Why Are Relationships So
Difficult?
Bob Grant | Understanding Man In
Relationship
A large part of my practice is made up of people interested in
relationship advice. Not really by design (I started out working with teenagers), it
just sort of worked out that way. Most often when someone comes in they want to know what to do. They request a
5 step plan to fix their problem, and they will be on their way. I must confess, for years I tried that “5 step”
type of approach. Reading book after book and experimenting on my clients. While I have personally seen
marriages seemingly miraculously healed, it just wasn’t happening every time. The magical formula never came, at
least not in the form I had expected.
What I did discover was that relationships are more than meets the eye. As I have
mentioned in previous article, if you have suffered any type of injury or trauma as a child, your brain and heart
have an overriding goal for you. They will protect you at any cost. Even if it that method of protection causes you
pain and loneliness. It is often primitive and deeply rooted. Here is an example. Let’s pretend that I have a
client named Alan (I made him up). Alan meets a woman named Cindy. Alan really likes Cindy and proceeds to call her
every 5 minutes. When he comes into my office I tell him, “Lets not call Cindy every 5 minutes. Women don’t like
that.” The next week he comes back in and says, “Bob, I have improved twice as much. I only called her every 10
minutes.” While I appreciate Alan’s 100% improvement, what Alan needs is to do is improve exponentially and not
call Cindy any more than once a week.

You can guess Alan’s reaction; he will grasp his heart as though I stabbed him.
This surely can’t be the Lord’s will to abandon something that seems so right? It seems so right to call her, yet
those feelings betray him. Every time Alan gets nervous he picks up the phone and calls Cindy. It keeps his anxiety
away. Some use cigarettes or alcohol for the same anxiety relief. What I want is for Alan to be anxious. He must
allow himself to feel out of control so we can find out what the anxiety is trying to tell him. His feelings will
give him insight, if (and this is a big if) he will allow himself to listen to those anxious feelings rather than
acting them out. At times the insights occur quickly, other times it takes longer.
What would cause Alan to be so anxious? There may be a variety of reasons. Most
likely, he is afraid of being hurt or rejected. While he longs for a relationship, he has also set himself up for
failure because he feels that a relationship should feel good...always...forever. His long history of avoiding
painful feelings has taught him to be even more afraid of them. Painful feelings are bad things, to run away from.
The problem with Alan’s thinking is that relationships, by their very nature, are a bit scary. Once you allow
yourself to experience a feeling you like (such as love), all the uncomfortable feelings now also have a doorway
out of your heart. It no longer remains suppressed, and it all comes out. Feelings and fears alike that may have
been dormant for years now seem to come out at the most inconvenient times.
The reason I am so relationship oriented is that many times individuals
misinterpret their fear and anxiety as something wrong with them or with their partner, rather than realizing it is
something to work through. It is an opportunity to be free of the very fears they are experiencing. (This in no way
involves instances of abuse, or an unhealthily relationship. If it is unhealthy your friends and/or family will
gladly point that out to you). If we could learn to stay with our fears rather than acting them out, our heart will
learn that it does not need to protect us as it did when we were a child. In time those childhood fears will begin
to subside. What now feels unnatural, can in time become effortless.
If you or someone you know feels they are experiencing this type of issue, let
them know that there is help. What is happening to them is not unique. There are answers to their questions and
fears. Once they discover this, relationships become an opportunity for healing and growth, rather than
work.
For women only: Learn how to Captivate a man, make him fall in love with you--and
want to give you the world. Visit: Relationship Advice for women
Copyright by Bob Grant, L.P.C. 2004-2006 All rights reserved. No part
of this article may be used or reproduced in any manner without written permission.

The Author, Bob Grant L.P.C. -- "The Relationship Doctor."
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