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Friday, November 22, 2024

Caring Isn’t Sharing

Posted by fxckfeelings on August 12, 2010

In this “Intervention”-happy society, we tend to believe that bluntly confronting friends about their problems is the ultimate solution. In reality, if you really want to warn a friend about worrisome behavior, it’s better to discuss risk without expressing worried feelings/”your behavior affects me in the following ways.” Worried feelings say you think people don’t know what they’re doing and you do, whereas discussing risk says you’re interested in how they value the cards in their hand and what they’re going to do with the losers. Don’t worry that your calm demeanor will fail to get across the depth of your concern. An in-your-face approach often fails to do much of anything.
Dr. Lastname

I’ve done some research, and I think my girlfriend is bipolar. She gets into these very good moods for no particular reason, and when she’s in this mood she can’t stop talking and seems high and silly (and that’s when she sometimes drinks too much). When she’s like that, she’s more obnoxious-funny than really funny, but she thinks she’s a riot. I’m not crazy about her up times, but what I really dread is the crash that follows; it’s hell for her and everyone around her. I know she sees a shrink, so I told her what I was worried about, but she acted like I was insulting her and then she said she was sorry, maybe I was right, but she likes feeling happy and doesn’t see anything wrong with it and why should it bother me. My goal isn’t to take away her joy, but I wonder if it’s bad for her to be bipolar and, if so, what she should do about it.

You’re right to worry about your girlfriend’s highs, but getting through to her may not be easy. Manic people aren’t exactly perceptive, unless by perceptive, you mean frighteningly giddy and overwhelming obnoxious.

Meanwhile, she sees her mania as the time when she’s fun and funniest, so she may resent you for criticizing her behavior when, from her point of view, she’s at her best, wittiest, and happiest.

Being manic also comes with the certainty that you can do no wrong. Between that and the ecstatic feelings, judgment is lost in a heavy, happy mist.

That’s why, if you have bipolar disorder, you should ask trusted friends to tell you if you seem over the top—it’s an “advance directive,” like the one you would use to tell them whether to authorize CPR if you pass out—because mania makes it hard for you to judge for yourself, especially when you’re too busy dancing on cars in a bikini to notice.

Of course, your girlfriend has a milder form of the problem, but it makes her focus on how she feels, rather than on what’s happening now or on consequences. That’s why she’s heard what you have to say and doesn’t appear to give a shit.

So, instead of expressing worry and doom, encourage her to consider the risks while expressing confidence in her abilities, and respect for her right to make her own choices. If she can’t or won’t understand your warning, accept that fact and do your best with it.

You want her to heed your warning and save herself and your relationship, but if she can’t, it’s better for you to know now than to spend months and years in a negative struggle, trapped in an unhappy mist that will drive you crazy yourself.

STATEMENT:
Compose a statement that makes your best case in a non-coercive way. “You’re usually very responsible and good with people, but I worry about your high moods because you seem to get carried away more than you realize, lose touch with how other people react, and drink too much, and afterwards you’re always depressed and very unhappy. Don’t trust my view if you think I’m prejudiced; ask others who know you and ask a professional whether the mood swings might get worse. Then, whatever you decide, I know you’ll be thinking about what’s good for you, rather than what feels good.

I like my brother’s girlfriend—she seems like an all-around good person—but I really worry about the two of them together. They fight constantly, and from what I can tell, the things they fight about are things that are never going to change. Like, she hates that he works so late, but she knew he was a chef when they met and that the hours are long, and he loves his work and isn’t leaving it for anyone. Then he hates how stingy she is about money when it means going without things they don’t need, even when they can actually afford it. I hate to see them fight, but they seem absolutely determined to stay together even though neither one of them wants to, or is able to, change his or her lifestyle. I see that they love one another, and my brother wants to marry her, but I worry that they’re locking themselves into a lifetime of unhappiness.

You’re right not to criticize a relationship that is obviously important and meaningful to your brother, for obvious reasons. What feels like worry to you will feel like criticism to him, with no good results to your relationship or his.

You can help him think rationally, however, (or at least satisfy yourself that you’ve done your best on that score), if you first show obvious respect for him, his girlfriend, and their effort to make things work. Keep your fear to yourself, because it always implies disrespect for his choices. Think like a hostage negotiator, with your brother’s future in bondage.

When he brings up an issue in their marriage, don’t talk about solutions; you’ve already decided there aren’t any, and trying to find one will just make you impatient. Instead, ask him about what will happen to him and her if they are who they are and life does what it does.

The key component you describe as possibly missing is acceptance—she can’t accept the hours dictated by his profession, and he can’t accept her money management–so it’s reasonable for you to wonder what’s likely to happen as their jobs become more complicated, they have kids, one of them gets sick, i.e., if life happens.

If you believe, as you do, that the things they can’t accept aren’t likely to change, then ask him whether, given the worst case scenario for his schedule and her spending, he thinks he can accept her as is and vice versa. You can share the notion that you think acceptance is a more important predictor than love of whether a relationship is likely to work.

Remember, you’re not asking him whether he thinks they’ll be happy together, because marriage is often painful and unhappy for everyone. Non-acceptance, not unhappiness, however, is what blows marriages apart.

You’re asking him whether they’re likely to be able to continue to do business together and, if not, what impact that will have on their lives. If he hears you out and still goes forward with marriage, then at least you can accept that you did your best.

STATEMENT:
Here’s a statement of your mission. “You’ve got three good things going for you: you love one another, you really want to make things work, and you’re actively trying to find out whether you can live together. You can’t necessarily control your own work and money habits, let alone someone else’s, so you never know whether you can make things work, no matter how much you love one another; but doing what you’re doing is the way to find out and, as long as you have the courage to accept what you find, you can’t go wrong.”

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