I've been listening to the podcasts on Relationship and Conflict
Relationship and Conflict
This time through, I'm listening because my partner and I are having some issues we'd like to work out and I'm looking for a framework. My partner expressed interest in listening to them too, so that's great. In some ways, just sharing the listening may create the framework.
Anyway, we were talking about the first one, and the idea that you can't get your emotional needs met in relationship. I've heard Ken say several times that we can't get our emotional needs met, those needs were set in us in early childhood, and you can't fix the past with the present. Okay. . .
When I look at intimate relationship, I come up with a short-list of emotional needs that I'm hoping to have satisfied in that kind of relationship: to love and be loved, to be part of family/larger group, to be known --- There's probably many more that I might perceive if I opened up to it.
Certainly some of these needs are there because I am a human (the psychology of herd animals, Maslow and all that). I don't think those needs are going away. So I have a hard time with the idea that these needs are never going to be met, because from time to time, they are met. So, what does this idea "your emotional needs will not be met" point to? The unsatisfactory nature of human existence? The transitory nature of existence (sometimes I'm loved, sometimes not)? What's the appropriate response?
As a coda, Woody Allen pops in mind, from "Annie Hall":
"I thought of that old joke: This guy goes to a psychiatrist and says, 'Doc, my brother's crazy, he thinks he's a chicken.' And the doctor says, 'Well why don't you turn him in?' and the guy says, 'I would, but I need the eggs.' Well, I guess that's pretty much now how I feel about relationships. They're totally irrational and crazy and absurd, but I guess we keep going through it because most of us need the eggs."