can get there.

Getting the Love You Want: A Guide for Couples by Harville Hendrix.  Once more I have to thank my first therapist for recommending this book to me. It’s important because it has changed the way I view how a relationship should be and Imago therapy itself has given me a lot of great techniques I can use as a couples therapist with struggling couples. In my opinion, it is the book to read if you are having relationship difficulties and you want to understand why. It suggests new ways to communicate with your partner and also gives good exercises you can do together to strengthen your relationship. I go into more detail about the ideas behind Imago therapy in my post “How Imago Couples Therapy Can Transform Your Relationship” So check that out for more information.

So there they are – five books that have changed my life and can change yours if you let them. Happy reading!

Have you read any of these books? What did you think of them? What books have changed your life? Please let me know in the comment section below.

Filed Under: Book Review Tagged With: books, change my life, change your life, changing your life, claude steiner, counselling books, imago therapy, interpersonal relationships, life changes, mindfulness, psychotherapy, relationship counseling, therapy, therapy books, transactional analysis

Marriage counselling and Morrissey

04/07/2011 By Ian Tomlinson

The Smiths  The Queen is DeadThis post is about what one of the most fiercely single men in music can teach us about being in a couple.  If you wanted couples counselling, Morrissey would probably be the last person you would seek out (I’m not sure he does it any more anyway – I think he has specialised and now just sticks to depression work and sexuality issues!). So what am I going on about? Well, I guess it’s partly an excuse to write about one of my favourite artists of all time, and a way of exploring just one particular track that speaks volumes about what a relationship could aspire to.

The track I have in mind is the Smiths “There is a light and it never goes out“. This is a song never fails to move me, quite often close to tears.

This is a hauntingly beautiful song, typical of the Mossa style. Ambiguous in its writing, we are unsure whether Morrissey is writing about a man or a woman and it really doesn’t matter. The passion and emotion that it triggers within me is truly heartrending.

So what’s this got to do with couple’s therapy? For me the chorus sums up what a deep loving relationship is about:

And if a double-decker bus
crashes in to us
to die by your side
is such a heavenly way to die
and if a ten ton truck
kills the both of us
to die by your side
well the pleasure, the privilege is mine

(Morrissey and Marr)

Surely this is the essence of true love? Macabre I know, but how many people do you feel so deeply about that if that time should come, you would feel privileged to die next to them? We often get so lost in the day to day bickering and one-upmanship of our relationships that such long term deep love gradually gets eroded. Harville Hendrix calls this the power struggle phase of a relationship. Couples that come see me for relationship therapy are usually deeply embedded in this phase and it is putting enormous strain on both members of the couple and the relationship itself.

I see marriage counselling as an opportunity to see each other again. To accept that you are not going to change your partner, they can only change themselves if they want to. Maybe to accept your partner for who they are, not who you want them to be. As this happens then change does come. Couples are more willing to give to each other and as they give they also receive, so a positive cycle begins. The relationship shifts from a stressful battle of bickering and resentment to a more settled, calmer place where love, deep love, can happen.

Please comment on this post – let me know what tracks hit that home run in your heart. Which songs express true love to you?

Filed Under: Couples Counselling Tagged With: deep love, interpersonal relationships, marriage counselling, mind, morrissey, psychotherapy, relationship, relationship counseling, the smiths, true love

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