In my work as a relationships and marriage counselor, I always make sure we practice skills in the session because I know change occurs through time and repetition.
When couples go home with some new skills to practice, sometimes they come back to my office complaining that they didn’t succeed. Sometimes they give up because it seemed “too hard” or “forced.”
I often ask myself “why is it so hard for people to change when they have the tools and just need to practice?” What is stopping us from being consistent?
Over the years I realized there are some mental blocks and natural fall backs on the path to growth that we must be aware of in order to be empowered along the way. Here is my list to help guide us through the pulse of human growth!
1) Know the Keys to Growth
Time + Repetition = Change
Time + Changes = Transformation
Time + Transformations = Mastery
Whether you want to learn how to play guitar, memorize Quran or instill a new relationship pattern, these keys will get you there. Know the keys and remember them often. Recall them when things get tough and you feel like giving up. Remember that nothing happens over night and every master was once a novice in their craft!
2) Know No One Is Perfect
I often hear the following from couples that play the blame game, feel put down and give up easily.
“My husband tells me I am the problem and I need the counseling- not him.”
“She doesn’t want to do anything different, she thinks I can’t change.”
Firstly, any human being that does not recognize that they can always learn and evolve as a person is ignorant and in more need of growth! No one has the right to say “I am fine and in no need to change or new skills.” This is a deadly delusion and will likely lead to many other failures in life.
3) Get Comfortable with Discomfort: The Pain Value System
Sometimes we know what we want but don’t know how to get it. I know I need to loose weight or improve my marriage but “I just can’t take that first step.” Our motivation is often linked to fear and anxiety of the discomfort of change. We like staying the same because it does not require any exertion. This is why we get stuck and before you know it, years go by and then you tell yourself “its too late.”
We need to psychologically assess and accept the reality of discomfort with any change and get ready for it. Pain and hardship is inevitable in life, get over it and stop expecting life to be a stream of undisturbed pleasure.
No one is free from tests, trials and discomfort, this is part of the existential journey meant to shape and refine us!
Since this is a fact, all of us must assess the pain between different paths of action as well as the gain of those paths, this is the pain value system.
For example, if I don’t like being overweight and recognize it gives me pain and discomfort, I may also see that having an exercise routine, eating better and sacrificing my midnight snack binges are also painful. Which path am I willing to be uncomfortable with and has gain and benefit I really want? Stay fat or get fit? Hopefully this reasoning will help us break through that first step and realize “enough is enough, if I’m going to suffer anyways, I might as well do what is best for me!”
In relationships, we must do what is best for “us.” Couple’s express how hard it will be to work on themselves or practice new skills. I tell them “you are already suffering in this relational pattern so you might as well suffer in a path towards growth instead!”
Push yourselves to practice skills and support one another!
It is better to try changing with hard work, than stay stubborn and not work- both paths will be painful but one will end in pleasure and success!
4) Growth Is Incremental
The keys to growth clearly show that things take time and happen in succession. We all know the saying “nothing happens over night.” Every step towards achievement is part of the achievement. To get to the top of the mountain where that epic view awaits, you have to take one step at a time. As we walk up the trail we may stop to rest, sit and reflect, hydrate or even fall down a few meters, but we have to keep going and move one foot at a time.
Growth has a pulse and it is not a direct line shooting up vertically or even at a smooth 45 degree angle. It usually has waves and crests much like a life line you see on a hospital monitor.
As a Taoist proverb says “It is better to move slowly than to stand still.”
In Islam, it is better to do a small good deed consistently than a huge deed once. Why? With time, those small deeds will become a mountain of goodness for you and change your character.
In relationships, the daily hug or smile you give your partner will result in a deeper intimate connection overtime. Research by Shaunti Feldhahn, a best selling author on relationships, has shown that it is the little things over time that make couples happier.
For example, saying “I love you” to your wife or “thank you” to your husband when he does something will take the edge off overtime and prevent conflict eruptions in the future.
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