“My husband and I communicate well enough on the surface, but I feel we are drifting apart deep down. I for one don’t feel like he understands me that much any more.“
The basis of emotional closeness in a relationship is empathy, the foundation of the experience of “we” rather than just “I” or “you.” If you sense that your partner really feels how it is for you, you feel less stressed, plus closer and more trusting, and more inclined to give empathy to them – and the same is certainly true for them with regard to you.
Fundamentally, empathy is a skill, like any other, and you can get better at it. And much the same, you can ask your partner to get better at it, too! Plus, getting better at empathy will only help a person become a better parent.
Emotional Imagination
Empathy is not agreement or approval. It is simply understanding, the intuitive sensing of another person’s underlying feelings, wants, and psychological dynamics – looking at the world from behind the other’s eyes. “What would I be feeling if I were him or her?”
Empathy is the expression of four basic skills:
- Pay attention
- Inquire
- Dig down
- Double check
Pay Attention
Attention is like a spotlight, illuminating its object – and you can get better at attention in several ways:
- Calm yourself.
- Consciously choose to give your attention over to your partner for a time.
- Just listen, without developing your case against what the other is saying.
- Keep the focus on the other’s experience, rather than on circumstances or beliefs or ideas
Inquire
Empathy is a process of discovery. You study what is under one stone. Then you ask an open-ended question, such as the ones below, that turns over another.
- Can you say more about ___________?
- How was it for you that ___________?
- How do you feel about him/her?
- What do you mean when you say _____________?
- What’s your gut feeling about __________?
- What do you think about ____________?
- What is really bothering you?
- What are you concerned they’ll do?
- What was the most upsetting part of all that?
- What do you wish would have happened instead?
- How was this like ____________ [i.e. some similar thing] for you?
Dig Down
The personality is layered like a parfait, with softer and younger material at the bottom. The empathic listener:
- Tries to get a sense of the softer feelings – hurt, fear, or shame – that are usually behind anger or a tough façade.
- Imagines the insecure, scared, suffering person behind the other’s eyes.
- Wonders how childhood and other experiences could have affected his or her thoughts, feelings, and wants today.
- Considers the underlying, positive wants – e.g., safety, autonomy, feeling valued – the other is seeking to fulfill, although perhaps in ways one doesn’t like.
- Inquires gently about the deeper layers – without trying to play therapist. This must be done carefully, usually toward the end of a conversation, without making it seem like the here-and-now elements in what the other is saying are unimportant, especially if they are about you.
Double Check
When we receive a communication, we need to tell the sender, “Message received.” Otherwise, he or she will tend to keep broadcasting, ever more powerfully, in an effort to get through. Try questions like these:
- “Let me say back what I hear you saying. Are you saying that ______________?”
- I’m not sure I fully understand this, but is it like ___________?
- Is the key point that ____________?
- Is it correct to say that you felt ___________?
- So one part is _________, another part is _________, and a third part is __________, right?
The Rewards of Empathy
With a better idea of the feelings and wants of our partner, we are more able to solve problems together. It’s like dancing: a couple shines when each person is attuned to the other’s mood and rhythms and intentions.
Additionally, when our partner feels understood, he or she is more willing to extend understanding in turn. Once pure survival needs are handled, the deepest question of all in any important relationship is, “Do you understand me?” Until it is answered with a “Yes,” that question will keep troubling the waters of any the relationship.
But when understanding is continually refreshed by new empathy, connections are constantly re-knit, strengthening the fabric of the relationship.
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This is an article adapted from the book Mother Nurture (2002) by Rick Hanson, Ph.D., Jan Hanson, M.S. and Ricki Pollycove, M.D.