I have never been one to value power, prefering to value love and sacrifice more. But I am learning that was my undoing. I have been making it my project to understand power and how a person needs to be aware of it. The following is an article from Psychology Today that helps me to see where I have been part of the problem of my own resentment and sadness. I think this is important to be aware of. So some of us may stop crying and start to work on our self esteem and .....oooh, I had always hated this word....POWER. It seems selfish to me. But I know that I, for one, need to exert some power over my own situation...over my own well being and self respect and real honesty. I have many times felt that the phrase "He who care the least in a relationship, wins" seems to be the story of my marriage...husband exerting power and "winning" most of the time because I was not playing power games but that is the way he perceives life in general. But I am studying POWER today for the health of being aware and having sanity.
Power Changes Everything
Denying the dignity of one partner has consequences not only for relationship stability and happiness, but for health.
...The “new science of power” emerging from decades-long research shows that “people with power tend to behave like patients with damage to the brain’s frontal lobes, a condition that can cause overly impulsive and insensitive behavior.”
The possession of power changes powerholders—usually in ways invisible to them—by triggering activation of the behavioral approach system. It’s automatic. Nevertheless, it makes powerful people quick to act on appetites, to detect opportunities for material and social rewards such as food, money, attention, sex, and approval. They think about sex more and flirt more flagrantly. Poorly attuned to others, they pay little attention to others’ feelings and assess their attitudes, interests, and needs inaccurately. Politeness be damned, they act rudely, indulging their own whims. “Having power,” Keltner reports, “makes people more likely to act as sociopaths.”
The biological oppposite marks the powerless. Their lack of power activates the brain’s inhibitory system. It also ushers in negative feelings, like anxiety and depression, hallmark emotions of those denied power.
“Whenever someone gives up her voice,” says Harriet Lerner, author of the now-classic The Dance of Anger and most recently of Marriage Rules, “whenever one person in the relationship sacrifices too much of the self, that partner experiences the greatest loss of power and to develop depression or anxiety or headaches.”
One of the consequences of powerlessness is that the fear narrows focus onto threats and makes the powerless keen observers of those who have power over them. They know them better than the powerful know themselves. It’s a natural channel for self-preservation.
The necessity of childcare gives rise to power inequalities that erode a sense of self and decision-making power. “The woman usually becomes the only parent who is changing her life for the children. She loses outside influence and sense of who she is. As she loses power as an individual, her partner may exercise veto power in decision making or become cavalier about when to be home for dinner.
Compounding the problem is income disparity. It tends to give men more decision-making power.
Enter resentment and anger. It can undermine the generosity and goodwill that make a relationship work. Often, sex becomes an instrument for withholding or rewarding. But most of all, the once-equal partner now has a diminished sense of self—unless she brings an unusual array of personal resources into the relationship. Here’s where charm, beauty, social skills, and fitness count, undemocratic as their distribution might be. They confer power precisely because they imply a person can function outside the relationship.
I fill so sorry for your husband; he has missed so much of u!
Submitted by c ur self on
(preferring to value love) Never let your wonderful values be compromised by someone who doesn't or has no capacity to appreciate you...
Live Love & Laugh!
You are special!
C
Able to function by ourselves
Submitted by jennalemone on
C, as you found out, making it clear that you are able and willing to function outside the relationship was a turning point in your relationship with your wife. I had been always puffing up, ego-stroking my H all these years and he has not seen it. If I were to go, he MIGHT feel the pain and loss of my absence....then again he might not. In any case, relationships do better on equal footing and there has to be some positive energy to be a good relationship. I am trying to find some positive energy.
This is going to require real work.
Here are some ways a victim can re-gain her/his equilibrium:
Re-unite with as many old friends as possible.
Gain strength of love and commitment by finding some spiritual community
Pray or meditate with God/the universe/your own soul and heart. Spend quiet time listening to your gut and listening to life and to the creator.
Be inspired by movies, art museums, music, dance OR whatever it is that made that younger "you" come alive and connect to the world....sports?, cooking? woodworking? traveling? reading? writing?
Commit to health. Change eating and exercising habits...ratch it up with real hard work change.
Find a purpose. Let go of the purpose you once had of impossible "happy marriage" and find a new purpose. Maybe your new purpose is to become your most beautiful, socially happy, charming you can be....or as strong, muscular, self-confident you can be. Find your own power options.
Make sure you know deep inside that you could do quite well with or without the relationship and you will be able to have an equal partnership with anyone who actually wants to have a relationship with you.
Change....
Submitted by c ur self on
You said some wonderful things; and you said some dangerous things:)...Yes; when I was able to take on a new focus (get my life back) it was a turning point for us....It allowed me to accept vs looking to change...And it woke her up to some degree, that her husband was well able to walk away from dysfunction....
But is doesn't let me off the hook of Love and Commitment. Which neither or weaknesses....Both are strengths:)
Yes it does take real work! But you are 73% home....Because you have stopped looking at someone, and started looking in the mirror for the change...
Out of everything you said...my vote would be to find some ladies (sisters) whom you can meet for breakfasts, lunches, travel, hobbies etc....
Whom you can share with, and pray with....We all need support and accountability...It's way to easy to allow our minds to look where we shouldn't, when we don't feel appreciated... (Maybe not you, maybe just me).... (((Hugs)))....
C