Many years ago my mother was on her front porch which
faces a lake. My father was down by the
lake doing work. A few moments had
passed when my mom heard my father shout up to her “Look Syl, I told you I
could walk on water.” As my mother
turned, sure enough, there was my father walking across the lake.
What I have left out of this story is the fact that it
was the dead of winter. His ability to
walk on water was just an illusion. My mother
was actually on the porch to watch over my father as he needed to walk on our
lake for one reason or another. Being a
good partner, my mother watched, intently taking care of her own needs on the
porch yet, at the ready to provide support to my father if need be. Having been in relationship with my father
for many, many years my mother came to know a few things: She believed in her heart my dad could walk
on water. She knew the importance of
showing and telling him that she believed in him. Having seen him “fall” into the very water he
walked on she knew he was human – had disappointed her in the past and would
likely do it again in the future. She
knew that accepting him for who he was while maintaining a sense of who she was
is what kept her with the man who still gave her goose bumps after all their
years together. She also knew she wanted
to throttle him about 200 times a day.
So why is that?
Why do we fall in love with and/or attract people who drive us completely
crazy? Why do we begin with Superman or
Superwoman only to end up with Clark Kent or Lois Lane? One
source of answers comes from Imago Relationship Therapy. In the book titled Getting The Love You Want: A Guide for Couples Dr. Harville Hendrix
(1988) explains “each one of us is compulsively searching for a mate with a
very particular set of positive and negative personality traits (p. 8). Typically, the negative traits are more
influential (p. 34).” Most people are “attracted
to someone who has the predominant character traits of the people who raised us
(p. 14).” According to Dr. Hendrix,
co-founder of Imago Relationship Therapy, most people seek out people with
particular traits in an effort to heal old childhood wounds inflicted upon them
by their primary caregivers.
So then why does my mate or friend change from what I was
initially attracted to? Your mate or
friend does not necessarily change. They
are who they always were. Their best self is what was experienced in the
beginning of relationship coupled with your unconscious projections of what was
desired to be seen in them. In the
beginning of any relationship there is risk of seeing what one would like to
see in a person; the characteristics that were yearned for in one’s primary
caregivers. Because the negative traits
in caregivers may have caused wounds, many individuals subconsciously seek someone
to heal those wounds. According to Dr.
Hendrix’s and Helen LaKelly Hunt’s theory the brain is trying to “re-create the
conditions of your upbringing, in order to correct them” (p. 31). So, in the
beginning of many relationships both participants are on their best behavior and
typically both participants have on rose colored glasses that were obtained in
childhood. Those “glasses” alter their perception of the very person standing
in front of them. Once your mate relaxes
and no longer feels the need to put their best foot forward and the rose tint
on the glasses begins to fade what is left is a mixture of a person very much
like the people experienced in childhood. Yes, you are back at square one! What is that saying about never being able to
go home again…?
Why do I get so frustrated with my mate? Many people who have traits that had to be
repressed, disowned, or erected in childhood are attracted to those same traits
in others. Therefore, many people seek
out individuals who have parts of themselves intact that they themselves do
not. For example: If a person is shy they may be attracted to a
person who is social. When Shy was
growing up he may have been told to be quiet, that his presence did not
matter. Shy therefore disowned the parts
of himself that were outgoing and social.
When Shy met Social he felt like life had been breathed into him. Social’s outgoing ways appealed to Shy and he
felt drawn to them. A part of him that
was disowned had now returned and was being expressed albeit though this other
person.
Over time, Shy came to resent Social because Social was exhibiting
traits Shy was not allowed to express as a child. Shy tried to quell Social because Shy learned
as a child that expansive traits were potentially dangerous. It meant that caregivers would disapprove or
worse, possibly abandon. Now these
traits expressed by Social irritated Shy and triggered a fear response in Shy
because Shy unconsciously associated the feeling with past events not with what
was happening in the present. At times,
fear may be expressed as anger. Shy
became angry with Social in his attempt to subconsciously keep both he and
Social safe. Shy sounded and acted like
his critical parent and begin being critical towards Social. Social resented Shy for trying to change her
and became confused and hurt as to why her once loved trait is now so
unlovable.
If Shy and Social are not able to successfully communicate
and understand where each are coming from the relationship may ultimately end
unless each are dedicated enough to the relationship to work to heal themselves
and help to heal each other. If left
unchecked, the likelihood of each person recreating this same scenario in a new
relationship is quite probable.
So what can you do?
A beginning would be to read the book Getting the Love You Want: A Guide for Couples. Another option is checking out the Imago Relationships
International website: www.gettingtheloveyouwant.com
Keep in mind the qualities we do not like in others are
typically qualities we ourselves hold (or maybe repressed, disowned…).
Hendrix, H. H. (1998). Getting the love your want: A guide for couples. New York: Henry
Holt
Rebecca Cowell, MS, LLP, CBIS, BCBA, CIRT
Limited License Psychologist
Board Certified Behavior Analyst
Certified Imago Relationship Therapist