Receiving Love Workbook: A Unique Twelve-Week Course for Couples and Singles
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Personal Growth
Relationships
Communication
Self-Discovery
Love
Healing Through Love
Coming of Age
Self-Discovery Journey
Personal Transformation
Healing Power of Love
Emotional Baggage
Wounded Characters
Mentor
Power of Love
Friends to Lovers
Imago Dialogue
Self-Awareness
Self-Esteem
Empathy
Giving & Receiving
About this ebook
Receiving Love: Transform Your Relationship by Letting Yourself Be Loved
In 2004, Harville Hendrix and his wife, Helen LaKelly Hunt, co-creators of Imago Relationship Therapy, authored Receiving Love, a critically acclaimed guide to cultivating a loving, long-lasting relationship that Publishers Weekly called "intelligent and insightful . . . wise and sophisticated." Now, in the Receiving Love Workbook, Hendrix and Hunt have constructed a companion to that groundbreaking book in which they outline a simple, practical plan that will help you to apply the advice and exercises in Receiving Love to your own relationship.
Receiving Love showed that while many men and women know how to give love, many more undermine their relationships by never having learned how to accept it. The Receiving Love Workbook will help you and your partner to explore the effect that this type of self-rejection has had in your individual lives and in your relationship as a couple. It contains a unique twelve-week course designed to help you work through the exercises in Receiving Love. It provides the same step-by-step instructions and examples that couples who participate in a couples' workshop or work with an Imago Relationship Therapist would experience.
For those who are ready to take specific steps to surmount the self-rejection and heal its causes, the Receiving Love Workbook will help you to make the changes that will establish an easy, natural pattern of giving and receiving love and that will create the relationship of your dreams.
Harville Hendrix
Harville Hendrix, Ph.D., a clinical pastoral counselor and co-creator of Imago Relationship Therapy, has more than thirty-five years' experience as an educator, public lecturer, and couples' therapist.
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Receiving Love Workbook - Harville Hendrix
How to Use the Receiving Love Workbook
If you are in a committed relationship that isn’t as close or fulfilling as you want it to be, this study guide is exactly right for you. Perhaps the intimacy and excitement that were there in the beginning have gone, or perhaps they were never there at all. Things are getting worse as the years pass, not better. You find yourself thinking it might make sense to end this relationship and find a partner who loves you more and can offer you the kind of hope and security you long for.
Perhaps you’re upset by the indifferent or hostile way you and your partner are connecting with each other. You often feel like you’re talking past
each other. You don’t seem to care about each other’s thoughts and feelings, or you become offended and defensive whenever you venture out beyond the safety of routine information. You might be able to decide who’s going to pick up the dry cleaning or take the kids to practice, but anything more personal feels as if you’re slipping into dangerous territory.
One wife we know described what it was like when she and her husband were living in this state of conflict: We were nothing more than roommates—roommates who didn’t even like each other.
They fought over everything, and couldn’t stop doing battle in front of their children. It didn’t take long for their pain to begin to poison the lives of their two young sons. The younger son had nightmares, and the older was showing disturbing signs of aggression in school. This couple finally reached out for help when they realized that their relationship problems were having a serious, negative impact on their children.
Sometimes, though, relationship problems are not so visible or openly expressed. Maybe you feel disappointed with your partner, rather than angry or resentful. You’re sad when you think about how seldom the two of you feel any closeness. When you think of sharing feelings of excitement or anxiety, you don’t think of your partner first. You think of your mother or your best friend. You are frustrated by how difficult even the simplest interactions have become. Why is the normal give-and-take in your relationship so hard? Other people seem to be able to ask one another for help, show appreciation, and get along with good feelings most of the time. Why can’t you?
The professional work we’ve been engaged in for the last twenty years or so has been an attempt to answer this question. What makes some relationships turn into fulfilling partnerships, and others into minefields of resentment and mistrust? How can the minefield evolve into a safe ground for nurturing growth? How can you turn your committed relationship into a partnership that heals your past wounds and fosters your wholeness?
The Receiving Love Workbook is a twelve-week course designed to help you and your partner work through the exercises in Part III of Receiving Love. This guide provides you with the complete step-by-step instructions and examples you would get if you participated in a Couples’ Workshop or worked with an Imago Relationship Therapist. Each of you should have your own copy of this workbook so you can each answer questions in your own book, with the privacy you want and need.
The purpose of the Receiving Love Workbook is to help you explore the consequences that self-rejection has had in your individual lives and in your relationship as a couple. One of the most significant and universal consequences of self-rejection is that it leads to an inability to receive love. Once you have an understanding of how self-rejection has kept you from being nourished by the love, appreciation, and support of those close to you, you are ready to take specific steps to surmount the self-rejection and heal its causes.
The most exciting truth we’ve discovered is that it’s possible for problematic relationships to become sources of healing and strength. Yes, you can bring back marriages that are on the brink of divorce. The same relationship that is now causing you grief can become the source of your personal happiness and spiritual growth.
At every life stage and in every way, we become who we are through our relationships. Injuries to our self-concept occur through our relationships with our parents in childhood. These injuries manifest themselves as problems in our committed adult relationships. And, these injuries can only be healed in committed adult relationships. The very person who is the cause
of our unhappiness holds the key to our liberation from pain.
Before beginning this workbook, please read all of Receiving Love by Harville Hendrix, Ph.D., and Helen LaKelly Hunt, Ph.D. We also recommend that you read Getting the Love You Want, though it is not essential for the successful completion of these exercises. Your successful participation in the process cadetailed in this workbook will be greatly facilitated by having an understanding of Imago Relationship Therapy. What follows is a summary discussion of the fundamental dynamics of intimate relationships, as conceptualized in Imago. (Please refer to Getting the Love You Want for a more complete discussion of Imago Relationship Therapy.)
HOW IMAGO RELATIONSHIP THERAPY
UNDERSTANDS RELATIONSHIPS
You are reading this workbook because your committed relationship isn’t as close and loving as you would like it to be. You may feel like this is your fault, or your partner’s fault, or you may blame rotten circumstances for your discontent. But before you decide that your relationship was a mistake, consider this: there are certain principles or laws
that are operative in all relationships. These laws function independently of who you and your partner are as individuals, and what your particular circumstances are. They serve as general rules about the way we, as human beings, fall in love and form relationships over time. Like everyone else, your choice of a mate and the way you connect to the person you’ve chosen has been influenced by factors within you that you are not conscious of.
YOUR CHOICE OF PARTNER IS NO ACCIDENT
Let’s start with the first reality: Your parents were not perfect. No matter how hard they tried or what good people they were, they were not undamaged enough themselves to be perfectly attuned to your unique and wonderful self. They did not support your development through the stages of childhood in just the right way that would bring out and strengthen all aspects of your temperament and personality.
So, the chances are good that you emerged from childhood with problems or unresolved difficulties with at least one of your parents. Glad to be finally out of your parents’ house and making your own decisions, you probably fell in and out of love several times, learning something of value each time. At some point, you chose the person you hoped would be your life partner. Obviously, this person attracted you on many different levels. If asked, you could list all the reasons you fell in love.
But you wouldn’t be able to list all the reasons you were attracted. None of us would. That’s because we have an unconscious attraction to potential partners who offer us the chance to work out unresolved problems from our childhood. As surprising as it may seem, we are drawn to people who have some of the same traits, characteristics, attitudes, beliefs, and/or behaviors as the parent who gave us the most trouble when we were children. This attraction would have to be unconscious, because who would commit to someone with problematic traits on purpose?
Once we get over our amazement at this trick of the subconscious, we can see that nature has actually handed us a fabulous opportunity. As an adult, we now have the chance to understand and heal the leftover wounds we sustained as children. If you think about it, you can see that only a partner who gave you a chance to work out the problems you were already carrying could offer you the opportunity to reclaim your wholeness.
If, say, you were fortunate enough to reach adulthood at peace with your intelligence but worried about your ability to get along with people, then a partner who did not challenge you to become more adept socially might seem like a good match. But you would miss out on the chance to grow in the area in which you need to grow more socially skilled. A partner who is a perfect mirror cannot stretch you into greater wholeness. That’s why we say that the purpose of committed relationships is to help you heal and become whole. It is in the course of doing the healing work that we find happiness.
THE COURSE OF LOVE IS WELL-ESTABLISHED
The word work
probably alerts you to the fact that healing isn’t easy. And that brings up something else you have to know: all romantic relationships go through stages. In the first stage, you don’t see the echo of childhood problems your partner embodies. You only see how beautiful, intelligent, funny, loving, talented, and sexy he or she is. You are in love and the world is a glorious place. Thank heavens for this stage of bliss. It affords some time-limited protection from the harder realities of life.
The second stage, however, is a challenge. This is the Power Struggle, which is where you probably are now. The rose-colored glasses of romantic love lose their tint, and you start seeing your partner in the cold, hard light of day. The same things that bugged you about your father are now starting to get you steamed about your husband. Only this time, you’re not going to cave in to another man’s arrogance and bossiness. You’re a grown woman and you’re going to fight! Or, let’s say you’re a man and your wife talks at you incessantly, just as your mother used to. It feels like more than you can bear. When you were a kid, you couldn’t run too far away from your mother, but you can darn sure find ways to hide from your wife.
For many couples, the Power Struggle is where they get stuck and stay stuck. It takes outside guidance and dedication by the two partners to work through this second stage and emerge into the third stage—Mature Love. Helping couples into the third stage is the purpose of our work in Imago Relationship Therapy. Mature Love is the oasis you can reside in, once you’ve crossed the desert of the Power Struggle. This is the stage where all the work that has gone before allows you to create a conscious relationship that is secure and lasting.
In Mature Love, you know yourself and your partner inside and out. You understand your histories. You have learned how to communicate, how to negotiate differences, and how to honor your individuality while strengthening your attachment. Completing the exercises in this workbook will be a significant contribution toward helping you reach the oasis of Mature Love.
One could say that this workbook is primarily for couples who are in the Power Struggle, who are trying to understand each other better and find a way to live peacefully. But because the central focus in this workbook is on how hard it is to let down barriers and receive love, we are addressing a subject that is larger than the stressful interactions that are part of the Power Struggle.
In fact, the following twelve sessions and their exercises are suitable for anyone who is unable or reluctant to let appreciation and support into their hearts and bodies, as well as their minds. Anyone in any situation can come to the realization that they can’t accept compliments, have trouble accepting help, and turn aside protestations of love. For that reason, you can benefit from using this workbook, whether you are madly in love, a disgruntled or reluctant partner, or someone enjoying the fruits of many years of relationship building.
The sessions are constructed to help you understand why you have the beliefs and behaviors you do, where they came from in your childhood, how your behavior fits with your partner’s, and how the changes you desire in your relationship can only occur when the two of you work together to achieve them. The goal is to help you become a more receptive partner, someone who can be nourished by the gifts of love that are everywhere around you.
UNDERSTANDING THE DEFENSES OF
MAXIMIZING AND MINIMIZING
One of the goals of this workbook is to help you identify the behaviors you use when you feel threatened emotionally. Everybody has defenses. Usually, they are so ingrained that we’re hardly aware of what our defenses are—although it’s a safe bet that our partners would be able to tell us. One’s defensive behavior tends to be obvious to other people.
An important concept in Imago Relationship Therapy involves maximizing and minimizing behaviors. We thought it would be helpful to discuss this concept here, so you will be familiar with these terms when you encounter them in the exercises. You will especially need to know what they mean as you complete Session 10.
Childhood wounds lead to the development of either maximizing or minimizing tendencies in adulthood, and partners who maximize and partners who minimize tend to pair with each other. Maximizers tend to exaggerate their energy, escalate their feelings, express intense emotions, and confuse their feelings with facts. When you ask maximizers what they think, they will tell you what they feel. Minimizers tend to diminish their energy by holding on to their feelings and showing little emotion. They are mainly interested in facts rather than feelings. When you ask minimizers what they feel, they will tell you what they think. Both maximizing and minimizing are survival tactics that have become habitual.
Everyone has elements of both maximizing and minimizing within them, since holding energy in and expressing energy outward are natural forms of defense. In early life, either maximizing or minimizing becomes dominant and habitual because it is effective in creating a feeling of safety. The imbalance, however, is ineffective in adult intimate partnerships because it creates danger, and thus fear, in the other partner. This results in a rupture of connection.
To clarify this concept further, let’s look at an example based on the couple used as an illustration in Session 9. Sally and Jim were amazed to find how well their wounds fit together. Sally had rebelled against the social straitjacket she thought her parents had tried to keep her in. Her way of fighting for her individuality was to withdraw her attention and her affection. This is something she did with Jim whenever she started boiling inside at his constant checking and double-checking of whatever she was doing.
Jim was stung by his wife’s withdrawals. Whenever she got quiet and uncommunicative, he compensated by becoming more expressive and emotional. He had the