How To Increase Your Marriage IQ
Marriage Enrichment 101 By: Mort
Fertel
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Listen to this email
I received from a reader and see if you can relate.
Dear Mort,
We are in week 2 of the silent
treatment! It all started over something so little and ridiculous! We
are both adults, old enough to know better than this! He is a judge, I
am a social worker! He won't budge! I need help!
Jodie
The dreaded silent treatment. The big
stand-off. You know it, don’t you? Horrible,
isn’t it?
The most intense prayers in a
household come during these silent treatments: "Oh God, I hope
that’s not him/her pulling into the driveway."
Or, "Oh God, when will he/she go
upstairs already?"
Sometimes you feel like you could
explode, right?
Most silent treatments start like
Jodie’s started; with something "little and ridiculous." Most
couples can’t remember what the impetus was. And if they
could, they’d be too embarrassed to admit that something so
small blew-up into something so big.
So what are these silent treatments or
stand-offs REALLY about? And how can you avoid them or end them soon
after they begin?
It’s interesting that Jodie
made a point in her email to say that she and her husband "know
better." In other words, they’re intelligent, educated, and
accomplished people. Jodie’s husband is even a judge, an
expert in distinguishing between right and wrong. They know that
treating each other this way doesn’t make sense. They know IT
is wrong. But they also know that THEY are right.
And that’s exactly the
problem!
Silent treatments ensue when both
people feel they’re RIGHT. And the more intense each
spouse’s conviction to their perspective, the longer the
silence lasts. And, ironically, the more intelligent and the articulate
the couple, the MORE LIKELY they are to endure silence between them.
Because intelligent and articulate people have confidence in their
position and justification for holding their ground.
Although Jodie is surprised that her
and her husband, intelligent people, could be so petty; the fact is
that one reason they’re holding their silence for so long is
BECAUSE they’re intelligent. In other words, intellectual
capacity and marital satisfaction can be INVERSELY related. Let me say
it another way: When it comes to your marriage, you can be right or you
can be happy. But sometimes you can’t be both.
In a courtroom, a hospital, or an
office, right and wrong determine success or failure. The decision to
prescribe the right medicine, for example, could be the difference
between life and death. The relationship between the doctor and the
patient is secondary. Being RIGHT is what matters and what is rewarded.
But in marriage, being right has no
value. All that matters is the relationship.
Sometimes you have to choose. Do you
want to be right or do you want to be happily married?
Just because you’re
right/wrong paradigm works at the office doesn’t mean that
you should bring it home. "He who is a hammer thinks everything is a
nail." Some things work perfectly in one area of life and fail terribly
in another. In marriage, you have to be like a carpenter and know which
tool to use. The right/wrong mode is the WRONG tool to use in your
marriage.
The more you insist on being RIGHT,
the more you will be miserable in your marriage. Don’t go for
RIGHT; go for LOVE.
Jodie expects that because she and her
husband are "intelligent," they shouldn’t find themselves in
these petty stalemates. But just because Jodie and her husband have a
high IQ, doesn’t mean they have a high EQ.
IQ is a measure of your INTELLECTUAL
intelligence. The higher your IQ, the better your ability to process
information and determine what’s "right."
EQ is a measure of your EMOTIONAL
intelligence. The higher your EQ, the better your ability to connect
with people and succeed in relationships.
Just as some athletes are strong but
not fast, so too many people have a high IQ but a low EQ.
Bottom line: Intelligence, in the way
Jodie means it, has little bearing on her and her husband’s
ability to succeed in their marriage. In fact, a high IQ coupled with a
low EQ can be a disastrous combination for a marriage.
The good news, however, is that EQ
can be developed. Anyone can increase their
EQ and learn to make their marriage RIGHT.
Mort
Fertel
Author
& Founder of Marriage
Fitness with Mort
Fertel
Marriage Enrichment
Marriage Counseling
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