POWER OF COMMUNICATION IN MARRIAGE
Let me tell you a story related by Thomas W. Ladanye, a therapist and
institute director, about the power of communication in marriage.
He said:
In one of our Institute
faculty meetings at the University of Michigan some
years ago, I was asked to conduct a husband-and-wife communication
session.
Prior to our meeting, I asked two colleagues to try a little experiment
with their
wives and children and report their experience at the meeting.
Both agreed; one
even said he would record the dialogue between him and his wife.
The assignment
I gave them was quite simple--they thought! Each was to sit
down with his wife in
a private situation where they wouldn't be interrupted and ask a
simple question,
"What can I do to improve our relationship?"
One couple had been married
for thirty years, the other for eighteen; and
both of the marriages were happy ones. Each husband agreed
cheerfully to carry
out the assignment and seemed confident that it would be relatively
easy.
At the faculty meeting
a week later, I called on the younger man first. He
was a jovial, outgoing guy, fun to be with and always kidding around.
As he stood
up to respond, however, he was unusually subdued. Quietly
he said, "You know,
when Tom gave me this assignment, I thought it would be easy.
Millie and I have
a great marriage and a great relationship. I was even taping
it; I was so sure of
her response. But when I asked, 'What can I do to improve
our relationship?' I
was shocked at her answer.
"She began by saying,
'Hal, you're a wonderful person and a good father and
husband, but--' and then she proceeded to bombard me with a lot
of pent-up feelings
she had been holding within her for years. I never knew she
felt that way, and she
had never told me because she didn't want to hurt my feelings or
the time never
seemed right."
They had talked well into the night; and perhaps
for the first time in their entire
eighteen years of marriage, they had discussed some very meaningful
issues in
depth. He concluded by turning to me and saying, "Thank
you, Tom, for helping
open my eyes."
The second man, also a
close personal friend, reported a similar experience.
"I assumed after thirty years of marriage that I knew my wife,"
he said simply.
"But I was wrong." He had taken her to a nice restaurant for
dinner and asked
the question during a leisurely moment.
"Helen stopped eating,"
he said, "grabbed my hand, and burst into tears."
He was flabbergasted and embarrassed but even more concerned and
shocked
about her response. She also told him she loved him very much,
but-- and then
followed some deep and emotional feelings about the "incompleteness"
of their
relationship. Their conversation lasted through dinner, all
the way home, and
late into the night. He was surprised and enlightened by his
wife's response.
Both of these fine men
and their wives indicated that they learned a great
deal from this experience and vowed they would ask that simple question
more
often--and listen hard to the response. The second couple,
based on this experience,
later asked each of their children this very same question; and
in one case, the
father and one son healed a long-painful relationship by getting
to the root of the
problem.
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This therapist was obviously
recommending that husbands ask this question
of their wives, but wives can ask their husbands how they can be
better wives and
start the discussion that way. I don't see any reason why
the same question will
not work with colleagues, among presidencies, and between visiting
teachers and
sisters being visited. Just ask, "What can I do to improve
our relationship?" The
sincere desire to serve--to minister to another's needs--opens doors
in a powerful
way.
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