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E-Book

E-Book, Englisch, 192 Seiten

Muehlhoff Marriage Forecasting


1. Auflage 2010
ISBN: 978-0-8308-6825-4
Verlag: InterVarsity Press
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)

E-Book, Englisch, 192 Seiten

ISBN: 978-0-8308-6825-4
Verlag: InterVarsity Press
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)



What's the forecast for your marriage? Marriages are as variable as the weather, and every marriage has a climate. Some are chilly and lack intimacy. Others are stormy and filled with conflict. But while the weather outdoors is beyond our control, the communication climates within our homes can be changed--for the better.Communication specialist Tim Muehlhoff offers simple strategies for improving the climate of a marriage. Our individual words and actions always take place within an overall atmosphere of expectations. Without a healthy climate of trust, we are prone to miscommunication and misunderstanding. Muehlhoff shows how to take an accurate climate reading of a relationship and explains what causes climates of poor communication. With current research on marital communication, listening skills, empathy and conflict resolution, Marriage Forecasting provides practical ways for couples to rebuild a warm relational climate.Don't just talk about the weather. Break the cold front, clear the fog, and change the extended outlook for your marriage.

Tim Muehlhoff (PhD, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) is a professor of communication at Biola University in La Mirada, California, where he teaches classes in family communication, interpersonal communication, persuasion, and gender. He is the author of I Beg to Differ and Marriage Forecasting, and the coauthor of The God Conversation: Using Stories and Illustrations to Explain Your Faith and Authentic Communication: Christian Speech Engaging Culture. Muehlhoff and his wife, Noreen, are frequent speakers at FamilyLife Marriage Conferences, and he has served with Campus Crusade since 1986. They live in Brea, California, with their three boys.
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1

What Are communication Climates?


While at a dinner party, we sat with some friends who are ardent campers. They told story after story of pitching tents next to streams, going to sleep in thermal underwear and waking at sunrise to catch breakfast. Noreen and I chuckled as we listened. Shifting the conversation to us, they asked if we liked to camp. Noreen laughed and said, “No. Tim’s not that hardy.”

I also laughed, but became increasingly silent and defensive. I could feel a strong chill blow through our climate. I interpreted the word hardy to be a dig at my masculinity. For the rest of the dinner party, I was cool and distant toward Noreen.

During the ride home, Noreen could feel the shift in our climate and asked what was wrong. After I repeated her comment, she was immediately apologetic and explained that she simply meant I am not the outdoorsy type. She’s right. Growing up, my two older brothers and I were so involved in sports that there was no time to go camping. As a result, my idea of roughing it is to stay at a hotel that doesn’t have ESPN in HD.

Have there been times your spouse has said something that hurt you or made you angry, and it shut down communication? Once the communication climate between you and your spouse is disrupted, it’s difficult and even unwise to ignore. And ignoring a communication climate is as futile as ignoring the climate outside your door.

I know, I’ve tried. My friend and I—both tennis junkies—once got a case of cabin fever in the middle of January in Michigan. On the first sunny day, with the temperature just above freezing, we grabbed our rackets and snow shovels, and headed off to some outdoor courts. Except for looking extremely odd, our plan seemed to work—for a while. During one rally, a partially frozen ball slammed through the frigid strings of my racket. Game over.

That day we learned a painful lesson: Mother Nature will not be ignored. The climate outside your door determines when and what activities you can do, from tennis to picnics to a trip to the beach. The same is true of the communication climate that surrounds our marriages. It’s possible to ignore a wintery marital climate for a while, but it will eventually compromise your ability to communicate with each other. A key step to improving communication with your spouse is to understand the overall climate of the relationship in which the communication takes place.

What Is a Communication Climate?

A communication climate is the overarching sense of value and satisfaction individuals feel as they interact with each other and go about daily activities. While all marriages engage in roughly the same activities—dividing up household responsibilities, making ends meet, instructing and disciplining children, helping with endless homework, balancing work and home schedules, preparing for holidays, interacting with in-laws—the communication climate for each particular couple can greatly vary.

Some couples live in a perpetually chilly climate. They don’t argue with each other, yet there is no warmth or intimacy between them. They go about their daily routines and never really connect. Other couples exist in a climate that is stormy and filled with arguments. These couples can’t seem to agree on anything, and talking about issues only seems to make matters worse. Others live in a climate that is partly cloudy; communication is fine as long as certain topics—finances, sex, schedules—are avoided. Like rain clouds, these topics hang over a marriage and threaten to disrupt intimacy if they are discussed. And some couples seem to live in a state of never-ending sunshine. They seem to always be happy and affirming of one another, and they never utter a harsh word toward each other. The key for each of these couples is to understand how their climate formed and what it takes to maintain or alter it.

How you regularly interact with your spouse is the single greatest factor in establishing the communication climate that surrounds your marriage. It isn’t “what we communicate about that shapes a relational climate, as much as how we speak and act toward one another,” note the authors of Interplay: The Process of Interpersonal Communication.[1] The book of Proverbs forcefully states that both life and death reside in the tongue (see 18:21). Just as our speech can impart life and death, it also establishes the type of marital climate we experience every day.

While communication scholars agree that communication climates are vital to healthy relationships, not all scholars agree on the specific elements that make up a climate. While surveying journal articles, wading through current research, conducting my own research and speaking at marriage conferences for more than thirteen years, I’ve identified four key elements of a communication climate: acknowledgment, trust, expectations and commitment.[2] Each one of these elements warrants our attention.

Acknowledgment

Acknowledging another person is perhaps the most confirming form of communication and the most rare. We acknowledge another person when we take time to seek out and attend to his or her perspective. Acknowledgment is often expressed by eye contact, touching, asking questions and allowing the person to speak uninterrupted. Philosopher William James once said that the worst punishment he could think of was to exist in a community yet be unnoticed by others.

Acknowledging another person’s perspective does not mean that we necessarily condone or agree with it. Rather, we simply recognize the validity and uniqueness of that perspective. To notice and engage another person as unique and irreplaceable is a deeply encouraging form of interaction.

The Jewish philosopher Martin Buber identified three broad ways we recognize and interact with others.[3] In an I-It relationship we do not even acknowledge or recognize the humanity of a person. When individuals walk out of a coffee shop and ignore the pleas of a homeless person asking for spare change, an I-It relationship is established. I-You relationships are formed when we acknowledge the humanity of people, but engage them only according to their social role, or what they can do for us. The people who serve us lunch at the cafeteria, garbage collectors, casual work associates, mail carriers and bus drivers can easily be placed into this category. To foster an I-Thou relationship with a person is to view him as unique and irreplaceable. These are rare relationships in which we acknowledge and focus on that person’s qualities that no one else possesses.

When you first started dating your spouse, most likely this is what you felt when you were with him or her. You felt special and that you had your spouse’s undivided attention. Early in the marriage your positive qualities were consistently acknowledged by your spouse, resulting in a positive communication climate. However, over the years, you may have slowly slipped into an I-You relationship, coming to see your partner only in his or her role as a husband or wife.

In the movie Revolutionary Road, Kate Winslet plays a woman who falls in love and marries a man (Leonardo DiCaprio) she describes as the “most interesting person she’s ever met.” She acknowledges his unique traits and is swept away by them. Yet, over time, her estimation of him fades as she gradually comes to view him merely as a husband, salesman and provider. Every day he gets up, showers, dresses in a charcoal suit and leaves for a ten-hour workday. He dispassionately serves his role as husband and father, as she serves her role as dutiful wife and mother. If we are not careful, we can do the same. When we take our spouse for granted, not only do we stop acknowledging him or her, but we also see that person as someone serving a predictable, useful role.

To counteract this slip into I-You relationships, we need to remember that each person with whom we come in contact—from those who deliver our mail to our spouse—carries the imago Dei—the image of God. Of all the creatures God created, we carry a unique likeness of God and represent him as image bearers. In light of this theological truth, we should seek to uncover and acknowledge how each person, especially our spouse, uniquely reflects God’s image. As theologian and popular author Eugene Peterson states, “There are no dittos among souls.”[4]

Trust

With regularity, media report on politicians, clergy, sports figures and presidents being caught in lies. Young athletes have grown up in the steroids era and now look at sports heroes with a suspecting eye. The cumulative result of this chronic lack of trust is that we are encouraged “to interpret daily communication actions from a vantage point of mistrust and doubt.” If the communication climate between two people is marked by mistrust, a person “begins to question what is stated and looks for an unstated real answer, which begins a cycle of distrust and suspicion.”[5]

This cycle of distrust was evident in a couple I once met at a marriage conference. During a break, the husband approached me and said that, early in the marriage, he had repeatedly lied to his wife about his addiction to pornography, and now his wife no longer trusted him and wanted out of the marriage. As we were talking, the wife walked up. She confirmed both his story and her desire to call it quits. She explained that, even though he’d broken free of pornography, she doubted whether she could trust him again. “To be honest,” she...



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