Philski, you made me prop when you said the competitiveness when you were 7 years old playing cribbage with your dad.
So firstly can I ask you some questions at the end of this story?
I'll tell you why, my spouse has been in counselling and has been quite cooperative recently. But you know, there is one blind spot my spouse has that's huge. The counsellor gives my spouse homework to do. You know like one new thing to try to incorporate each week or so, in family relations. Then my spouse journals and reports back, and I journal and report back too so the counsellor can reference them against each other. It's a very interesting experience, collaborative, and we don't get to see each others reports, which is good or it might start fights. One of the things though that the counsellor has been unsuccesful to date to get my spouse to understand, and even my spouse admits they don't get is. This problem contributes to our own children difficulty in keeping their relationships with their friends running smoothly. It goes like this. When one child was 4 they expressed a strong interest in learning chess. I couldn't teach chess, don't know how to play, but my spouse is the chess champ so my spouse decided to teach. From day one my spouse wanted the child to play 'seriously'. The child would cry if my spouse took a peice, and my spouse wouldn't give it back and insisted the child play seriously. Well the interest was definitley in the child because the child would keep bringing the chess board back over months and now years, and within no time I'd hear tears from the child, but the child would keep on playing, snifing and crying. During counselling this was discussed with the counsellor, and the counsellor suggested to my spouse to play with the child certainly, but not to expect the child to play as a 50 year old, but for the spouse to come down and play as a 5 year old. My spouse has found this so impossible to do. Says things like, they have to learn to play properly, I won't play if it's not played properly. This attitude began to transfer to my child at school, where when playing games with other kids, if they got silly and wouldn't play properly my child would say, I won't play with you if you won't play properly, or somtimes my child would threaten not to play if they didn't play my childs way. Fortunately we saw this early on and have been able to work on it, residue still exists today but it's definitely been modified and my child is learning 'new ways to play' that are different to daddy's and more fun for everybody playing .
Is this kind of like how your dad was?
If so, how have you dealt with the effects of this 'training' in your behaviours?
I ask because I'm interested to see how it affected your relationships as an adult?
If none of this applies to you, then hi Philski, how are you going?