Dr. Frank Gunzburg
Baltimore Maryland
At this point, you should have some fairly solid ideas about
how you can become transparent and rebuild the trust in your
relationship. If you institute the strategies above, trust
will blossom, and warmth and love will come back into your
relationship.In order to reinforce this process, there are
10 destructive habits that you should stay away from if you
truly want to rebuild the trust in your relationship and make
it thrive again. In order to initiate and maintain a warm
relationship, avoid the following:
1. Neglecting Your Partner. You will remember that attention
is one of the building blocks of trust. Neglect is its antithesis.
If you consistently neglect your partner, you can be assured
that any trust you’ve developed will falter. Be attentive,
not neglectful. Here are some ways you might be neglecting
your partner:
2. Angry Outbursts. Anger is a feeling. At some time, each
of us gets angry. It’s what you do with your anger that
can harm your relationship. The caution here is that even
when you are angry, be respectful and reassure your partner
that you are just angry, not dismissing or un-loving them.
3. Unfair Accusations. You will get nowhere by accusing your
partner of not caring about you, having never loved you, going
out with their paramour when they are five minutes late from
work, trying to take revenge on you, or intentionally trying
to hurt you. Accusation is not a good way to rebuild your
relationship. It makes your partner defensive, and a combination
of accusation and defensiveness generally just leads to useless
arguments.
4. Constant Fighting. If you are constantly bickering with
your partner at this point in the program, you need to review
the 2-stage method for conversation that I presented in Section
6. In it you will find ways to be an active listener. If you
cannot effectively do this exercise, then you might want to
seek professional counseling. Fighting all the time is akin
to being angry all the time. It simply doesn’t work
to create a healthy and loving atmosphere in which a relationship
can flourish in.
5. Taking Revenge. Revenge in any form is a mistake. You
certainly don’t want to take revenge and have an affair
yourself. Nor do you want to get involved in any other kind
of revenge. We have already discussed that issue. Even small
ways of being vengeful, like snapping at your partner when
they say something you don’t like, biting sarcasm, or
saying passive, hurtful things to or about them, should be
avoided. If you feel the desire to be vengeful, go back to
Section 1 and look at your feelings more closely.
6. Disrespectful or Demeaning Comments. These don’t
serve any kind of healthy relationship, and you should particularly
avoid them if you are recovering from an affair. There is
always a cleaner, more direct way to communicate your needs
than being demeaning.
Some people, for example, combine their own frustration with
a simple request such as, “Will you open the door for
me, please.” The combination of the frustration (whether
it is related to the request) and the request make the person
sound angry. If they are frequently frustrated or overwhelmed,
they might come across as always being angry or always talking
with an angry voice to their partner. Situations like this
are not demeaning by intent, but that is the unintentional
impact.
7. Nagging. You certainly will have to make requests of each
other from time to time, and you might have to do so multiple
times in a day. Asking once or twice about something is okay.
Once you go beyond that, you will probably be accused of nagging.
If a responsible adult needs more than a few reminders, then
some other issue is at work. This is when you need a conversation
about the request and whatever issue might be present around
that request. Think of times when your partner has nagged
you; what issue was going on for you that kept it going? Now
think of a time when you nagged your partner. Make a guess
about what issue was going on for them that kept it going.
8. Intentionally Engaging in Irritating Habits. If you intentionally
annoy your partner by engaging in habits that you know irritate
them, then you are not doing all you can to rebuild the trust
in your relationship. Cease the behavior, and look at what
lies beneath your desire to irritate.
9. Selfish Demands. A relationship isn’t about you.
It isn’t about your partner either. It’s about
both of you together as a unit. You need to have your needs
met in order for the relationship to function in a healthy
way. However, selfish demands do not fall in line with this.
These kinds of demands inhibit trust by telling your partner
you think your needs are more important than their needs.
End the selfishness. Open up to the world of sharing your
life with your partner. (If you feel that you or your partner
might be having problems with this, have a look at Minefield
#3: Inconsiderate Choices in Section 5.)
10. Dishonesty. I left this for the end of the list because
if there is one of the 10 destructive habits that I want you
to remember to avoid, it’s this one. The only thing
dishonesty can achieve is a breakdown in trust. It serves
nothing else. Don’t get confused into thinking that
dishonesty will make your life easier later or that you are
somehow protecting your autonomy by lying. It won’t,
and you aren’t. Dishonesty only serves to further hamper
your progress toward a more beautiful relationship.
If you employ the other strategies in this chapter and avoid
these 10 destructive habits, your relationship will warm up
again and you will learn to trust your partner.