Investments in little, tiny, Commitment Behaviors Pay Big Relational Dividends

Commitment behaviors: 

In line with the Gottman Method principle of “Small Things Often” commitment behaviors offer ways in which partners make deposits into the emotional bank account.  They are also formalized rituals (shared meaning) created by partners during negotiation and reinforced in performing them time and time again with compounding valuation by partners.

Photo by Irene Strong

A commitment behavior can be anything, from hanging up a towel, to making “eyes” at your partner from across the socially crowded room. They can be a bouquet of flowers on Friday or Monday.  A phone-call to one’s partner after interacting with that particularly attractive co-worker.  An agreement to disclose attractions to others along with the manner of so doing.  A back-rub on Tuesday. Special dinners one counts on to celebrate a specific occasion.  


The point is that they are formulated mutually, agreed upon mutually, and can be replicated regularly.  They are the How we get from A to Z with regard to this or that or the other. 


Pain, anger, disappointment, even joy may be the catalyzing agent to develop a commitment behavior, perhaps even a whole slew of them. 


Walking you through, there is impetus for the creation of an agreed upon behavior. It comes along from the recognition or realization that life does not need to have this particular re-occurring suffering in it.  What if we transformed our actions around this particular event/irritating transgression? What if we “cut a deal?”  


Could we negotiate for something that would work for both of us and in so doing will engender appreciation for our partner/spouse? Careful self-aware mindfulness will prevent and work around any restrictiveness of such a deal and in fact, a good deal is good for everyone, not a 0 sum game!  How can it work for everyone?  This is where creativity, trust, and reliability count.  Can we count on our partner’s positive attitude for the iterative nature of creating such a positively meaningful behavior?  

Photo by Kelly Sikkema

Yes, if both partners arrive to the negotiation table fully resourced, and resolved, of sabotaging resentments.  If so, then partners will want one another’s happiness; they will be motivated to remove obstacles or add a proverbial vault to our partner’s quality of life satisfaction.  


No, if there are an accumulation of unforgiven injuries rolling around in the sub-flooring of our consciousness. 


One can begin to find areas for commitment behaviors by moving through one’s day from waking up to going to bed.  Look for parts of your day that you might dread and identify what it is about it that irritates. The same steps apply for annual, monthly, or weekly tasks, events, or celebrations.  Imagine how you might ideally like something to go. That is where you begin.  Create, create, create, and simplify to boil it down to what is essential here for you that might be influenced by your partner’s committed behavior. 


Now you may be ready to recruit your partner’s participation in said ideal. 


Now you will be ready for negotiation.  You can learn more about negotiation here. 


As consent-based negotiations require skill sets, working with a Couple’s therapist who specializes in NVL or Gottman Method Couples Therapy may be a valuable asset to hold until you’ve both honed the practices.  After negotiations, accountability measures may be put in place. These are also consent-based negotiations. 


Consent-based negotiations in short—allow us to cleanly ask our partner for their participation in what would bring us joy/relief/predictability/reassurance/surprise/etc. (i.e., any number of experiences we have self-identified). They are asks, without cajoling, manipulation, pressure, coercion, or intimidation. 

Photo by Mareks Steins

What you walk away with may be iterative, but each effort along the way says, “I love you and am here for you in this life.” It says we are committed to one another’s positive experience of this life, that we participate and share in their joy and lived experience.  Over and over again, it demonstrates: WE are Partners! 

4 Best Ways to Be Present for Others: Intentional Presence

Do you see me?

Do you care that I’m here?

Am I enough for you, or do you need me to be better in some way?

Can I tell that I’m special to you by the way that you look at me?

 

Photo by: Toa Heftiba  

Post inspired by Maya Angelou

In every interaction with others of us, each of us arrive at the moment with the same unconscious questions. We answer each of these questions during the engagement.

 

Question 1: Do you see me?

 

We provide this answer in how we engage with the other:
Do we look at them when speaking to them, have we foreclosed on how we will respond to anything they have to say before they even say it? 

In other words, have we predestined how they will respond to us and are therefore engaging with an object versus an emergent, iterative, changeable, subject?

 

Question 2: Do you care that I’m here?

 

We answer this with our greeting of the person before us. How do we begin our verbal and non-verbal hello? Or do we skip this step as we are interacting with a home appliance or app? Further, do we personalize our greeting in some way, calling up a moment shared in our last interaction which fosters a sense of continuity, an indicator that there is an actual ongoing relationship with this person even in the interim of our engagements. It says to them, “I know who you are, what you and I are about, that we have a history and that I care enough to remember it.”

 

 

Question 3: Am I enough for you, or do you need me to be better in some way?

 

This is an interesting question that we answer with our PRESENCE…
For instance, if the interaction’s purpose (read more about that here), calls for us to be giving someone feedback, requesting something of our partner (friend/child/co-worker/etc.), are we focused on the behavior we want to see in action or are we focusing on the behavior we don’t want to see (i.e., are we criticizing–coming through the back door of communication by not explaining what we want and instead forcing our partner to figure that out,…or even worse are we contemptuously relaying some message that if they were a decent person, they would somehow already know what to do without our explicit, illumination of our request)?

 

Succinctly, relaying warmth, direction, compassion and confidence about the other person (even when asking them to do something differently) is answering the third question with affirmation: I do not need YOU to be better, even when I am requesting something different of you.

 

Question 4: Can I tell that I’m special to you by the way that you look at me?

 

How is our body language, what does our affect (facial expression) say to them in the moments that we are engaging with them? Are we inviting? Dismissive? Enthusiastic? Compassionate? Rejecting? Kind? Eager? Engaging? Shut-down?

When we engage others, intentionally answering each of these questions (even 2 would be AMAZING!), we bring the full weight of our powerful presence to another. Our presence expressed in this way sets up the interaction for the best possible outcome and we free the communication from expectations. In that moment we relate to an aliveness in ourselves and in the other with whom we communicate/relate. All possibility, potentiality is tapped.

 

For more questions about Presence, or how to move into the presence by breaking the circuits of automatic behaviors, reach out to us; we are here to help!

 

Warmly, 

 

Amanda Mason Psy.D.  CAPSY26711

Because Love Breathes

There is an in and out of love.  There is a rest and action.  There is a pulsating rhythm to life and so it also goes with love.  You can rest in that.  You can explore what are your needs in the ebbs and floes of your own love experiences.  

Healthy relationships are buttressed by healthy secure attachments.  Aligning your actions to what promotes secure attachments is essential.  Saying a proper hello and goodbye goes a very long way in fostering a trustworthiness that the relationship continues to be just as strong and secure even when we are not together, even as we inevitably come and go.   

Building routine and ritual in the quintessential comings and goings can be one of the biggest challenges and victories for couples.  Even parents must wrest with the daily greetings and goodbyes inevitable in raising our children.  But what does it mean to create a ritual around relational breathing? Around the ho-hum daily rhythms of the couple, or if you have kids, the hive?  

With intention, with consciousness, we create beauty.  Whereas with mindlessness, havoc and chaos reign.  We all want a beautiful life. Here’s how to set yourself up for having one.  

Develop your hello and goodbye rituals.

It only takes a split-second to realize that we want to be greeted when we come home, and be wished well when we depart.  

How this looks is as individual as we are.  

Try identifying or dreaming up your idealized version of your everyday greeting of one another.  

How do you greet one another? How do you come back together?

Now look at what you would most like to receive before leaving the ones that you love.

How do you depart from your beloved?

Take it a step further and extend the benefits of this exploration. 

Anticipate your longings for the times when you and your partner are not together? 

What do you need when you are away?

What does your partner need when away?

A warm hello and a pleasant goodbye not only impart fondness but also leave us with the sense that we are desired and a part of something greater than ourselves.  No matter what upset may be lingering unprocessed, warmth and connective efforts go a long way to reducing relational stress and creating a sense of attachment security and safety. 

In thinking back, what do you recall have been the most pleasant welcoming and departures? What would increase your sense of safety and connectedness in these simple yet powerful rituals?