[continued from previous post]
If you are black and white in your thinking, and then when you and your wife have diffferent feelings (which is typical), then if you deem that one of your feelings is right and one is wrong, and you are sure you are right - then that really is the setup for emotional abuse - in my inexpert opinion. I do think an expert opinion would be good on that though.
Also your saying that you are strictly black and white in how you see things could mean there is serious inflxibility in what you say and do and demand, and that would contribulte to emotional abuse.
Your saying that you demand respect could be a problem. Because if you see something as disrespect, and she sees an incident in another light, for example not as a disrespect issue at all but as expressing her emotional needs, then unbendingly demanding your way because it makes you feel respected could certainly be emotional abuse.
Also your saying that “feelings are either right or wrong” seems to fly in the face of all the psychology I have ever read. My understanding is that all feelings are okay. Feelings are feelings. Its what you do about the feelings. As Catholics, we do not sin by feeling angry. We sin by sinfully acting on the anger. In a relationship, I believe, all feelings should be validated. If you tell people their feelings are wrong, thats invalidating, and probably its emotional abuse.
There are different levels of emotional intelligence. How high do you think yours is? I am just suggesting you think about it. Because its possible its not your strength. Maybe your other intellectual powers are the stronger ones, like mental and logical intelligence. If you have high emotional intelligence, then probaly everyone considers you a real feeling kind of guy, sensitve, empathetic, understanding and people flock to you when they need to feel better about themselves, and they thank you a lot for helping them feel so much better about themselves and life. If thats the case, you probably have very high emotional intelligence. But if emotional intelligence is not your strength, and your wife says you emotionally hurt her, then an expert could probably give you some tips to improve the situation, things that never occured to you.
Also possibly your wife is not that in touch with her own feelings, at least not in touch enough to be able to undrstand and communicate them. But maybe she is right in saying you are somehow the reason she feels so bad. She just can’t sort out and communicate what you can do to make her better. A counselor could help her sort it out.
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Also, about
counseling - there are really good ones out there but there are an awful lot of bad ones! There really is virtually no accountablity for the counselors when people come to them desparate for help and they get no help (or worse). Really the only accountability is if they physcially abuse the patients - which is not something you generally have to worry about! But not getting help, wasting your time, money and hope is common.
Also there are many approaches to fixing problems and the approach the counselor is accustomed to taking may not be the one you need. For example, the approach many, many counselors take is to just listen, so you can vent, and hear yourself talk, and they nod and affirm, yes, yes, hmmm, and withhold advice. They just provide a place for you to discover your own answers (isn’t that nice!) as you talk aloud and their money meter ticks. And if their approach is unsuccessful or sets you back in money, time or hope, it doesn’t cost them a dime, and in fact they collect their full fees whether they help you or not.
So thats why I would go to Gregory Popcak, who has a EWTN radio and TV programs, and is a very wise man who, in my opinion, feels an accountability to God to truly help people, and he does. You can hear his wisdom when he imparts advice on his radio or TV programs, or read his books (especially For Better…Forever!), and you can get his counseling serivces by telephone. It won’t be wasted money or time, he doesn’t just provide an ear, he truly listens and discerns and imparts wise counsel. Wasting time, money and hope is often the case with picking a local counselor who is not accompanied by strong reccomendations.
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