I ask you
I hate asking people for things beyond the basic “hey could you hand me that” kind of thing. I knew this. I’m reminded it’s still true. I’m almost pathologically … no. I am absolutely, pathologically resistant to asking anyone to change a behavior in order to make my life easier or happier.
It has come to my attention that this can actually damage relationships.
Sigh.
It has come to my attention that this can actually damage relationships.
Sigh.
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Yeah... me too.
On top of that I also have trouble saying no when someone asks for my help. I'm getting better, but it's hard.
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(It's been a very long week, j/s)
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(Not comfortable sharing details here; ping me on PM if you want to hear more.)
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PM 100% welcome. *gentle hugs offered*
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I had to start small and build trust. We both did. I had to try and change the things that bothered him, and I had to make a conscious effort to use my WORDS.
Because apparently I still had some of that "if he LOVES ME he would just KNOW" bullshit script remaining... ARGH
and now I use my words more, and we're both having a better time with things .
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- I need to trust that the other person gives a shit, which is NOT a given;
- I need to trust that the other person is willing to say no when that's what they need to say, which is ABSOLUTELY NOT A GIVEN;
- and I need to trust that when they care and I need something and they need to say no, we'll work at it until we find an alternate path or something that is going to do well for both (all?) of us.
So... okay. Not asking may damage the relationship, but now that I've thought about it even a minuscule amount, the lack of trust shows that me being reticent to make a request is not "my problem" in isolation.(Which is also sort of discouraging, because I'm the only person I can change.)
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*Hugs*
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I do have, intellectually if not in my gut where it counts, evidence that the other person gives a shit. (The fact I don't "trust it in my gut" is probably a trauma response. Technically that's a me problem, but since it won't go away quickly, it becomes an us problem, a thing we both work with and respond to.) At least I've got this knowledge in my logic-brain. This is superb.
In addition, I'm pretty sure I can and will at least keep trying with working at something until we find an alternate solution. I have a relationship that has lasted three decades and change; we've done a lot of creative solution finding in that time, so I know I'm capable of that. This is a good thing to know about myself and I'm kind of proud of it. Like, even if that relationship were to dissolve tomorrow, I know what I'm like in that kind of long term situation, and I have some traits there that I think are cool and nifty.
So now I need to work on the saying no piece of trust.
Hmm. This has been very helpful. Thank you. ♥
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Trust really is key to everything, and, geez, it's hard.
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While the character traits and self-knowledge may be more widely applicable, though, the specific skills probably are not. I wonder if there’s a way to work on building up trust.
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I believe that our brains are more malleable than we think, so I think there should be skill-building for trust.
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I suspect working on trust looks very different if it’s one person working on trust issues in general versus if it’s two people working on one person’s specific, situational lack of trust. I shall noodle on that.
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Drat this panini anyway. Would love to do a hang-out-and-catch-up some time.
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If you can't ask for changes, can you at least mention the impact on you? Or discuss the behavior in the abstract? It seems like that might be easier, or at least a step in the right direction.
I'm currently working on "Yes, And..." (explicitly agreeing with statements before going off on tangents or bring up exceptions, which comes off as dismissive) -- it's really hard to change a behavior, but I'm getting faster at recognizing when I've slipped up, sometimes halfway into my first sentence!
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Time to dust off the Buddhist philosophy.