|
How
Not to Spend Quality Time Together!
|
|||
|
StreamTree Counseling Coaching Articles & Links Email Links: Email
John
|
It was a beautiful, crisp fall day. Suzanne and I had enjoyed a walk down the woodsy trail to Denny Park on Lake Washington, our Australian sheep dog trotting along beside us. The Park was beautiful, the lake serene, and we had it all to ourselves. How did we spend our time there and on the picturesque walk back? Arguing! What subject could be important enough for us to waste all that ambiance by passionately disagreeing? We were arguing over the right way to tell the dog to fetch a ball! Our dog would drop the ball about five feet away, jump up and down and bark incessantly. (This dog has enough energy to power a small city if we could figure out how to harness it.) Suzanne suggested I gesture toward the ground in front of me to get him to bring it all the way. So I patted the side of my leg, to which he barked and jumped, dropped it six inches closer, jumped and barked, another six inches, more barking and jumping. This dog was getting on my nerves big time. Then Suzanne said, “Do you understand what I meant when I told you to point at the ground?” This was the final straw. My dog was scolding me, my wife was telling me I was doing it WRONG. I pushed the ball dramatically toward her and said, “Here—you do it!,” thereby fueling an “energetic conversation” for the next 20 minutes or so. Then Suzanne finally got through to me that she had been training the dog, unbeknownst to me, to sit quietly and put the ball at our feet. The signal was to point at the ground. She knew I liked to throw the ball for the dog and had thought of it as a surprise gift to me. Suddenly, everything changed. Where a moment ago I had seen Suzanne as an adversary who was trying to prove I was wrong, she was now an ally who was trying to do something special for me. The unsettling thing is, this transformation had nothing to do with Suzanne’s behavior, but simply how I interpreted it. The next thought that came to me: why couldn’t I give her the benefit of the doubt more often and choose to see her as an ally rather than an adversary? What a concept! Stressful periods can magnify our emotional inconsistencies. During holiday times, for example, we are reminded more of the importance of friends and loved ones, but the stress of the season can make it easier to alienate those very people. If I have any credibility left after my dog story, let me offer the following suggestions for maintaining healthy communication, even in stressful times. Then the next time you go for some "quality time" with someone special, perhaps you can handle it better than I did!
|