Why People Who Say They Need Baby Steps Won’t Change.

 

Therapists are human; if they’re like me, they root for their clients. It’s sometimes painful to watch when they refuse to take action on the things that aren’t working in their lives. Graphic: Canva/Becky Whetstone Photo: Adobe Stock/Asier

Maybe I’m going through an anger stage in my therapy career, but I’m sick and tired of the reasons and excuses some clients use for not doing the work or even taking the small steps they could to feel better and improve their lives and relationships. A therapist should allow clients to reach their changes in their own time, meet them where they are, and have no judgment about when, whether, or how fast they improve, but that’s getting less easy.

Therapy is an interesting career for many reasons, but one thing I like about it is people usually come to see you because they want to. Sure, there is a handful who are dragged or forced in; some are court-ordered to be in therapy; I don’t see those. Occasionally, desperate friends, spouses, or family members drag in someone who is driving them nuts, which usually doesn’t go very well. Still, most people in therapy have an issue they want to sort out and make an effort to call and come in. You might think that someone who does that would be motivated to change, but that’s often not the case.

In therapy, motivation is everything. Back in the day, when I was miserable and suffering, experiencing depression and panic attacks, I couldn’t wait to get better. I was determined to experience positive change and would do whatever it took to get here. I wanted to know why romantic and family relationships were disastrous — was it them? Me? Both? I saw my therapist twice a week for two hours at a time, and it cost a small fortune. It changed my life and tweaked my interest in becoming a therapist, but I didn’t realize then how rare that is.

Going to therapy with the wrong mindset.

Sadly, only about 5 percent of people who go to therapy dedicate themselves to big changes and the hard work that will get them there. I find that some people don’t want to take a deep dive. Instead, they want to tiptoe into the baby pool and only put in the bare minimum effort. “Let’s not open Pandora’s box,” some say.

Many want to vent and complain to someone who has no skin in the game, won’t gossip about them, and has a caring and compassionate heart, while others are not there for themselves; they want me to fix their spouse, sibling, child, or parents. Although that’s fine, it’s not therapy and won’t result in significant shifts in thoughts or behaviors or heal the wounds they carry. People pay for a therapist’s time and can spend it how they want.

All of us come out of childhood with trauma and emotional disabilities. Others have genetic propensities for mood disorders or other mental or emotional issues in addition to that. These types of disorders are treatable, and still, most people wave off getting meaningful help. I sometimes think, “If I could just get them to see this great thing over here … something that would lift their burdens and empower them to do whatever they want, surely they will do it. But, you guessed it, they don’t.

Do-it-yourselfers.

Another strange phenomenon is that people think they know more about how to help themselves than a doctor or therapist would.

“I self-medicate with booze and pot,” I hear this a lot.

“I don’t believe in medications.” says the client. “Why not,” I ask, “Do you know some research that I don’t?”

“I got acupuncture.” Nice, I guess. So, if that was a success, why are you here?

“I know I ‘m always tired and should eat right and exercise, but I just don’t have time or desire.” How’s that working for ya?

Reasons people won’t do things that would make their lives better.

The National Institute of Health says one in five adults has a mental disorder and agrees that most people don’t get treated. (1) The reasons given are:

1. Fear. Not wanting to look weak and/or fear judgment. Some people think therapy is for “crazy” people. Also, many people have so little faith in themselves that they fear the unknown and change.

2. Doubt. Many people can’t imagine that talking to someone would have any impact. This is one I’ve heard a lot. A wife (usually) forces her husband to come in, and at some point, he may mention his surprise that there was so much benefit to therapy. I say, “Talk it up, tell your friends, you can influence people to make it acceptable.” One of my former clients is a firefighter and said his colleagues noticed he was changing, and teased him. “I told them, ‘I’m just trimming the fat!” he said. I loved that so much. He faced it head-on, truthfully and with humor.

3. Pride. Asking for help from someone else is difficult for some people, who may feel they should be able to figure it out independently.

4. Misinformation and ignorance. Not knowing what it is and not caring to find out.

5. Impatience. “I went a couple of times and it didn’t work.” I say, “It would have worked if you had worked.”

6. Cost. This is the only one that has merit. I find it shameful that mental health care is not readily available to all at a very low cost.​

The type of therapy I do is educational and directive. I’m not the kind that usually lays back and only validates, empathizes, and handholds. I go for broke the first day. I tell clients, “I never know how many times I will see you, so I’m not wasting time, I’m going to tell you what I see and what I think you need to do once I get a feel for it.” My reasoning is that someone knowledgeable needs to tell them why their life isn’t working at least once, so at least they’ll know. Once I do that, they will either join me to get positive results or won’t.

Pia Mellody, author of “Facing Codependence,” gave her book that name because she saw that childhood trauma caused people to not take care of themselves. They will often live in their misery and terrible relationships their entire lives without taking action. One of my colleagues says about that, “A lot of people are comfortably uncomfortable.” He’s correct. Pia gave her book that title because when people start working toward recovering from their issues, it means they are facing them. Facing the things that aren’t working in your life and doing something about them is the definition of self-care, and it is what healthy people do.

Baby steps.

Roger had been my client in couples therapy with his wife for over six months, and he was making little progress.

“Roger,” I said, “Have you read the book I asked you to read.”

“No, but I will. I, uh, have been, uh, busy.”

“Have you been implementing the things we have talked about? Anything?”

“Oh, uh, I thought about it a few times, but then I forget.”

Roger’s wife, Sandy, rolls her eyes and pipes in, “Becky, he knows I’m frustrated, he knows I am at my wit’s end, he knows one of these days I am going to reach my end point and kick him out. And no, he doesn’t do anything we talk about.”

“Becky, I need to take baby steps, baby steps.”

And there you have it. One more client who has no intention whatsoever to do what it takes to change and improve himself or his marriage. That’s what the words “baby steps” mean to me, and I cringe whenever I hear them. People like Roger don’t intend to change but attempt to buy time from facing a fate they dread by making excuses. I told Roger six months was long enough to see how this venture was trending, and I couldn’t do any more to help his marriage, and they needed to find individual therapy if they were to do therapy at all.

“Becky, I would like to do that and stay with you,” said Sandy. “Roger, I think you can figure out what that means for us.”

Why do so many lack courage?

So much in life takes courage, and so few have it. One of my most shocking realizations as an adult and a therapist is how many people live in constant fear and live in a comfort zone they aren’t willing to venture away from. They live their lives thinking about what could have been but will never be. It will never be because they were unwilling to make themselves feel discomfort of any kind, so they won’t stick their necks out and take a chance on themselves. The difference between a success and a failure is that the successful person took a chance. They faced their discomfort and powered through it. The first baby step of life is punching through fear.

At some point in my life, I decided I didn’t want to have regrets and made that promise to myself. If I wanted something, I was going to at least attempt it. It’s funny how certain things we tell ourselves can fuel us to change everything and have what we want. I didn’t enjoy college or academics in my 20s. I had put in a half-assed effort and was an average student, and only went because of family pressure. Twenty years later, things were different.

Taking action on life’s little nudges to move forward.

I had recurrent dreams about going back to school and felt an unexplainable drive to go to graduate school to become a therapist, even though I wasn’t even sure I could get in. My first step when I decided to attempt to get in was to study the graduate school catalog and take a few undergraduate prerequisites I lacked. I hadn’t been to college in 20 years; computers had been invented since then, and things were very different. I told myself I’d hire a tutor if I needed to. Still, I got through those classes successfully, settled into the new era of education, and moved on to the next step, the graduate record examination, commonly known as the GRE, which is required to get into graduate school. I didn’t prepare or study; I just went and took it and told myself I’d take it again if I had to. Guess what? I did very well the first time. Now it was time to take bigger steps … apply to St. Mary’s University in San Antonio. What a difference it made that I wanted something badly and was now driven to succeed. In 2001, I was paying the tuition and doing it for myself, to make a dream come true. All of a sudden, I was a very good student.

That’s a story about pushing through doubts and fears and seeing if I could do it. If I couldn’t, at least I’d have no regrets. It has brought me joy beyond description. So now, when I see clients with hopes and dreams or a problem they live with that could be resolved with some time and effort, and they choose not to do it because of fear, doubt, or whatever obstacle it is, it’s painful for me. Such things are difficult to comprehend because I know what they are missing. The road less traveled, it appears, is the one of making great things happen in your life.

When I die, I hope to get an exit interview, and I will ask why so many people feel disempowered. Why are so many people afraid? I know from experience that childhood trauma does that to people, and in many ways, adults are scared little boys and girls doing life in adult bodies. The only way out of that is to do the work to grow yourself up. To do that, you have to have courage. It’s not that hard to make big things happen for yourself, but you have to be able to see the big picture and take action. Fear is never your friend.

(1)National Institute of Health Stats on why people won’t get the mental help they need.stics/mental-illness#:~:text=Mental%20illnesses%20are%20common%20in,(52.9%20million%20in%202020).

Becky Whetstone, Ph.D., is a licensed Marriage and Family Therapist in Arkansas and Texas* and is known as America’s Marriage Crisis Manager®. She is a former features writer and columnist for the San Antonio Express-News and has worked with thousands of couples to save their marriages. She can work with you, too, as a life coach if you’re not in Texas or Arkansas. She is also co-host of the Call Your Mother Relationship Show on YouTube and has a telehealth private practice as a therapist and life coach via Zoom. To contact her, check out www.DoctorBecky.com and www.MarriageCrisisManager.com. Also, here is how to find her work on Huffington Post. Don’t forget to follow her on Medium so you don’t miss a thing!

For licensure verification, find Becky Whetstone Cheairs.

Understanding Marital Crimes and What to Do About Them.

Some marital crimes are worse than others. Some deserve no punishment; others deserve the death penalty. Graphic: Canva/Becky Whetstone

Every married person commits marital crimes; the question is, how seriously should one weigh a partner’s mistake, and what can and should be done about them? Hopefully, we all believe in grace, and if punishment is chosen, it should match the level of the crime. To help you understand how a marriage and family therapist like me deals with them when working with couples, I will provide Becky’s Marital Criminal Code, listing the level of offenses, penalties, and provisions that couples may consider. This works two ways … the person who commits the errors and the one who is the accuser. Some accusers think crimes were committed when they were not, so it’s important to know what constitutes various misdemeanors and felonies in marriage, and if you’re not sure, go to a couples therapist and have them help. Also, if you are a nit-picking partner who points out every mistake, you will likely be cast in a very negative light by your partner. We all must choose our battles and not call out every violation we see. We must be perceived as fair-minded.

Still, the misdemeanors that aren’t marriage-ending on their own can become marriage-ending if you do them repeatedly after your spouse has requested you to stop. A non-responsive spouse’s stock will drop over time if they don’t take their partner seriously and attempt to correct the little things that annoy another person. If you promised to honor and respect your partner when you said your vows, that’s what this is.

I recommend we all show grace when possible, and if something is worth mentioning, make sure it’s worth bringing to the table. No one wants to feel like they have a compliance officer in their home. It’s annoying, kills romance, and, as I said, over time, it can seriously damage your relationship. Rule of thumb to keep in mind: Do not be obnoxious; don’t intentionally annoy. If you want to marry and have a best friend, enhance their life rather than create burdens for them.

The Marital Misdemeanors.

Parking tickets.

Very minor offenses that most often should be overlooked. Leaving dishes in the sink, forgetting to take out the trash, underwear, and/or clothes on the floor, getting mustard in the mayonnaise jar, forgetfulness, white lies, minor clutter, leaving the lights on in unoccupied rooms, leaving the toilet seat up, leaving laundry out and not put away, you get the idea.

What you should do: In marriage, no one should make demands; instead, we all have the right to respectfully request. First, make sure your request is reasonable and worth calling out. If it is, you can say, “Roger, I’d like to make a request. My request is that instead of just putting your dirty dish in the sink, you go ahead and either wash it or put it in the dishwasher. I’d really appreciate it. “

What the offender should do: If you value your marriage and believe that to get along with another person over the lifespan, you must bend and compromise; you sincerely will not want to impede their happiness. Take the path of least resistance, and exhibit that you believe in we over me, and honor their request. Not just this time, but stop doing what annoyed them in the first place.

Speeding tickets.

Someone got a little out of hand. It’s stuff that rarely happens, but when it does, it either scares, mortifies, or annoys you. Maybe they yelled at someone in public, engaged in road rage, drank too much at a party, flirted with someone, or allowed their jaw to drop when an attractive person walked by, but you feel disrespected, embarrassed, or both.

What you should do: If you are in public, you can either hang out a little longer or, without creating a scene, ask your spouse to quietly leave with you if at all possible. Tell them you would like to speak about what happened when you are both calm and sober, if sober is applicable. When you are, tell your partner about your feelings and what you need moving forward, “It embarrassed me when you started to slur your words in front of everyone. They were laughing at you. I’d like you to promise me that you will never allow that to happen again.”

What the offender should do: You are in a partnership, remember? If your partner was mortified or embarrassed by whatever it is you did, you need to take stock of yourself and ask how you let that happen. Make the adjustments necessary to ensure it’s not a repeat offense. When these types of things happen once, they are minor crimes; when they happen repeatedly, the charges get more serious. Approach the situation with humility, taking full ownership of what happened. Do not be defensive.

Reckless driving ticket.

One of you crossed a very important line. Maybe your partner reached out to an old love on Facebook, or perhaps they said something bad or embarrassing about you or to you in front of friends or family. Maybe they talk badly about you to your children or try to get a valued friend or family member to align with them against you. Are they enmeshed with their biological family at your expense? Did you see them kiss someone else? Perhaps their family did something dastardly, and your spouse didn’t support or defend you. Have they built up debt you know nothing about? Maybe they asked to borrow money or have you co-sign or buy them something that is too big of an ask. Lies and deceit are serious marital crimes. Whatever it is that happened, it was disloyal, and you feel violated.

What you should do: It’s time to discuss appropriate boundaries for couples. Our spouse comes before our biological family in the healthy family pecking order. Couples turn toward one another when things come up, not turn away and seek out alliances or confidences with others. If you have an issue with your partner, talk to them about it or a therapist, and no one else. You need to go to a Marriage and Family Therapist trained in trauma and have them help you plug the leaks here. Without professional help, your spouse likely won’t understand why it was so bad, and there will be no change.

What the offender should do: Get your s**t together, man. It’s time to become an adult instead of remaining an emotional child your whole life. You need to conduct yourself like the loyal and cherishing spouse you promised to be. You’re not single anymore, no excuses.

The Marital Felonies.

Certain actions by a spouse are so egregious, so damaging, that they could be marriage-ending. When we marry, most of us have agreed to love, honor, cherish, and remain faithful. Whether or not your vows state these the following things explicitly, they should be understood. Marriage therapists commonly know about the three A’s, or marital felonies, that can kill whatever goodwill there is between two people who have vowed to stay together for life — adultery, abuse, or addiction. All three of these are terrible crimes and potential marriage-killers.

Adultery.

Though most of us promise ourselves that if our spouse ever cheats, we will divorce, the truth is that 75 percent of us stay and work it out. Marriage is complicated that way. Things aren’t cut and dry, and attachments are strong bonds that are difficult to throw away. However, when your spouse cheats on you, it hurts almost like nothing else. There are different degrees of cheating; the least difficult to recover from is the one-night stand with someone you didn’t previously know, and the most difficult is probably the long-term, emotionally connected love affair. Add to that my child being born, and things can get even more terribly ugly. Then there is every type of cheating situation in between. One thing is certain after someone cheats, nothing will ever be the same, and the cheater shouldn’t expect it to be.

What you should do. Stabilize the situation. Get the third person as far away from your marriage as possible, whatever that means in your situation. Your marriage will not survive if this does not happen. If you have to call their spouse, do it. Couples therapy is a must-do; if your spouse won’t go, go alone.

What the offender should do. Humility is your only option. Fall on your sword, or accept your fate as a future divorced person, or person who remains in a marriage where your partner looks at you with continuing disgust. If you have children, they’ll consider that you cheated on them, too. Get into couples therapy pronto.

Abuse

There are three types of abuse, verbal, emotional, and physical. Before I understood these dynamics, I had a feeling a man or two had been verbally and emotionally abusive to me in relationships. I’d say something about it, they would deny it, and I was too ignorant to know that I had been right. The bar is not terribly high to qualify as abuse, and that’s as it should be. No one should have to tolerate unkindness and verbal nastiness from anyone. Any false accusations, name-calling, financial control, or control of any kind qualify as abuse. Laying a hand on anyone in anger qualifies as physical abuse. Every person should be aware of what abusive behavior is, so I urge you to take a look at the national abuse hotline website and inform yourself about what it entails: https://www.thehotline.org/identify-abuse/understand-relationship-abuse/. One more thing, anyone who abuses another rarely changes that much.

What you should do. Educate yourself about what abuse is. Domestic violence centers in your area have free counseling to educate you about it and to offer you specialized help about what to do. I know because I did my grad school internship at one and was amazed at their great work, and I learned so much. Do not hesitate to use it. Use the link above to read what you can, and promise yourself that even though you are attached to the person abusing you, you will do what is best for you in the end.

What the offender should do. Most people who abuse won’t face the truth that they are abusers. It’d be a phenomenon first step if you could do that. Get therapy with someone who specializes in therapy for abusers and controllers. This is not optional. Get in an anger management support group. Some domestic violence centers have specialized training and groups for abusers; use them. This is a nasty, ugly dynamic and is dangerous. If you hope to continue with your family intact, you must dedicate yourself to this proposition.

Addiction.

There are many types of addiction … substance abuse, food, sex, video games, love, gambling, smoking, shopping, pornography, Internet. All are serious. A habit becomes an addiction when it starts affecting the quality of work and relationships. Stopping these things cold turkey usually ends up exchanging one addiction for another. Twelve-step programs hit these issues at the root … all are toxic shame related, which is the idea that one is defective, not good enough, and doesn’t fit in. Without dealing with the toxic shame that fuels an addiction, a person is wasting their time. Get serious about ending your addiction by getting tried and proven help from an addiction professional.

What you should do. To be healthy yourself when you are married to an addict, you need therapy for codependent and trauma-based relationships, and I highly recommend you join a support group like Al-anon or Codependents Anonymous (CoDa). Educate yourself, work on yourself, and get as healthy as possible. Stop focusing on your partner’s problem. They know you want them to quit. Focus on how you can be healthy now and moving forward.

What the offender should do. Come out of denial, drop your defenses, get a professional therapist who specializes in the type of addiction you have, and join a 12-step program. That includes getting a sponsor and getting serious about getting healthy. No excuses, do it.

Capital Crimes

A capital crime in marriage is when a spouse does something so impossibly horrible that nothing is left to be done except to end the marriage. In the most extreme cases, you may learn that your spouse murdered, raped, harmed, molested someone, committed other types of crimes, endangered the family with their actions and behaviors, destroyed family finances, or more. Some capital crimes are more subjective than others but know that not every person should have or deserves grace or mercy for their horrific actions.

Conclusion.

When we do something wrong in our relationships, we must make it right and do the repair. A person usually only gets so many chances before their spouse will lose hope for change. Learn to apologize and to stop doing the things that annoy or scare your partner. Responsiveness is key in marriage — don’t blow off your spouse when they address something that is not working for them. Don’t minimize or deny. Being able to look at yourself in the mirror and face the part of you that you don’t like or is flawed will be the best and most powerful thing you could do for yourself.

Becky Whetstone, Ph.D., is a licensed Marriage and Family Therapist in Arkansas and Texas* and is known as America’s Marriage Crisis Manager®. She is a former features writer and columnist for the San Antonio Express-News and has worked with thousands of couples to save their marriages. She can work with you, too, as a life coach if you’re not in Texas or Arkansas. She is also co-host of the Call Your Mother Relationship Show on YouTube and has a telehealth private practice as a therapist and life coach via Zoom. To contact her, check out www.DoctorBecky.com and www.MarriageCrisisManager.com. Also, here is how to find her work on Huffington Post. Don’t forget to follow her on Medium so you don’t miss a thing!

For licensure verification, find Becky Whetstone Cheairs.

Marriage is a lot harder than you thought, huh?

They say love conquers all, but that’s not true. What conquers us all is emotional immaturity and not being our best selves. We must learn to be an adult in relationships, or marriage won’t work. Adobe Stock: Rudall30

A lot of people plan to marry one day, and if you’re like I was, you have a fantasy of finally having a best friend, and great, lasting, devoted romantic love, and a happy ending. And then, when the day finally comes, and the years pass, it doesn’t go like you thought it would. A lifetime with another person is very long, and people seem surprised at how hard it is.

Accurate statistics aren’t available on how many married men and women are happy in their relationships, though I’ve read anything from 12 to 85 percent. My wild-ass guess (WAG) is that the lower number is closer to accurate. Why? I have lived long enough, had enough experiences, seen enough clients, and talked to and known enough people to see how terribly ill-prepared, half-assed, and emotionally damaged so many are. Not only as individuals but also in relationships.

The divorce rate says absolutely nothing about who is happily married or how many are in a bad marriage. This is another statistic that can’t be nailed down because not all 50 states report their divorce numbers in any given year, but it is estimated at 40 percent. My parents stayed in an unhappy marriage for 62 years. They should have divorced, and a lot of couples are like my parents. Unhappily intertwined for life, just trying to get through it, elderly couples heading toward life’s finish line filled with bitterness and resentment. What a way to live.

People don’t leave for a variety of reasons, from money to children, to what people will think, religious beliefs, fear of being a single mom or dad or how the children will fare, lack of courage, the strident belief that marriage really is for better or worse, or death do us part (I couldn’t disagree more), the fear of failure, lack of certainty, fear, being alone, and more.

People have the desire to be married, our brains are wired to make us want to, but almost no one has any idea what we’re signing up for or how much effort it takes. From my perspective, a lot of the time, when people get married, it’s like having a person who has had no flying lessons get in an airplane and then expect them to fly the thing. You can imagine the disaster that will ensue, and that is what I see with marriages day after day.

Having a healthy relationship cannot happen through instinct. It is a learned skill. What I find talking to couples in trouble is that many use benchmarks like, I need to avoid being an asshole, I need to be a good and reliable provider, and that’s about it. People, there is so much more to keeping a romantic partnership stoked and alive throughout your entire life; surely, it is not surprising to learn this.

Here is what I wish most people understood before making such a huge decision … these are the qualities that set you up for marital success …

1. Marriage is for people who are emotionally stable, mature, and self-aware. What does that mean?

  • Emotionally stable. Your mood is mostly solid and calm. All of us have bad days, but they should be rare. You practice self-care and know how to bring your best self to you and your relationship because that will keep you content and the partnership alive.
  • Mature. Have you noticed the two types of adults? Girls and boys versus men and women? A lot of my clients are paired up with emotional children. Emotionally immature people might have any or all of the following qualities: irresponsible, dependent, childish, pout, throw tantrums, talkers (not doers), shut down, refuse to talk, defensive, secretive, boundaryless, controlling, jealous, stubborn, prideful, and lack self-control. There are more, but you get the idea.
  • Self-aware. You have learned to pay attention to yourself and can feel when you need or want something, advocate for yourself, and adjust accordingly.
  • Low maintenance. If you have dated more than ten people in your life, you know well that some people are very demanding in relationships, and others are like a Toyota Camry, reliable, solid, and requiring infrequent time in the shop. When selecting a mate, one type will wear you out, and the other is like a soothing balm. Choose wisely.
  • Capable of adult-level communication. Your partner says something to you, and you have a negative reaction and verbally punch them right back in the nose, run away, or shut down. Adults can stay calm and present in the conversation and respond with respect. Let me break it down for you …

Example: Husband, sounding upset:

“Good God, Marianne, do you know how many Amazon packages arrived at our house last month?” (The way he phrased this is aggressive, and his wife’s brain will go on alert immediately because of the tone and stance — rather than adult to adult, he is standing over her, like an angry parent to a child.) This never works.

Wife with childish response:

“You’re such an ass. Do you know how much time it saves me to order stuff like toothpaste instead of shopping at the store? You think I’d buy whatever and destroy us financially. Glad to see how much you trust me, dickhead.” (Because her brain told her she was under threat, it ignited her snarky 14-year-old self to respond). This never works.

The pattern that destroys.

This is the pattern that almost every couple I see is engaged in.

1. The speaker makes a comment perceived negatively by the listener.

2. The listener’s brain feels a threat, and they go from a state of calmness to a red alert, signaling that their nervous system has been activated. Their heart rate increases, and they go into fight, flight, freeze, or fawn mode (FFFF). The problem is that the part of us that responds while in FFFF is a snarky 14-year-old teenager who damages the relationship with their words or actions.

3. Now, the listener’s nervous system fires up into threat mode, and their own 14-year-old responds.

4. The argument escalates, the damage is done, and neither partner feels understood.

After a few go-rounds like this, one or both of them will conclude, “I can’t talk to them,” so they don’t. Anger builds, each person seethes in resentment because they can’t get their partner to understand them and their concerns, and if they can’t understand, there won’t be hope for change. In the end, the stock of the marriage plummets.

Here is how it could have gone …

Husband: Wisely and thoughtfully, he has waited for a calm and pleasant moment to bring up a difficult subject. His wife is in a pleasant, soft mood. He approaches her slowly and in a non-threatening way, making certain his tone is soft and kind. He speaks: “Hon, you know, I find myself feeling anxious every time an Amazon box arrives, as if each box represents doom or something. I know it doesn’t make sense, and I know and trust you know what you’re doing, but I can’t seem to shake my anxiety. Even though it sounds kind of off the wall, would you mind reassuring me that I don’t have any reason to worry about it?” (Notice that he is talking about his feelings and his problem. In no part of this conversation is he pointing a finger at his wife.).

Wife: (Laughs) “Of course not,” she says. “If each box represented big ticket items, we’d both be in trouble,” she laughs. “But it just saves me so much time to buy the little things from them, even stupid stuff like toothpaste and toilet paper. If it makes you feel better, you Might look at the Amazon card statement once in a while and see what I’m spending; I sure don’t want you to worry.”

Success! The same conversation happened but was done in a healthy way. This is the difference between an immature couple communicating and a mature one. Mature adults are thoughtful, edit themselves, and choose the right times to bring things up.

2. A good relationship or successful marriage takes a lot of time, focus, awareness, and continual communication.

It helps to think of it as having another job. When you think of priorities in life, marriage should be number two, after your own self-care. The most important thing to remember is to make sure your spouses’ needs are met and topped off; then, you can spend time doing other things without fear of criticism.

  • A spouse has to check in with their partner’s needs and wants regularly. Ask, “How am I doing? Are you happy? Is there anything I could do to improve your life or our lives?” Note: If your spouse will not do this, you do it. Ask them how you are doing and if they are happy or need anything.
  • Most couples know about Gary Chapman’s book, The Five Love Languages. Reading and applying what it says should be mandatory for every marriage because it clearly outlines the work of marriage.

The number one cause of divorce, from my perspective, is emotional immaturity. Better put, that 14-year-old teenager who lives within us, always ready to pounce, kills respect and goodwill. A lot of people think that the snarky teen is helpful because it won’t tolerate bull or baloney from anyone, and while that may be true, people hate dealing with it so much that eventually, they won’t even try. That’s not conducive to a relationship.

There is no problem or situation that cannot be more effectively dealt with by the mature adult part of ourselves. In marriage counseling, we seek to retire the 14-year-old, thanking it for its loyal service but telling it at the same time we can now take over the wheel of our personality. Do this and change the whole dynamic of your life and relationships.

I still hear the voice of the 14-year-old occasionally, but in almost every case, I don’t allow it to speak for me. She sits back, in reserve, for the rare cases when only her nastiness will do. That happens after every attempt at setting a boundary using my healthy adult voice has been implemented unsuccessfully, and the problem has not been resolved. Unfortunately, there are some people who will only stop causing harm when you blast them with a verbal AK-47, but luckily, most people aren’t that way. In these cases, I choose to be immature in that specific situation.

Think US, as opposed to ME.

Recently, I was working with a couple, and the wife was begging the husband to stop correcting her and others if they were the slightest bit inaccurate with what they said. “Why can’t you just let things slide? she said. “It’s the only thing I ask. It’s so friggin’ irritating when you correct everyone; we all hate it!”

Her husband’s brow dropped, and he said, “I can do whatever I want when I want!”

“Yes, you can,” I said, sensing an opportunity. “But you will also have to accept whatever consequences come with doing what you want without regard for other people’s feelings. In marriage, you need to consider what is in the highest good of all, not just yourself. If you want to stay married, that is.”

And therein lies the rub. Do you want to be right and do things your way with little or no thought of others, or do you want to be married long term? I hope that’s an easy choice. My mentor, Terry Real, who recorded the amazing audiobook Fierce Intimacy, says a person should want to do what their spouse asks to get what they want in return. In other words, if you accommodate your partner, they’re more likely to accommodate you. That’s why Real calls his method of therapy for couples the Relational Life Theory (RLT). He literally teaches couples what I am teaching you now: the dynamics that help us become relational-minded instead of me-oriented.

Therapists trained in RLT are counselors and therapists who teach each individual how to do the give, take, and compromise a relationship takes. Understand that we all enter adulthood with residue from childhood developmental trauma, and quite a few of us are emotionally disabled in ways that have to be addressed and healed so we can have healthy, flowing relationships with others.

For instance, if you are full of self-loathing, we have to work with you to change that so you can be healthy in a relationship. If not, your toxic relationship with yourself will trickle down into everything you say, the actions you take, and how you perceive what others say. It will poison your relationships and make them untenable.

​Come out of fantasyland and be realistic about what marriage entails.

When I decided to marry again after being single for a long time, I reminded myself that it meant losing my freedom to do whatever I wanted in exchange for a best friend and life companion. I was ready and willing to do the giving and sacrifice that a good marriage requires. If you come into a new marriage for yourself or for what you can get out of it, you probably should have stayed single. At the end of the day, healthy relationships require not always having your way.

I dream that one day, the kinds of skills I know and teach will be taught in schools across America so that small children will learn early how healthy and loving relationships with ourselves and others look. We could save so much damage that will inevitably happen later if we just educated young students and gave them a healthy compass to shoot for. It’d be a great first step in preparing children and young adults for healthy relationships.

There will never be such a thing as a perfect couple, but we can all be good enough couples. Romantic relationships are the best thing in the world when they work the way they were meant to. You must take time to understand and heal yourself, grow yourself up, and learn to be a respectful adult.

Becky Whetstone, Ph.D., is a licensed Marriage and Family Therapist in Arkansas and Texas* and is known as America’s Marriage Crisis Manager®. She is a former features writer and columnist for the San Antonio Express-News and has worked with thousands of couples to save their marriages. She can work with you, too, as a life coach if you’re not in Texas or Arkansas. She is also co-host of the Call Your Mother Relationship Show on YouTube and has a telehealth private practice as a therapist and life coach via Zoom. To contact her, check out www.DoctorBecky.com and www.MarriageCrisisManager.com. Also, here is how to find her work on Huffington Post. Don’t forget to follow her on Medium so you don’t miss a thing!

For licensure verification, find Becky Whetstone Cheairs.