Enriching Your Marriage by Creating Shared Meaning

Terry Gaspard, MSW, LICSW  for Gottman.com Blog – November 30, 2017

To read this article on line: Enriching Your Marriage by Creating Shared Meaning

After being married ten years, Teresa, age 38, discovered that being in love with Brian, age 37, was just not enough to sustain happiness in their union. When Brian married Teresa, he was impressed with her hard-working nature and financial independence. Teresa was attracted to Brian because he had a good job and was conscientious and kind.

However, over the last few years, Teresa found herself comparing her marriage to her friends unfavorably and criticizing Brian for habits she found annoying, such as leaving dishes in the sink and not hanging up his clothes. They rarely spend time together and intimacy and romance have evaporated since their young children, Aiden and Stacy, had arrived. Teresa put it like this:

“It seems like Brian puts all of his energy into his job and has little left over for me, our kids, or our home at the end of the day. We’ve been considering buying a bigger house but I’m putting that on hold for now.”

Just because you fall in love with someone, that doesn’t mean that love will stay alive without nurturing your partnership. If you find yourself asking, “What is missing from my marriage?” your situation may be similar to Brian and Teresa’s.

What might be missing is what Dr. John Gottman refers to as a sense of shared meaning. A successful marriage is about more than raising kids, paying bills, and getting chores done. It is also about building a meaningful relationship that has a spiritual dimension and is rich in rituals of connection.

Here are four ways that couples can build a stronger relationship with shared meaning:

  1. Sharing a common dream or vision for life can help you gain a healthy perspective. When couples have that shared dream, the inevitable ups and downs of marriage are less bothersome. Creating a larger context of meaning in life can help couples to avoid focusing only on the little stuff that happens and to keep their eyes on the big picture.
  2. Talking about your shared vision can foster attunement. Taking time to process your dreams can bring you closer. A crucial goal for couples is to create an atmosphere that encourages each person to talk honestly about his or her convictions. According to Dr. Gottman, couples who talk about their hopes and dreams with one another openly are more likely to be happy and less likely to be struggling.
  3. Creating daily or weekly rituals of connection will enable you to build shared meaning. Carve out time to be together and spend time doing enjoyable activities that bring you both pleasure. Couples need to make a commitment to spending quality time together – which includes saying goodbye in the morning and reunions at the end of the day.
  4. Implementing your shared goals can help you to be a stronger couple with a purpose. For instance, your goals might include volunteering in the community, raising your children in a specific way, or adopting a sustainable lifestyle. Regardless of what your shared vision or goals are, they can strengthen your bond.

In fact, creating shared meaning is the highest level of Dr. John and Julie Gottman’s Sound Relationship House, which is a model on how to have a healthy relationship in which a couple can intentionally create a sense of purpose together. Building a relationship that is full of meaning and involves prioritizing time and resources is essential to a happy marriage. It encompasses a couple’s legacy – the stories they tell, their beliefs, and the culture they create to form a shared meaning system.

Maintaining a Deep Connection to Your Partner

In Fighting for Your Marriage, Harold J. Markman, Ph.D., writes that the amount of fun partners have together while nurturing their connection is a key factor in predicting their overall marital happiness. But Markman also explains that “[w]hen we interview couples planning marriage, we learn that most of them have tons of fun early in the relationship. But for too many, fun fizzles out as time goes by.”

While a new relationship is often exciting, stimulating, and fun, having a deep and meaningful connection with your partner can infuse your relationship with love and purpose over the long run. Excitement and fun are mostly felt in the present moment, and they can fade away; feelings of pleasure can be temporary. But developing shared meaning over a longer period will sustain a deep connection in your marriage, resulting in overall positive affect and shared happiness.

Couples who take the time to develop shared meaning and goals are more likely to cultivate intimacy – a hallmark of matured and lasting love. Intimacy is something not simply arrived at by chance, but it is deliberately nurtured. Keep in mind that maintaining a deep connection to your partner does not mean that you place them on a pedestal or that your relationship is without problems. It’s not about sidestepping conflict, but you can’t force your opinions on your partner, either. In every marriage, you will have your disagreements, and the key is learning how to manage them.

However, if you like and respect who your partner is and how they conduct themselves in their world, and if you generally agree on the fundamentals in life, your connection will be deeper and more meaningful. This doesn’t mean you’ll see eye to eye on everything, but your shared goals will align.

Going back to our example, for Brian and Teresa to overcome their current difficulties and succeed in their marriage, they’d be wise to build quality time into their relationship on a weekly basis, and to consistently remember and verbalize the positive meaning and dreams that they share. In that case, Brian may be quick to elaborate on Teresa’s strengths about having a shared purpose in his marriage, which indicates his fondness and admiration for her:

“I respect Teresa because she’s a hard-worker and a loving wife and mother. We argue, but we try to be patient with each other and show understanding and empathy. When I get aggravated with Teresa, I try to listen and respect her view. We both avoid issuing ultimatums, shutting down, or being disrespectful.”

What is the secret to increasing shared meaning between you and your partner? Spending quality time together on a regular basis and getting to know your partner better by sharing your innermost thoughts, feelings, and wishes, which is a life-long process and takes a strong commitment. This, as Dr. Gottman’s research proves, will result in a happy and successful marriage.

Lesson 9 – Shared Meaning and Dreams

      No Comments on Lesson 9 – Shared Meaning and Dreams

The purpose of this lesson is to help you along the way to a marriage that can last a lifetime. That is the goal of all of us when we marry. For some, the goal has gotten buried under the load of responsibilities and distractions of life. Shared meaning, a common goal, and continued commitment to reaching the goals we set, give us strong incentive to keep our marriage healthy.

Start by watching: The Truth about Great Relationships

Zach Brittle says, “Creating shared meaning is one of the most rewarding facets of a marriage. It can be awesome, messy, agonizing, joyous, elusive, fun, risky, maddening, invigorating, mysterious, and all of these at once. If you start your relationship off by ensuring that it’s meaningful, you can save yourself a lot of pain and heartache down the road.”

Begin by reading the article: Enriching Your Marriage by Creating Shared Meaning

Read: Suggestions for Creating Shared Meaning

Then consider how to make your dreams come true. Read: Making Your Dreams Come True

Read: 5 Rituals to Reconnect in Your Relationship

A ritual of connection we have not talked about yet is the 6-second kiss. A daily six-second kiss will increase your emotional and physical intimacy. According to author Dr. Kory Floyd, physical contact releases oxytocin (the bonding hormone), can improve our mood (for days), and can help you stay calm. Holding hands, hugging, touching, and making out can reduce your stress hormones (cortisol) and increase your sense of relationship satisfaction.” If kissing for six seconds feels like too much, share a hug or cuddle that is not intended to lead to sex.

Rituals of connection, creating shared meaning, and making your dreams come true are ways to keep your marriage healthy and satisfying for your life-time.

There’s one last topic you’ve probably been waiting a long time to see. Please read: A Great Sex Life After Baby

If you prefer to complete this classroom today, you may go on to Lesson 10- Final Words

Discussing Triggers

      No Comments on Discussing Triggers

Ellie Lisitsa  for The Gottman.com Blog 0n  January 17, 2013

Be sure to see her list of triggers at: Discussing Triggers

Processing fights and regrettable incidents with some tips on how to identify and understand what triggers you and your partner. Working on understanding each other’s triggers is one of the most important things that you can do to avoid hurting one another. Next time you are processing a fight or a regrettable incident, try the following:

Identify the triggers for each of you: What escalated the interaction?

Put in your own words what escalated the interaction for you. These are often old and familiar feelings. Here are some common examples:

What triggered me?

Understand Why These Are Triggers.

  • Rewind the story of your life in your mind. Stop at an incident you remember from your childhood or your past in general (not in this relationship) in which you got triggered in the same way or had some of these very same feelings.
  • Tell the story of that incident, how it happened, what you felt. Listen to your partner’s story with empathy.

Overall, What Was Your Contribution to the Fight?

Figure Out How To Make It Better Next Time.

  • What is one way that your partner can make it better next time this kind of incident happens?
  • What is one way that you can make it better next time.

We fully understand that these questions are not easy to answer. They require a great deal of introspection and emotional energy. To figure out what is happening within yourself is difficult, and explaining what may be deeply personal experiences to your partner may make you feel scared and vulnerable. We all experience these emotions. But keep in mind that the preceding exercise can be of great benefit to your relationship.

When you and your partner consider these questions, when you connect the feelings that come up for you in the present with your experiences in the past, you gain insight. You start to understand what’s really going on in each other’s mind. This understanding is invaluable as you grow in your relationship together. As you learn the stories behind your partner’s triggers, you begin to understand where they are coming from – their sudden attacking or defensive behaviors in conflict start to make complete sense!

With this knowledge, you can identify which behaviors to avoid, so that the two of you don’t accidentally set each other off. If you use these tools to help you process fights, you will not only learn to have more constructive conversations when conflicts come up, but you will learn more about each other, and grow closer than ever.

Moving Forward, after a fight has a short video on Three tips on the Right Way to Fight.

The Aftermath of a Fight

      No Comments on The Aftermath of a Fight

By Ellie Lisitsa for the Gottman.com Blog -January 16, 2014

Read the entire article click: The Aftermath of a Fight

When one or both partners are left feeling hurt, frustrated, or angry after a fight, wouldn’t it be nice if you could just hit a restart button? Unfortunately, you can’t erase an argument from your memory, but you can take steps to repair and move forward. Arguments happen, and often enough we say the wrong thing, or do the wrong thing, and end up hurting one another. One of the most important tools for building a healthy relationship is knowing how to process a fight in a way that helps you learn from it.

The key in processing a fight is to first talk about what happened to understand what went wrong, how you each were feeling, and what could have prevented the combative discussion from ending in such in a negative way. If these steps are taken, you may emerge from what was initially an incredibly stressful interaction with new knowledge of your partner, and a new understanding of how to make your relationship work better in the future!

In the aftermath of a fight or regrettable incident, you can use the following format to increase understanding between you and your partner. It is crucial for you to understand that in any given argument there is no absolute “reality” as to what happened. There are always two “subjective realities” or perspectives. It is never a matter of who is right and who is wrong, but how the two of you can come to understand each other, accept responsibility, and find your points of compromise so that you can move forward together.

Processing a fight means talking about what happened without jumping back into the argument. Focus on finding ways to understand why the conversation was so unproductive as well as how to make this type of interaction better in the future. Try to make it your job to understand your partner’s reality and not to argue for your own perspective.

Step 1: Each Partner has a Turn to Talk About What They Were Feeling

I Felt…

Defensive
Not listened to
My feelings got hurt
Totally flooded
Angry
Sad
Unloved
Misunderstood
Criticized
That my complaint was taken personally
Worried
Afraid
Unsafe
Out of control
Righteously indignant
Unfairly picked on
Stupid
Like leaving
Overwhelmed with emotion
Lonely
Ashamed

Step 2: Discuss and Validate Both Subjective Realities 

Take turns to talk about how you each saw the situation, remember that neither of your perspectives are “wrong!” Focus on each of your feelings and needs. It is crucial that you validate your partner’s experience and communicate that you understand at least some of his or her perspective. As we said in our blog entries last week, Dr. Gottman’s research has demonstrated that you can only be influential if you accept influence.

Step 3: Accept Responsibility – What Role Did You Play in this Fight?
What Set Me Up…

I’ve been very stressed and irritable lately
I’ve taken you for granted
I’ve been overly sensitive lately
I’ve been overly critical lately
I haven’t shared very much of my inner world
I haven’t been emotionally available
I’ve been depressed lately
I haven’t asked for what I needed
I haven’t felt very much confidence in myself
I’ve been running on empty
I’ve needed to be alone

We cannot always prevent ourselves from making mistakes or saying things that we shouldn’t have, but we always have the ability to go back and make attempts to repair the situation. When couples make a habit of engaging in destructive arguments without processing or trying to understand their partner’s side of things, the conflicts build on each other until they become unmanageable and overwhelming. Don’t let a regrettable incident grow into an unnecessary catastrophe! When you make repair attempts early, you can salvage the point of the conversation and create a more productive and positive outcome.

The Art of Compromise

      No Comments on The Art of Compromise

Ellie Lisitsa   for the Gottman.com Blog –  January 10, 2013

Read on line at: The Art of Compromise

We’ve all been in the middle of an argument that we know we cannot win, understanding that our frustration has overwhelmed all sense of perspective. Spent and shattered, we would do well to remember the old saying: “It is better to bend than to break!” And this is just what Dr. Gottman’s countless research studies have shown.

When you are caught in the heat of an argument, you are in a state of crisis, which is defined as “a time of intense difficulty, trouble, or danger” from the Greek krisis. In times where you experience crisis, what you yearn for most of all is to feel safe. If you do not feel safe (emotionally or physically), there is no way for you to reach a state of compromise with your partner.

Dr. Gottman’s further findings may not seem so intuitive: If your goal is to reach a state of compromise, you must first focus on yourself. Define your core needs in the area of your problems, do not relinquish anything that you feel is absolutely essential, and understand that you must be willing to accept influence.

His advice, based on more than four decades of research, is the following:

Remember, you can only be influential if you accept influence. Compromise never feels perfect. Everyone gains something and everyone loses something. The important thing is feeling understood, respected, and honored in your dreams.

If you feel like this is an incredibly tall order, you are not alone. Luckily, the following exercise may be of comfort. Featured in the couples workshop that Dr. Gottman presents with his wife and collaborator, Dr. Julie Gottman, this exercise will help you and your partner to make headway into the perpetually gridlocked problems you face in your relationship. We hope that it will provide welcome relief in this critical first step towards easing the many stresses of conflict:

The Art of Compromise

Step 1: Consider an area of conflict in which you and your partner have been stuck in perpetual gridlock. Use The Compromise-Exercise diagram. The inside circle is your Inflexible Area, and the one on the outside is your Flexible Area.

Step 2: Think of the inside circle containing the ideas, needs, and values you absolutely cannot compromise on, and the outside circle containing the ideas, needs, and values that you feel more flexible with in this area. Make two lists.

Step 3: Discuss the following questions with your partner, in the way that feels most comfortable and natural for the two of you:

  • Can you help me to understand why your “inflexible” needs or values are so important to you? 
  • What are your guiding feelings here?
  • What feelings and goals do we have in common? How might these goals be accomplished?
  • Help me to understand your flexible areas. Let’s see which ones we have in common.
  • How can I help you to meet your core needs?
  • What temporary compromise can we reach on this problem?

Designed as an activity for the two of you, this exercise should not be approached in the midst of a stressful discussion. It will be most helpful if undertaken in peacetime, perhaps in the evening or on a weekend. It should take you and your partner approximately thirty minutes. Remember, this activity is not a magical pill that the two of you can pop, causing your problems to disappear forever! It is the beginning of a series of what will likely prove to be long, honest, fruitful, and fulfilling discussions.

If this all still feels intimidating, don’t be discouraged. It probably means that this is important to you. And that is your greatest power – motivation to overcome these very real difficulties. In the words of Virginia Woolf, “You cannot find peace by avoiding life.” The differences between us all are very real.

Remember, those of us who love someone have a real gift – having seen the unique beauty of the one we love, in all of its strengths and weaknesses, complexities and depths, we share the will to build bridges between our souls.