Get Past The Burden Of Feeling Like A Failure To Her
Your wife is not happy. Her job is frustrating as heck. The kids aren’t listening to her. And you’re not enough for her.
Just hearing all this makes my stomach cringe. To be married to a woman laden with problems is overwhelming for a guy.
Often his natural response is to take on the burden of her unhappiness and compound it by feeling like a failure if he can’t help her make things better.
Do you take on the burden of your wife’s problems?
An immature woman will blame a man for not perfectly supporting her or making things better.
A mature woman will take responsibility for her situation. She will notice her mindset, her attitude, and her projections.
Note, this is not easy and takes a lot of work to gain this level of maturity, for men and women.
To be honest, many of my clients are in a relationship with an immature woman. And to be clear, this doesn’t mean she’s to blame for your relationship problems.
What’s more important to look at is how you enable her immaturity and take it on as your problem to solve.
Do you enable immature behavior in your wife?
Enabling happens in many different ways, such as fixing, pleasing, rescuing. Anything that you would do to try to “make her better.”
I know this dynamic firsthand as it’s been my own personal dynamic in relationship. As a coach, I can go into classic fixer behavior.
But the problem is that when I do the fixer bit, my partner becomes a burden to me, to such an extent that I can lose my shit and want to push the eject button.
And then I become untrustworthy.
If you’re acting from a compensating behavior such as a pleaser, fixer, or rescuer, you’re taking a burden onto yourself which is unsustainable. Until you recognize that, you’ll blame her for being the problem.
What’s your compensating behavior in your relationship?
All these behaviors are a burden to you and they get even further compounded when you use a self-talk script of “I failed her.”
You can’t be powerful in relationship when you feel overwhelmed and burdened.
The first step to taking back your power is noticing your compensating behaviors and how they further compound your relationship challenges.
So the compensating behavior is not about her, it’s about you trying to heal a deep wound within yourself – be it neglect, abandonment, or some other form of abuse.
Noticing hooks and triggers is the start of you owning your shit and taking charge of it, instead of dumping it onto her with blame or judgment.
The next step is standing side-by-side with your partner, listening and loving, without offering too much advice, if any.
This means listening to her problems without taking it on as your problem but staying compassionate.
Do you want to let go of the burdens in your relationship?
Check out the video below for three quick tips on how to diminish the burden so that you can be in your power to create the marriage you want.
Let’s face it, we’re in a relationship to experience a richer and bigger life. If we feel burdened, weighted, or stressed frequently, our relationship suffers.
We are not achieving the mission of a bigger, richer life with a partner.
Note, this is different than the immature expectation of being completed or made whole by a partner.
This is a form of codependence and causes unhealthy relational dynamics.
How can you get healthy in your relationship today?
Take the first step and let’s have a quick chat.
A guaranteed, powerful conversation to help you get the upper hand on your partner’s verbose ways. I’d be honored to hear from you.
And to be clear, talking with me is just an honest, real conversation between two guys. No sales pitch. To get started, shoot me a quick email.
And for the many women wanting to learn more about men, here is a special link for you women.
Lastly for the men who aren’t ready to talk 1:1 and still want to transform their marriage, try out the Men’s Relationship School for free.
It’s also a great way to get to know me and see if my coaching style is a fit for you.