Hi Reader,
Are you a world-class husband?
Maybe so. But thereâs still one thing you canât do:
You canât talk your wife out of an emotion.
Logic doesnât work.
Reason doesnât work.
Trying to reassure her doesnât work.
Trying to calm her down doesnât work.
Giving her advice doesnât work.
All of us have tried! The result is always the same.
And over time, despair.
Yet still we try.
Foolishly.
â
Tired of endlessly repeating what doesnât work?
Tired of creating more distance in your relationship?
Dr. Henry Cloud to the rescue.
Dr. Cloud is a clinical psychologist and co-author of the bestselling Boundaries series of books. On his podcast (episode #147), he offered valuable advice to husbands caught in this trap.
Hereâs his suggestion:
When your wife approaches you in the grip of an emotion (whether mild or elevated), listen to her with this orientation:
That wasnât in my wheelhouse 15 years ago.
Instead, I listened to my wife with this orientation:
I know none of you can relate.
Back to Dr. Cloud âŚ
Specifically:
A world-class husbandâs job is to acknowledge all three.
â
Dr. Cloud gave an everyday example. Imagine the scene:
Your wife gets off the phone with her mom. Sheâs upset because her mom was trying to control her. Your wife finds you and begins to vent.
Most of us respond with something like:
All examples of what not to do.
Instead, hereâs the world-class response Dr. Cloud suggested:
Masterful.
Three sentences. Three acknowledgements.
1, 2, 3.
Do you see it?
He acknowledged the issue.
He acknowledged what sheâs most likely feeling.
He acknowledged the consequence.
Letâs look closer:
â
Acknowledge what happened. Thatâs easy, right? Simply repeat back to your wife whatever sheâs in distress about. Whatever she just griped or complained about.
âI canât believe Jenny canceled on you again.â
âUghh. I hate that your mom tries to control you.â
âYour boss has a lot of nerve. That was very unkind of him.â
â
You can do this.
Is your wife frustrated?
Say, âThat sounds so frustrating.â
Is she angry?
Say, âOh man. Iâd be pissed off too.â
Is she sad?
Say, âDamn. That must feel terrible.â
Donât overthink this. You donât need to nail the feeling. You donât need to use the perfect word or phrase. Simply mirror â reflect back to her â whatever you pick up on.
â
Take her primary feeling (anger, sadness, etc) and ascribe an in-the-moment, how-she-feels-right-now consequence to it.
For us guys, think ârash decision.â Unreasonable but âreasonableâ considering her state and how sheâs feeling at this moment.
What would a rash-decision reaction to her distress be?
I really like Dr. Cloudâs use of the phrase âI bet you âŚâ for this.
âThatâs so frustrating. I bet you feel like quitting right now.â
âThat sounds so unfair. I bet you donât ever want to go back to that coffee shop.â
âThat sucks. I bet you want to drive over there and give her a piece of your mind.â
Youâre not suggesting she actually do any of these things, of course, but youâre doing something much more powerful:
It might only last two minutes âŚ
But hereâs the thing âŚ
In two minutes you wonât have the opportunity you have right now:
This is your chance to build emotional closeness and intimacy. To create more positive feelings in your marriage.
One more time:
No, you havenât traded in your masculinity. Youâve stepped more fully into your masculine frame and leadership role.
This is worth getting right.
Itâs where marriages are won or lost.
â
Your Coach,
I was a mediocre husband for 15 years. Today, I teach husbands how to avoid the mistakes I made. How to grow and become great men. The kind their wives swoon over. New content delivered monthly. đđź
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