Hi, Acapella. I was sorry to read about the suffering you’ve endured and wanted to let you know that there is good reason for hope. As a representative of
www.wearesaved.org, I thought I’d offer a response that directly answers some of your most fundamental questions. Is there a better place? Is anyone right? What is a better relationship? The answer to these questions, Acapella, is
yes. WE who ARE S.A.V.E.D. (Strongly Advocating Vulnerability Every Day) want to let everyone know that a world of vastly improved relationships will unfold if people begin to fully embrace the wisdom of Emotional Honesty.
When we use the term Emotional Honesty, we aren’t talking about the mere willingness to talk about what you are feeling with others. True Emotional Honesty requires that we admit the truth about the great depth of our need for approval. It means admitting that you can be
easily hurt by any hint of criticism. It means admitting that you are ultimately
at the mercy of the opinions and comments of others. It’s the kind of honesty about personal vulnerability that any sane individual would find extremely frightening
unless she knew that the exact same thing is true about everyone else.
At our web site, we focus primarily on the impact that a universal commitment to Emotional Honesty would have on social relations, but the impact it has on intimate relationships is probably the bigger story. For it is only within intimate relationships that human beings are able to achieve an ideal satisfaction of a collection of very important physical and emotional needs. Indeed, when intimate partners are able to keep themselves constantly focused on their shared vulnerability and pure dependence on each other, it becomes possible for them to experience a level of
Relationship Ecstasy that most people today can only dream about. Yes, Acapella, there is a better place where we can be if we are willing to face up to the truth about what is inside of us.
The “better relationship” that is possible for us to experience is ultimately dependent on our willingness to make ourselves utterly dependent—
emotionally—on our intimate partners. That is a prospect that many people
who are married fear greatly. They feel that the less dependent they are on others, the better off they will be. They are
afraid of intimacy because they fear the emotional pain they know they would feel if their intimate partners were ever to leave them.
People who feel this way SHOULD NEVER GET MARRIED. We can’t have it both ways. If we want to enjoy the wonderful fruits of intimacy, we have to be willing to expose ourselves to the risk of great pain. You cannot experience the joy it bestows otherwise. If protecting yourself from that Ultimate Pain is more important to you, then you should never allow anyone to think that you are committed to them, for you will simply be using them in an ultimate act of
victim-generating selfishness.
Why do intimate relationships fail so often to fulfill their promise? In most cases, the cause can be traced to the collection of “values” that people typically embrace when they are in social environments. In the typical social environment, many people are able to reach a certain comfort zone of interaction with others that leaves them feeling mostly unthreatened. What these people don’t realize is that their feelings of security are heavily dependent upon their ability to keep the attention of others focused away from their own personal vulnerabilities. We are happy to discuss almost any topic, as long as the topic isn’t our own emotional vulnerability. We especially enjoy talking about
other people’s imperfections because attention is then distracted away from our own.
When men and women enter into intimate relationships with each other, the comfort zone they enjoyed in the social environment in which they met begins to quickly melt away. When less of their attention is focused on others and more of it is focused on each other, it becomes more and more difficult for them to hide their imperfections from each other. Unkind commentary is certainly not appreciated, but it’s not just expressed criticism that bothers us. A woman could be completely innocent of even thinking some critical judgment of her husband, but if he
fears she might be thinking it, he may very well launch a counterattack to defend himself from the criticism he expects, thus starting a cycle of retaliation.
Intimate relationships are a special challenge for most people because the truth about human emotional needs becomes laid bare. As intimate partners begin to defend themselves from the criticism they fear by “criticizing back”, pain is inflicted and the anger instinct can become quite easily aroused. Nothing hurts us more than being the target of another human being’s anger. If couples rely on their anger instincts to defend themselves, their intimate relationships are guaranteed to fail, as they will soon become bitter enemies.
The strategies that people typically employ in the social environment do not work in intimate relationships, but destroy them instead. If WE who ARE S.A.V.E.D. are able to accomplish our goals, the values of the social environment will begin to change, eventually becoming identical with the natural values of intimacy. People will no longer be encouraged by the social environment to behave in ways that end up destroying their intimate relationships.
Better relationships, Acapella, are created when two people are able to intentionally present an Image of Vulnerability to each other at all times instead of an Image of Threat. When we are able to perceive only each other’s vulnerability, we will no longer perceive a need to defend ourselves and are able to listen to each other as caring friends, instead of as wounded enemies. CHANGING THOSE PERCEPTIONS IS EVERYTHING.
Obviously, men are going to find the idea of Emotional Honesty more difficult to warm up to than women. Their socialization encourages them to try to protect themselves from emotional pain by steadfastly denying that they have any emotional needs that might make it logical for them to seek out a committed love relationship. What they need to learn is that
they’ve been fearing the wrong thing. What they really
ought to be fearing are the efforts of other men to perpetuate the myth that some people—like them—are immune to the pain of rejection. With a bit of courage, they can begin to confront those other men who are making it tough on everyone else with their refusal to admit the truth about themselves.
WE who ARE S.A.V.E.D. look forward to a New Day when the world finally becomes Safe for Emotional Vulnerability...
Gabriel
communications.officer@wearesaved.org