If you keep showing off your buttons can you really blame your partner for pushing them?
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One of my friends is regularly triggered by his partner. There’s one thing in particular that really gets to him. She talks over him while he’s talking, especially in conversations with their friends.
His response is to blame her because he believes that making her wrong will get him what he wants. It’s never true, but he tries it anyway.
He has a button that says, “If you talk while I’m talking, I’ll get upset.”
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They’ve been doing it for so long that they’re stuck in a pattern. He protests her behavior by saying, “I won’t put up with this! You can’t treat me like this!” And then he puts up with it, and she continues to treat him like that.
Sometimes, his wife looks for an opportunity to get back at him. And she knows how to do it because he’s shown her where his buttons are.
He has a button that says, “If you talk while I’m talking, I’ll get upset.” So whenever she wants him to get upset, she talks while he’s talking.
It isn’t rocket-science. It’s just everyday preventable marriage dysfunction.
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We’re constantly teaching the people around us how to treat us through our response to what they do. If we show them that a certain word or look will get a consistent reaction from us, we’re training them to use that word or look whenever they want that reaction.
We’re saying, “If you want me to act this way, just activate this trigger – just say this word that I’ve told you to never say, or take this action that I’ve told you to never take.”
His predictable response keeps his wife treating him in a predictable manner.
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And when we’ve shown people where our buttons are, how they’re activated, and what our auto-response will be, it’s really not appropriate to blame them for pressing a button that says “Push here.”
What could my friend do that would work better? He could make himself unavailable. He doesn’t necessarily need to go away. He only needs to not provide the response his wife is seeking, because people don’t keep doing what doesn’t work anymore.
His predictable response keeps his wife treating him in a predictable manner. And they’ll continue doing what they’re doing, until one of them decides to do something different. And divorce won’t help because they’ll continue the pattern with their new partners.
We can create positive change in our relationships, but we can only do it through ourselves, not others. So, if we want people to act differently toward us, we’ll need to begin by acting differently ourselves.
Until we change, nothing will change.
We’ll need to make a conscious decision to stop being triggered by what people say and do, which will deactivate our buttons and give us back our power.
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We’ll also need to examine whether our beliefs are valid. My friend needs to look at what he truly wants and whether making his wife wrong is getting it. And he needs to figure out how he can achieve what he wants without making her responsible.
First though, he needs to stop delivering his predictable response. When people can’t trigger the reaction they want, they’ll eventually stop looking for the buttons. But first, they’ll try harder to find them.
So it may get noisy with his wife for a while. And he may actually need to leave the conversation, the room, even the building. When he returns though, it’s super important that he support every positive thing she does.
That’s how we train people constructively. As my friend pays more attention to the consequences he sets in motion, instead of blaming her for them, his communications with his wife will improve.
When we feel triggered, if we will change our usual response, people will change their behavior.
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We’re teaching people how to treat us all the time. The people in our lives who treat us badly are doing it because we’ve given them permission. And those who treat us well are doing it because we taught them how.
The key is to do it on purpose. When we feel triggered, if we will change our usual response, people will change their behavior. When we no longer take what others say personally or believe that we’re a target, we’ll feel more secure in our relationships.
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And if we won’t settle for less than that, all our relationships will become healthy – and those that can’t will go away, which is also healthy.
We get what we want by being an example of it – by creating the internal change that we want to see externally. So the best way to teach people to treat us the way we want is to be an example of what we want.
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Photo: Getty Images
Dear lord………..switch the roles. A husband talks over his wife all the time, especially in company. She tells him its rude as hell, and it it drives her nuts and she asks him to please stop it. In response, he continues to do it in order to get under her skin. If that were the case, the husband would be seen as an asshole, which I would agree with, and the wife would be hailed as strong and wonderful for standing up for herself, which I would also agree with. So I have to ask, why is it different for… Read more »
Wait just one sec.
Isn’t “partnership” all about being vulnerable to each other, to admit our weaknesses?
If we start lying to our partner, start hiding our true feelings and our true self, then what is left of the relationship?
The real question is, why does his wife use her knowledge to deliberately hurt him in front of others?
If she hasn’t already “checked out” of the relationship, what does she hope to gain from undermining the foundation of trust and cooperation, the feeling that they are in this together?
Started falling inot that trap a few years back. My wife “changed” a bit. Where she once praised me in front of people she started doing this “grrl thing” where she’d make little dismissive comments or insults aimed at getting a laugh from her friends at my expense. I know where it came from. Her nurses do it all the time at work. Her sister does it, some of her friends do it…and she got sucked in. I started acting in kind, then I remembered that I’m Batman, that I have a gadget or gismo for every occasion. I blew… Read more »
Not her fault. SURprise. She can’t help herself.
One of t the hings he’d like not to happen is her making him look like a helpless wimp in front of other people. Her desire to do this is strong enough and soi symptomatic of a deeper hostility that there’s no sense in staying. The reason she pushes his button is the issue. The push is the symptom. She’ll keep going until she finds another.