Words on Relationships
Balance your Brain
Crucible Therapy vs Gottman Therapy
Ellyn Bader’s Developmental Approach to Couples Therapy
Bader, Schnarch, Real, Perel: Differentiation in Couples Therapy
Differentiation vs. Attachment in Couples Therapy
Differentiation-Based Couples Therapy
Your Relational Brain
Anxious/Avoidant Attachment in Relationships
Women’s Retreats Near Sacramento
Men’s Retreats near Sacramento
Your Relational Brain
Your relational brain is the part of your brain that is designed to help you have healthy relationships with other people.
When your relational brain is online, you care about your partner, and you also care about yourself. You’re less likely to do or say something that makes your partner uncomfortable, unless you have a really good reason to do so.
Your relational brain sees your partner as a living, breathing, human being, just like you. It sees their love, their passion, their sadness, their longing.
Right Mind Relationships
The two halves of the human brain are physically separate from each other, except for a connecting organ that is about one inch in diameter. Each half responds to the world in its own way:
Common Relationship Dynamics
Relationships are full of self-reinforcing dynamics. Each partner shows up in a way that makes it easy for the other to show up in the complementary way.
You get to choose how far you move into each dynamic. When you move toward the center, you make it easier for your partner to do the same. When you move away from the center, you make it easier for your partner to do the same.
The solution to these dynamics is for one person to take a step away from their instinctive behavior, and toward the center.
Most of these dynamics show up, to varying degrees, in most relationships.
Parental Blindness
A child’s brain has a safety filter that prevents the child from clearly seeing the worst things the parents parents are doing
We still learn to replicate those things, but we remain blind to them unless we do something about the filter.