I remember the time when sleeping was difficult, and how disturbing was the silence when thoughts where stirring and you realize that there is n one to speak, not just because they sleep, it was deeper, but the fact they were sleeping removed even the feeling of "maybe there’ll be a change to connect and talk ". And suddenly the silence got deeper and the minutes longer.
I recall the need to do anything not to sit in that silence where the unspoken voices felt louder.
It’s day here when it’s night there, I think I would have loved to have this place back then, where the time zone difference would be a plus instead of feeling like jet lag. (Or you need to spend time in the night to follow up
).
I don’t know if it’s comforting but I think I understand what some of the reasons for your wake are.
Since couple of times I had the impression some feedback it is not always welcome, let me just go and say ahead this:
- It is only my intuition, i am responding because there’s no stop sign and because I can relate somewhat to the situation and I think I am seeing some clues about what is happening.
- It’s not a judgement or there’s no shadow reason behind it, and if the feedback is not welcome it is enough to say that once, I will not be engaging if it stirs you more or its not useful.
- To be safer about everyone else emotions I will try not to respond or clarify unless asked by you the OP, no matter how it land, it’s received, or the understanding of what I share gets a different attribution of intention than the one intention behind what I will write.
This is the only clarification I will offer ahead, not to sidetrack your space.
——
I have a feeling that you have an unmet need to be understood.
You feel that you’re making effort to reach out and allow others to peek into your inner emotional world. And you are trying to figure out how to show that part with the person you’re opening up to focusing on the important emotions you are experiencing right now, without being distracted by other things that they may find inside.
I think so because I have the impression you are trying to find a method to come across without being misjudged. You offer many explanations and details that might superficially look like rambling, confusing and at times contradictory.
I sense what you are trying to do is provide a full emotional context of how you feel to explain from where you feel the current leading emotions might stem from.
I would say you are trying to learn and master the language of emotions, and when that feels misunderstood you feel hurt because the connection you are trying to establish feels rejected and this kind of communication where you truly open yourself leaves you vulnerable. And that might be outside of your usual historical comfort zone.
I have the impression that you are trying to parse your husband’s emotional state before allowing you to disclose your feelings.
What I mean by that, I imagine you are observing him and trying to figure out how safely a communication between your feeling and his empathy can be received.
I obviously don’t know if you are addressing him directly when you feel emotional unrest because I only get a sense from what you share. I am telling you my intuition is that you tend to probe his emotional state first, assessing where you stand right now (as in, you know your emotions and you try decode his, through observation before engaging). I feel like there’s a lot of work you invest in finding the correct communication before that communication actually occurs.
Hopefully if I use the word "gently" you won’t take offense, so gently: my impression is you are somewhat walking on eggshells when you feel the need to connect with your partner about your emotional needs.
I sense fear of misunderstanding and rejection (not of you, of the emotions you express), and I wonder if that’s not self sabotaging your attempts.
You explain a lot to avoid being misunderstood and misjudged, you utilize a form you curated ahead to trace a path towards his empathy, using curated form and language that you think it will help avoid any emotional land mines you believe you have identified ahead through observation. In short I imagine you put effort in preparing for the conversation, possibly playing it in your mind before it happens, and you follow through that schema when you gather the confidence to speak.
If it’s playing as expected then no problem. But if there’s an unexpected reaction that throws you out of pace, and you’re left in "improvisation land", where there’s no time to reflect enough about the message form without "withdrawing and regrouping " - which could feel as retreat and avoidance or dismissal to your partner - so you have to resort to "learned language " to get out of this pickle without neither of you feeling hurt.
I wonder if this is resonating with what actually you experience: did you notice if when you are met with an empasse, you tend to resort to "therapy language " to mitigate the effects of misunderstandings?
I ask so, because I think therapy has a very specific language designed to help people through emotional chaos and help them find their way, and this language uses a sort of "codified detachment " that is useful for leading a patient through their emotions into awareness.
However I suspect the same kind of language that works for therapy and makes you feel better, can have a different or opposite effect when it is used in "partner to partner connection " than when it is used in "therapist- patient communication ".
I say this because our nerve systems are usually very sensitive to associate what makes us feel better with safety. If a specific technique or language Carrie’s with positive outcomes in therapy, we might unconsciously associate that with relief, and we might adopt it outside it’s intended environment, unintentionally, but we might do it.
A thing that I feel it’s important when you are dealing with trauma and pain between partners, is this: "I am not your therapist, I am your partner". This is how I am usually expressing it.
What I mean by it is that I will not approach you, my partner, with curated or codified language because that’s helpful in different settings.
I approach you directly, through the deeper connection that we share, communicating feelings and emotions in a straight manner as honestly as it can get. Even if I think that can be painful, if it’s felt and causes distress and discomfort, it must be spoken and delivered with its raw emotional load. I
think that has a better chance to land and seed in, even if it’s first reception triggers pain or defensiveness. Eventually it can be helpful to add that "I know this can be harsh to hear and I understand if it makes you feel bad. But it’s what I feel now, I wanted you to listen and you deserve to know". Then leave them space to digest and see if they feel like this is something worthy to work it out (alone, with you or in therapy).
Sure there’s no guarantee that whatever you feeling is received in the way you want it to be received. It can still be met with reaction instead of with response.
But it’s not detached, it doesn’t carry any "therapeutical sanitation " it is connected with the other person by closeness and familiarity just as much as the disclosure of warmth is (but obviously positive emotions are better received generally).
I also have the impression that it is you the partner who is making the most effort in connecting and closing the emotional gap.
I don’t know if he’s coming around in the same measure. What I think is that you showing up and trying to start the connection even with difficult conversations is meaningful.
I am hazarding an advice here that you should carefully consider before jumping on it, as you know what kind of emotional tension you two are breathing in this moment, see if it makes sense or it’s counterproductive:
You should keep showing up for him. Even if the responses aren’t always what you hoped for, the mere fact that you are the one initiating brings value and a sense of care to your partner. Showing up is one of the hardest things to do and one of the most meaningful things you can do.
Because it signals "you matter", you approach them being vulnerable while you could choose to avoid and hide.
Even if it’s met with aggression and resentment, it gets registered as an act of love and respectful kindness, it will likely matter in the long run.
But I know it can be painful, you will possibly be met with a lot of animosity that can feel like rejection.
It’s not necessarily like that. It’s poking a hole into the walls of his emotional bubble, and the pressure that leaks out and hits you, is his own emotional pressure releasing just a little bit.
You take a hit, but you also lower any build up that can influence his internal state and his moods.
Probably if you find a way of communicating that works, the holes you poke might be wider, and the air hitting you on might still be strong, but distributed, nod an air blade but more of a venting. If that works also his own emotional pressure will likely decrease in kind.
Mind that you don’t have to do it for his benefit (you can sometimes when you feel you are in a better place than him), you are not his therapist. The above advice is intended for when you have an emotional item that you feel the need to share or confront with him.
You need this approach for your own healing and peace. The suggestion how to approach it is to help in minimizing the chance that it will backfire instead of helping you.
The fact that helping you might also help him, it’s a bonus, not the goal.
Finally one thing you said about melatonin and nightmares.
I am curious about it, melatonin is naturally produced and it should help us to get a more nourishing rest.
It helps to reach the deeper sleep, the restoring one, where dreams happens, so potentially it should help to reach your subconscious and allow it to release and integrate through dreaming that will be forgotten the day after.
It’s a sort of detox for the subconscious and a good booster for your body and brain health and energy recuperation.
Have you spoke about this side effect with your doctor or therapist? One to make sure it’s not the pill you take that is bad for you (maybe there’s a better one to try), the second to see if that’s a possible door to shed a light on and explore.
Note - there are other things that jump to my eye (his described behaviors), I didn’t address them as I suspect they might be more a sensitive topic and I don’t know if you want to hear what is unavoidably second hand speculation. I’m learning that is not well received, so I’m keeping it to myself and will try to unload that information.
I tried to focus on the "you side" only.
Hope it is helpful in getting more sleep, (out of boredom if anything).
— insight into: the lots of edits are actually fixing the autocorrect when I write. Example-> calling your efforts "meaningful" was autocorrected into "meaningless ". So there is that. I hope I caught them all.
[This message edited by BackfromtheStorm at 9:14 AM, Saturday, July 18th]