Powerlessness and Perspectives
A mother of an eight year old daughter who is having severe
emotional problems has come to me for help with the conflicts she is having with
the girl’s father. Their brief marriage
ended just after the girl was born.
There are a couple of upcoming meetings with the daughter’s
school and with the clinic which is addressing her emotional problems. These meetings could be held separately with
mom and dad or they could happen together.
It is hard for the parents to be in the same room with each other but
Mom wants to work at addressing the issues between her and Dad so that their
daughter experiences less stress.
When Mom received an email from school about the plan for
separate meetings she hit “reply all” and suggested they meet together. She then contacted Dad to suggest that they
should work at working together. He
replied that she was once again trying to control everything and that he had
set up a separate meeting.
Mom wrote to me aware that the feelings she had discovered
of a sense of strength and purpose in acting on behalf of her daughter had withered
in the face of Dad’s attack. She was
again feeling sad and weak.
I hear your discouragement at how Dad is showing up in the
relationship with you and that your efforts at reconciliation are no match for
his efforts at alienation. You are
noticing that the feelings you have about yourself for what you are trying to
do changed back in just 24 hours and you would like to recover a sense of power
and purpose. So let me offer a couple of
observations.
When we were talking about what you see going on and what
your concerns are and how you would like things to be, you began to feel more
calm and focused and even powerful. When
you begin to focus on Dad and what he is doing and whether his choices make
sense, you begin to feel out of kilter and even sad and weak.
When we are focused on things we can do something about we
feel powerful. When we are focused on
things we can’t change we feel helpless and hopeless. When we are focused on things within
ourselves we feel centered. When we
begin to focus all of our attention on others we start to feel off center. We start to wobble.
I am not suggesting that you don’t pay attention to what is
going on with Dad. It is even helpful to
try to anticipate how he will feel about and respond to what you might do. I am just suggesting you do that from a
vantage point which is within your sense of your Self, your values, your
perspective.
Having said that, I will now appear to argue the opposite
position. You look at the choices Dad is
making—as that he doesn’t want to meet with you at school but will go to a
meeting with you at the clinic—and you don’t see them as making sense. And that is true; from your perspective they
don’t make sense. They only make sense
from Dad’s perspective. For you to see
the sense they make, you would have to want to be able to see from his
perspective. Is there any benefit to
seeing things from his perspective?
We get stuck on this because we assume there is only one
valid perspective. When we make that
assumption, we then fight over who has the right perspective. When instead we start with the assumption
that there are many valid perspectives but that they are all partial…even my
own…then there is something to be gained by seeing from the perspective of the
other. I can get a fuller sense of what
is going on.
So, holding fast to your own perspective and not abandoning
your own values and hopes, can you see anything that is valid about Dad’s
perspective which is different from your own?
One thing that occurs to me (and I don’t really know much
about what is going on) is that the school and the clinic are the ones creating
the meetings and they may have different goals for the meetings. Those differences require meeting separately
or together. Another is that neither of
you likes being in the presence of the other.
You both feel like the other is trying to make you lose.
So there are aspects of the perspectives from which you both
approach this situation that are the same and arrayed against each other. You are both afraid. You are both feeling controlled by the
other. You are both looking from the
same place, just in opposite directions.
You may not be ready to acknowledge this to Dad, but, if you can hold onto
this awareness for yourself, it may help you to stay calm and centered.
Waiting...
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