Ronni
Well-known Member
- Location
- Nashville TN
Reading an article the other day...I can't remember where I read it, unfortunately, so I can't cite the source. But I copied a portion because it really resonated with me.
"It's not disagreements over the dinner menu or the remote control that lead a couple to divorce. It’s the disagreements over who is in charge and who isn’t, and the stress and disruption that come along with these disagreements. Couples with unresolved dominance may last for a while, maybe even forever, but their relationship is inherently unstable."
I believe that every relationship is a dance of dominance and submission (not like in 50 Shades of Gray submission...bear with me here.) There are some things I excel at and some things that Ron does. He's useless (by his own admission) when it comes to technology, and I get anxious about vehicle issues because I don't know cars. He is certainly better at the handyman type stuff, while I do far better than him with decorating, color choices etc. Many other examples. He's in charge about some things and I am about others. We defer to each other in those areas.
In my prior marriage, my ex HAD to be dominant in EVERYTHING. His opinion/decision was always the dominant one under every circumstance, even in situations where my own knowledge base was far greater than his. Even separate from his abuse, this trait alone was devastating to the marriage.
I think that struggle for power, that effort to be in charge, underlies many arguments and issues in relationships. The need to be right, the need to not come across as weak or powerless, to not make oneself vulnerable...that kind of struggle in a relationship is at the base of many arguments, unrecognized as such, but nonetheless fueling the discord.
Is this something you have dealt with in your relationship?
"It's not disagreements over the dinner menu or the remote control that lead a couple to divorce. It’s the disagreements over who is in charge and who isn’t, and the stress and disruption that come along with these disagreements. Couples with unresolved dominance may last for a while, maybe even forever, but their relationship is inherently unstable."
I believe that every relationship is a dance of dominance and submission (not like in 50 Shades of Gray submission...bear with me here.) There are some things I excel at and some things that Ron does. He's useless (by his own admission) when it comes to technology, and I get anxious about vehicle issues because I don't know cars. He is certainly better at the handyman type stuff, while I do far better than him with decorating, color choices etc. Many other examples. He's in charge about some things and I am about others. We defer to each other in those areas.
In my prior marriage, my ex HAD to be dominant in EVERYTHING. His opinion/decision was always the dominant one under every circumstance, even in situations where my own knowledge base was far greater than his. Even separate from his abuse, this trait alone was devastating to the marriage.
I think that struggle for power, that effort to be in charge, underlies many arguments and issues in relationships. The need to be right, the need to not come across as weak or powerless, to not make oneself vulnerable...that kind of struggle in a relationship is at the base of many arguments, unrecognized as such, but nonetheless fueling the discord.
Is this something you have dealt with in your relationship?