HOW DO YOU RESPOND TO YOUR SPOUSE?
Imagine your hubby or wife (mostly wife) has come from
work or out and comes home excited about what transpired out there. They are
excited and storm into your space with their excitement eager to share with you
their story. How do you respond to them?
So often our response to our partner’s stories can
either kill them or make them look forward to sharing their day with you. So
often we hear cases where a couple wonder what happened to them because they no
longer enjoy having conversations with each other. They instead prefer or look
forward to sharing their stories and having those conversations with their colleagues
at work or with that other person in their life. What started this lack of
excitement in sharing with our spouse our excitement and stories? It just could
be how we responded to them.
According to the Active
Construction Responding Model by Gables, Reiss, Impett & Asher, 2004,
our responses can send messages that are either active or passive, and
constructive or destructive. For instance, if your wife comes to you as a
husband telling you what new things the baby did today, or when you as a
husband comes home excited about a presentation you made at work, here are
different ways you as a husband or wife can respond to your spouse.
You can respond by
1. Rejoicing
with them and saying something like “Wow!
That’s great! I’m so happy for you! Tell me more about it!” This is what
they call a Nurturing or active constructive response.
2. Being
cold about it, not being moved by what you hear and only saying “Oh that is good”. This they call Cold or passive constructive response. You don’t out rightly rejoice with
them neither do you shun them out rudely.
3. Nicely
telling them that “Sorry I don’t have
time to listen to you right now”. This
they call Ignorant or passive destructive response
4. Out
rightly dismissing or belittling their excitement or story by saying “Only that! Or “You should have done better! Or ‘That’s something small” This they call Hurtfull or active
destructive response.
Which of the above four best describe how you usually respond to your spouse?
When do you find yourself responding in a not so nurturing way?
What needs to change for you to respond in a nurturing way?