https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/08/business/management-jerks.html?

Why I Thank the Worst Boss I Ever Had

She inspired me to arrange a life of self employment 

In 1997 I married a politician while I was a feature writer and twice-a-week columnist for the San Antonio Express-News. Writing the column was a dream, and I tolerated workplace bullying and sexual harassment to continue doing it. My features editor was always supportive and encouraging. That helped. In the late winter of 1996 she was replaced with Elaine Ayala, who immediately told me she was going to “Teach me how to write.” She’d ask me questions about the department workings and would snap at me in return, “I already knew that (roll eyes)!” 

We turned in digital and hard copies of our stories. I’d come back from lunch with the hard copy thrown in my chair, marked up in red flair pen and 2-inch words like, “No!” written at the top. In January I covered the presidential inauguration and Elaine said, “Make me proud.” I froze while digging for stories that made the front page. She never said a word to me about it. I got depressed, started having panic attacks and had writer’s block. For the first time I missed deadlines, and felt powerless to do anything about it. 

In May I married the politician and they took my one reason for tolerating the baloney away — my column. I went to the big cheese editor and told them I could not work for Elaine, to please move me to news or have someone else oversee my work. They denied my request, telling me I was a born feature writer and had to stay, so I resigned, fearing that I would die if I did not. As I packed my things, Elaine watched. She came up to me and said, “You never respected me.” “Hmm,” I thought, “I wonder why?”

I did not say anything in return, but wish I had. Respect is earned, of course, and when I had bosses who were supportive and encouraging, I’d do most anything for them. I wonder how my life would have been different had Elaine Ayala not entered my world. I have grown and matured a lot since then and imagine handling things differently. The one thing that came from it is I made a decision to situate myself where I would be permanently self-employed moving forward. Never would my career be in anyone else’s hands. It took a few years to get there, but I am grateful to Elaine for showing me how one toxic manager can change the course of a person’s life in a positive way. I am so happy, thrilled, ecstatic that employees in 2022 are not enabling arrogance and contempt from their bosses. It’s a cultural shift that needed to happen.

Becky Whetstone has a doctorate in Marriage and Family Therapy and is a former writer for the San Antonio Express-News. Www.DoctorBecky.com.

https://doctorbecky.com/2023/03/14/https-www-nytimes-com-2022-01-08-business-management-jerks-html-27c4d3380e9c/

If Your Spouse Wants Out, Do This ….

The three parts of a dysfunctional person’s personality — only the Functional Adult is healthy. The hard part of life, and getting through marriage crisis, is managing the two on the left. Graphic by Becky Whetstone, Ph.D. Copyright 2018.

If Your Spouse Wants Out, Do This ….

Avoiding mistakes in a marriage crisis makes a huge difference.

“A marriage crisis begins when an affair is discovered, or one partner says they’re unhappy or want out.”

Becky Whetstone, Ph.D. — America’s Marriage Crisis Manager

If you are part of a couple in a marriage crisis, it is vital to understand a few things: You both are afraid and confused, your nervous systems are activated and in the threat mode, you have little or no idea about what to do, and you’re incapable of thinking and acting rationally. To the outside world, couples in crisis are likely to do things that look crazy.

Now is the time that we must minimize the crazy, making sense of it for both parties — I call them The Decider and the Leaning-in partner. We do this by calming down your nervous system and creating a space for intelligent and rational decision-making.

With that said, I first want to explain the sympathetic nervous system in as simple a way as I can because doing so will help you understand at least 75 percent of the why this and why that questions you might have. Every animal has a nervous system except for blob-like organisms like sponges, jellyfish, coral, and other microscopic things that most of us can’t pronounce. The physical part of the nervous system is the brain, spinal cord, and all the nerves that branch out throughout your body from there. The purpose of the nervous system is to keep living things functioning and alive. An important part of keeping us alive means that the brain is always ready to go on alert to get us out of danger and scans for survival threats four times a second.

When we are calm, our parasympathetic nervous system is in operation. If you think of a stop light, this is when the light is on green — moving through the intersection with ease while listening to easy listening radio. That’s when we do most things required of daily life like eat, sleep, digest, think, shop, learn and more. But when mammals, like human beings, sense a threat, our sympathetic nervous system will fire, or activate, like a rocket on Nasa’s launching pad. With animals like dogs and tigers, the sympathetic nervous system fires when things they hear or see appear to be a potential threat. A dog hears something out in the yard, stiffens and listens to gauge if there is a threat or not, and if it is, it’s off to the races. We’ve all seen film where one animal is chasing another. The animal being chased is experiencing a true threat and is running for its life. You can be sure its sympathetic nervous system is on all systems go.

The Sympathetic Nervous System and Your Marriage Crisis

Thirty seconds before the announcement of unhappiness, Leaning-In partners are in full parasympathetic mode, perhaps even relaxed on the couch looking at their phone with not an immediate care in the world. Green light. The Decider comes in, makes the announcement, and now the Leaning-In person gets activated and goes into a fight response. Red light. The Leaning-in partner’s impulse is to fight for the marriage with all they’ve got to capture The Decider in an imaginary net and pull them back into the marriage. Both The Decider and Leaning-In partners are activated and have entered very dangerous territory where mistakes are made. Neither one’s brain is calm enough to attain common sense or rational thought. Both are now prone to act on impulse.

When the sympathetic nervous system is in full throttle, or activated, things are said that aren’t meant; people lash out, threaten, and harm one another. When my friends and family speak of someone going through a marriage crisis, they may say it appears that person has lost their marbles, but they haven’t. “Forgive them for they know not what they do,” I say, and I mean it. They really aren’t themselves when activated; no one is.

We need to minimize damage at this point. Think of your marriage as a body that is on the floor and bleeding badly. We want the bleeding to stop so we can see if the person can be saved. If we don’t stop the bleeding the person won’t make it. If we can get the bleeding under control, we can see what’s going on, how bad it is, and what we need to do, including what’s possible.

Calming Down to Assess the Situation

This is why it is so important for you to do all you can to come out of activation, to become calm, and to do everything I suggest along the way. Controlling yourself during these days will be the hardest thing you’ve ever done, but you must do it. Everything both of you want depends on it. I will be helping you with suggestions on how to do this below, but for now, use every piece of self-control you must will yourself to take action from the best part of your personality. Remember, a lot is at stake, and you simply must do it.

Things you can do to help yourself come out of activation:

· Splash cold water on your face.

· Take a cold shower.

· Use an icepack on your face and forehead.

· Sleep on your right side.

· Exercise or engage in physical exertion.

· Spend time in nature.

· Meditate. Visualize calming resources that always make you feel better.

· Stay away from negative people, places, and things.

· Use vibration noises such as voooo, owmm, or gargling noises.

· Spend time with a child or pet.

· Engage in a favorite hobby.

· Use touch. Your nervous system responds positively to calming touch, so sold yourself. Put your left hand under your armpit and your right hand on your left shoulder. Also try holding the back of your head, like a mother might hold an infant’s head.

My Favorite Self-Soothing Ritual

Young children have self-soothing techniques to reduce stress — they have lovies, pacifiers, blankies and whatnot that when needed, will do the job of calming them down. Now is a good time to take a cue from them — just because we grew up doesn’t mean we don’t still need self-soothing rituals. For many years I have kept one in my back pocket that works for me every time, and here it is:

Step One: Use physical exertion to release negative energy. I like to get sweaty and dirty, so I may go for a power walk or bike ride in nature, work in the yard pulling up weeds, trimming trees and bushes or detail my car. Before I begin this, I tell my brain, “I am upset about X, and what I’m about to do is to help me release the negative energy I feel about that.” Then I do it. If I don’t have that kind of time, I have a three-foot-long piece of water hose that is about two or three inches in diameter that I beat against a pillow or mattress. I whack, whack and whack while focused on my emotional pain. Pretty soon, my brain tells me I have completed what I was doing it for, and I stop.

Step Two: Following step one, I go home to take a shower or bath, then create a soothing atmosphere …. music, candles, maybe a glass of wine. I put on something warm and comforting, get in bed with some books, magazines or prepare to watch a favorite spirit-lifting movie. Then I fall asleep. My wounded inner child feels totally taken care of and nurtured in these moments.

I suggest you create a similar ritual for yourself that fits you. Think of what a compassionate mother or father might do for her child, then do that for yourself. You will be needing this ritual quite a bit during the coming days, weeks, and months, and I urge you to embrace it.

Understanding the Parts of Our Personality

I keep talking about controlling your behavior during a marriage crisis and how difficult it can be when your sympathetic nervous system is firing. I want to explain more clearly what I’m talking about.

I’m a trauma therapist who has worked with thousands of clients over the years and have never met anyone who doesn’t have childhood developmental trauma. Pia Mellody published a book in 1989 titled Facing Codependence, which showed the world what childhood trauma is and how it happens. I trained with her over three years starting in 2010 and use her powerful theory in my work. I sincerely believe there is nothing else like it for helping people recover, grow up, and be their authentic, best selves.

Pia’s definition of trauma-causing events is “anything that happened in childhood that was less than nurturing.” With criteria like that, you can be sure that all of us were traumatized thousands of times by family, friends, our culture, and all the expectations put on us to conform. What comes from it is the development of toxic shame, the idea that we aren’t good enough, don’t fit in, are defective, and can’t measure up. When people ask me what the number one cause of divorce is, I say, “Toxic shame.” Why? Because no one can have a healthy relationship with anyone if they are full of toxic shame and viewing the world through an I’m not good enough lens. In addition to putting inaccurate negative meanings on things, the toxic shame-filled person beats themselves up regularly. and processes every interaction with the I’m less than or inferior viewpoint. People loaded up with life’s wounds and toxic shame tend to take things personally, have numerous activations when there is a perceived slight, and likely have either an emotional bucket that doesn’t ever seem to get filled up enough by friends and family or have turned off needing and wanting altogether. If you don’t think this applies to you, think again. Even those I’ve met who have a better than or superiority stance have toxic shame lurking on the underbelly. Feeling better than or superior to most others is also a result of childhood trauma. Neither one is conducive to healthy relationships.

Example: Josie’s self-esteem is lesser-than or inferior. Deep inside she feels her husband Jose is too good for her. She tells herself that he doesn’t love her and wishes he could leave her, none of which is true. When she gets home from work one afternoon, she starts slamming cabinet doors and then begins to pout. Jose asks what’s wrong.

”You couldn’t even make time to have lunch with me like I asked, you’d rather be doing anything else!” Jose is astonished.

“What? I had a meeting, sweetheart. I told you I had a lunch meeting with my sales manager. It had nothing to do with you.”

Josie created problems where there were none, because of her toxic shame. Over time, these sorts of interactions wear down husbands like Jose, and it’s all so unnecessary.

Here are the three parts of the personality of any person who took on toxic shame in their childhood, and those who feel superior to most:

The three parts of a dysfunctional person’s personality — only the Functional Adult is healthy. The hard part of life, and getting through marriage crisis, is managing the two on the left. Graphic by Becky Whetstone, Ph.D. Copyright 2018.

Wounded child. (WC) All of us have an inner wounded child within who is hurt, frightened, angry or in some state of emotional pain. Much of the time that part sits at our side quietly, though it stands ready to activate anytime someone says or does something that it perceives as a threat. This part of us resides in the limbic part of our brain where emotions and survival reside. There is no reasoning, done here, only extreme emotions. Josie’s WC was provoked, and she became activated when Jose told her he couldn’t have lunch. She wrongly assumed it was because he didn’t want to spend time with her.

During a marriage crisis a person’s WC will be activated again and again. Both the Leaning-in partner and the Decider feel the emotional pain of becoming activated to the core. What happens once activated is where I am asking both partners to learn to control themselves.

Adult Adapted Child. (AAC). We have an older child self that is the reactor to the emotions that arise in the WC. Think of it as the WC’s protector. When the announcement of marital unhappiness is announced the WC rises in fear or fury, and in individuals who don’t know better, the AAC unleashes it unedited, uncontrolled fight, flight or freeze response. Deciders notoriously flee, while Leaning-in partners are fighting to keep the Decider from leaving. It is right here, in these responses, where damage is done. Why? Because the AAC is an emotional 14 or 15 year old and responds to emotional hurts in an immature fashion. Josie was allowing her AAC to take control of her personality when she was slamming cabinets and pouting. She was passively aggressively letting Jose know he screwed up. Since Jose was falsely accused, he will become frustrated and want to disregard her pain, which will activate Josie even more.

The AAC is immature, punitive, obsessive, and vindictive. Here are things I’ve seen the AAC part of the personality do in response to perceived hurt during a marriage crisis:

· Become verbally, emotionally and/or physically abusive.

· Take money out of bank accounts or close credit cards.

· Threaten to take children away.

· Talk smack about the other person to friends and family members.

· Call the partner’s boss or visit their workplace to cause a scene.

· Stalk.

· Burn their partner’s possessions.

· File for divorce.

· Put the house up for sale.

· Give away a beloved pet.

· Threaten suicide or harm to the other.

· Refuse to respect their partner’s boundaries.

If I could get your WC to stop feeling the emotional pain it no doubt is feeling right now, I would. That pain comes from piles of wounds from many decades of life’s difficulties that the brain has stored in its hard drive. A trauma therapist can help reduce the emotional pain associated with those wounds, but right now you still have them, and they are going to fire up the limbic brain numerous times during this crisis and send you into survival mode. What I am asking you to do is to not let the AAC be the responder. Sure, the first voice you will hear is the AAC telling you to say or do something nasty. Wait a second or two longer and gain access to the functional adult, located in a different part of your brain, the frontal cortex, where a more adult-like and reasonable suggestion can be found. Learning to do this can mean the difference between saving and losing your marriage.

An example of what the AAC might say at the beginning of a marriage crisis is, “Hell no! You aren’t leaving me! I will take the kids, the money, and I’ll go to your job and tell them what you’re doing!” The functional adult might say, “I hear that you’re unhappy enough to want to end the marriage. Of course, I don’t want that, but please give me some time to process this and I’ll speak further to you about this in a day or two.”

Even if you can access your functional adult self, the Leaning-in partner will still feel the pain and fear coming from the WC, and we must tend to it. When mine is feeling that way, I pull up the self-soothing ritual I wrote about earlier. This is my functional adult reaching around and nurturing and taking care of my wounded little girl. It works, and it heals. Allow your functional adult to compassionately parent you while you are feeling vulnerable and lost. It will go a long way to bringing you out of activation and in to making wise decisions. Don’t hesitate to ask yourself, “What would make me feel better right now?” The answer cannot be self or other person destructive, and needs to be something you can provide for yourself as we can’t always count on others to be there for us. Use this tool as often as you need, as people like me in trauma recovery do day in, day out. Learning to nurture yourself is one of the best medicines available, so use it.

The first stage of a marriage crisis is working to stabilize emotions. To bring yourselves out of activation, to slow things down, so you can seek wise counsel and advice and act rationally. This advice will not come from friends, family, and maybe not even a lawyer. Find a Marriage and Family Therapist who knows something about marriage crisis and the divorce decision, then lean on them for their counsel and wisdom. I do this work every day, and it makes a difference in whether couples will make it or not.

Becky Whetstone Cheairs, Ph.D., aka “Doctor Becky,” is dedicated to helping couples make it through marriage crisis without destroying themselves and their families, and is referred to as, “America’s Marriage Crisis Manager.” She writes under the name Becky Whetstone. She is a licensed Marriage and Family Therapist in Arkansas and Texas, and a Licensed Professional Counselor in Arkansas. She has a private practice and sees clients via telehealth and telephone. You can find her on Twitter, Linked In, TikTok, Facebook, Reddit, Instagram and You Tube. Her web sties are www.DoctorBecky.com and www.MarriageCrisisManager.com.

Hey Adults — Slip This Under your Intrusive Parent’s Door and See What Happens Next.

Boundary-less parents is a universal problem, and it has adult children steaming.

Hey Adults — Slip This Under your Intrusive Parent’s Door and See What Happens Next.

Yes, parents, there are rules you should follow if you want your adult kids to visit.

One of the most talked about subjects in my therapy room involves complaints about older adults who overstep their adult child’s boundaries. Someone said or did something that was an outrage, or what someone didn’t do was an outrage — How dare they? What the hell?

“My husband’s parents dropped by without telling us!”

“They bought things for our kids we didn’t want them to have!”

“My mother is judging my friends and love life!”

“My mother calls me four times a day!”

“My dad talks negatively to my brother about me, and negative about me to my brother.”

“My mother-in-law is judging my parenting.”

All these human annoyances and violations could end once and for all if people would just understand the basic rules of boundaries and practice them, but they won’t. Why not?

Guidelines on how to do it have been out there for years and very few seem to be running to learn them. Instead, people behave how they want, their friends and family complain about all the outrageous toe-stepping behaviors inflicted on them, they express self-righteous indignation, outrage, disgust, contempt, and sometimes shed tears. But does that motivate people on either side to do anything? No.

Before I again spoon-feed the general public about boundaries for parents of adults, which I fully expect will be anonymously delivered to every parent across North America, let’s look at some obstacles.

First obstacle, adult children are afraid to set boundaries with their parents. “Well, if I do that, X, Y and Z will happen, and I can’t handle that.”

I could probably do a stand-up comedy routine about all the excuses clients have given for why they must continue to allow others to inflict pain and suffering on them, but if you think about it, it’s not funny, it’s just pitiful and sad.

“I’ll be written out of the will,” the adult child says, “Live your life as if you’ll get nothing “ I say.

“Yes, but …” the client says.

“I will be cut off from seeing my sister or nieces or nephews,” the adult child says. “Maybe not, I say. Surely there are other ways to get in contact with these people.”

“Yes, but …” the client says.

“Why can’t my parents just get it?” they say. “The only thing you can control is yourself,” I respond.

“Yes, but …” the client says.

Yes, therapists are supposed to be compassionate, but we’re also not supposed to enable unhealthy behaviors. If a clients steps into a mosquito-infested swamp and gets bit thousands of times and then refuses to get out, what should a therapist say? It’s dysfunctional to complain over and over about ongoing situations without taking healthy action. Eventually I’m likely to tell a client the second or third time they complain about the same thing is if they aren’t going to do anything about it then we need to move on and talk about something else.

So, here’s the basic concept of boundaries …

Boundaries are a security system for human beings to protect themselves. Not only does setting solid boundaries protect us from all types of human invasion, they also restrain us from becoming invaders ourselves. If you come over to my house and I pick up your purse and start going through it, I failed to restrain myself, right?

Boundaries involve our physical and sexual selves, having to do with our bodies, but also our psychological selves … what we think, feel, and do. Children are born with no ability to protect themselves and it’s a parent’s job to teach a child how to live in a world of other people so that we can all get along. Most parents fail miserably at this, and so most of us grow up with either no ability to protect ourselves, so we get stomped on repeatedly, or we have no ability to restrain ourselves, and one becomes the victim of the other.

The job of a parent is to raise a confident child who will grow up to be independent and be able to take care of themselves. Once that is achieved, parenting in the form of unsolicited suggestions, advice, judgment, and control are no longer needed, and almost never desired. Therefore, at some point, a parent needs to change their approach from protecting, guiding, and nurturing to a loving, caring, support that stands by if needed. In the end, no adult has a right to involve themselves in another adult’s life unless requested.

If that isn’t clear enough, I put together a list of specific rules for parents of adults to follow.

The Ten Commandments of Parenting an Adult Child

1. No interfering in your adult children’s weddings, parties, decisions, or anything else.

2. No social media posting about your kids or grandkids without the parent’s agreement.

3. No unsolicited advice on housekeeping, child raising or anything else.

4. No parenting of adult kids who are self-supporting. Instead adopt an attitude of a caring support who stands by to help if requested. Keep criticism of your child, daughter or son-in-law to yourself.

5. Let your kids be who they were born to be. Don’t mold, pressure, judge.

6. Don’t use money, property, inheritance to control your adult children.

7. Don’t call doctors and therapists to make appointments for your grown kids.

8. Allow your kids the leeway to visit or not. Don’t guilt or pressure them into doing what you want them to do.

9. Mind your own business. Ask if you may help, and if your adult child says no, stand back.

If this doesn’t motivate more parents of adult children to create the space for their kids to have their own lives in their own way, then maybe they’ll understand when the children begin to lessen or not include them in their lives at all. That’s typically what happens when we don’t respect another adult’s boundaries.

Becky Whetstone writes under her maiden name. Her legal name Is Becky Whetstone Cheairs. She is a Marriage and Family Therapist who does therapy in Arkansas and Texas, and life coaching around the world. She is just completing a book, writes a blog, and makes self help videos alone and with her daughter on the Call Your Mother channel on You Tube. Find Doctor Becky on her web site at www.DoctorBecky.com.