âCatchâ your partner being kind. What was the last thing your partner did that you felt grateful for? A dinner he made? A backrub she gave you? Or maybe there was a moment you were impatient with your partner, but he didnât hold it against you, and you appreciated that. Take note of that small act. Research points to the benefits of keeping a gratitude diary to record and solidify the things we feel grateful for, but even simply noticing and calling to mind the good, little things your partner does can have a positive impact. This is a simple but powerful way for us to âcatchâ our partners being kind rather than falling into the common trap of giving more attention to disappointments.
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Focus first on whatâs working well. This is the easiest place to begin. Take a look at the relationships on the energizing side of your social universe and consider how you might solidify or encourage whatâs great about them. Tell (and show!) those people how much you appreciate them, and why. It never hurts to double down on whatâs already bringing energy and vitality into your life. These relationships are already rolling, but there are usually one or two that have slowed down and need a little push to get up and running at full tilt again. Even good relationships tend to repeat the same routines over and over. It might be time to try some new things with them.
We expected that empathic accuracyâgetting the right answer about what your partner was feelingâwould correlate with a stronger sense of relationship satisfaction. This correlation was certainly thereâunderstanding how your partner is feeling is a good thing.
But more important than that, especially for women, was the empathic effort involved. If a person felt their partner was making a good-faith effort to understand them, they felt more positively about the interaction and about the relationship, regardless of their partnerâs accuracy.
To put it simply, understanding another person is great, but just trying to understand goes a long way in building connection.
Some people do this automatically, but efforts to understand others can also be deliberate, intentional behaviors. It neednât come naturally to you at first, but the more you try, the easier it will get. The next time you have the opportunity, try asking yourself:
How is this person feeling?
What is this person thinking?
Am I missing something here?
How might I feel if I were in this personâs shoes?
And when you can, let them know that youâre curious and trying to understandâa small effort that can have an enormous impact.
These findings, along with our findings about the importance of empathic effort (discussed in Chapter 5), point to an important idea about intimate relationships: if a couple can cultivate a bedrock of affection and empathy (meaning curiosity and the willingness to listen), their bond will be more stable and enduring.
Try something different! Make a plan to surprise your partner with breakfast in bed. Maybe you havenât walked around your neighborhood together in yearsâafter dinner instead of falling into the grooves of your usual routine, take a stroll and see whatâs out there. Plan a weekly date night and take turns choosing what you will do (and maybe surprise your partner with a new activity if a surprise would be welcome).
We all fall into habits and routines. Thatâs normal. But often they become so rote that we cease to really notice our partners as we cruise through the day. Breaking these routines alerts our minds to novelty, and this helps us recognize and appreciate our partners in new ways. It also signals to our partners that they are important to us.
First, listen without commenting.
Then, try to communicate what youâve heard your partner say without judgment (this is the hard part). You might begin with something like: What Iâm hearing you say is ___. Is that right?
A second technique that is helpful in its own right and can make reflective listening even more valuable is to offer some understanding of your partnerâs reasons for a feeling or behavior. The goal is not to point out your brilliance and ability to see things your partner cannot, but to let your partner know that you see them. You want to communicate that it makes sense that she feels this way or that he is behaving in that way, and to nurture that bedrock of empathy and affection that research has shown to be valuable. For example, you might say, It makes sense that you feel so strongly about this... and then continue with something like: since you care so much about being kind. Or: ... since this was the way youâve described things happening in your family growing up.
A third useful practice is to try to step back a bit from the conversation, a practice that psychologists call âself-distancing,â and look at your experience as if you are watching someone else. You might notice the thoughts that this person (i.e., you) is having, and recognize them as fleeting thoughts that may shift. This is a technique that shares much in common with mindfulness approaches, and the psychologists Ethan Kross and Ozlem Ayduk have done a lot of research showing its utility. Together these practices may help you to get started with challenging conversations and hang in there emotionally when things get tough, to slow down, and to show your partner that youâre trying to understand.