A Summary of Dr.
Harley's Basic Concepts
This is a
brief summary of the Basic Concepts that I use whenever I try
to save a marriage. If you apply them all to your marriage,
you will do what most couples want to do, but have failed to
do -- fall in love and stay in love. And that's what
ultimately saves marriage -- restoring the feeling of love.
Of course, it
takes much more than just the feeling of love to build a
successful marriage. It takes your willingness and ability to
care for and protect each other. But that feeling of
incredible attraction is the best litmus test of your success
in giving each other the care and protection that you need.
When you are
in love, your emotions help you meet each other's emotional
needs. They provide instincts that you may not have even known
you have -- instincts to be affectionate, sexual,
conversational, recreational, honest and admiring. These all
seem to come naturally when you are in love.
But when you
fall out of love, everything that will help your marriage
seems unnatural. Your instincts turn against marital recovery.
That's why I've created these Basic Concepts -- to help you do
what it takes to restore your love for each other when you are
not in love, when you don't feel like doing any of them. And
then once your love is restored, these concepts will help you
stay in love for the rest of your lives.
Basic
Concept #1: The Love Bank
In my
struggle to learn how to save marriages, I eventually
discovered that the best way to do it was to teach couples how
to fall in love with each other -- and stay in love. So in the
early ‘70s, I created a concept that I called the Love Bank to
help couples understand how people fall in and out of love.
This concept, perhaps more than any other that I created,
helped couples realize that almost everything they did
affected their love for each other either positively or
negatively. And that awareness set most of them on a course of
action that preserved their love and saved their marriages.
Within each
of us is a Love Bank that keeps track of the way each person
treats us. Everyone we know has an account and the things they
do either deposit or withdraw love units from their accounts.
It's your emotions' way of encouraging you to be with those
who make you happy. When you associate someone with good
feelings, deposits are made into that person's account in your
Love Bank. And when the Love Bank reaches a certain level of
deposits (the romantic love threshold), the feeling of love is
triggered. As long as your Love Bank balance remains above
that threshold, you will experience the feeling of love. But
when it falls below that threshold, you will lose that
feeling. You will like anyone with a balance above zero, but
you will only be in love with someone whose balance is above
the love threshold.
However, your
emotions do not simply encourage you to be with those who make
you happy -- they also discourage you from being with those
who make you unhappy. Whenever you associate someone with bad
feelings, withdrawals are made in your Love Bank. And if you
withdraw more than you deposit, your Love Bank balance can
fall below zero. When that happens the Love Bank turns into
the Hate Bank. You will dislike those with moderate negative
balances, but if the balance falls below the hate threshold,
you will hate the person.
Try living
with a spouse you hate! Your emotions are doing everything
they can to get you out of there -- and divorce is one of the
most logical ways to escape.
Couples
usually ask for my advice when they are just about ready to
throw in the towel. Their Love Banks have been losing love
units so long that they are now deeply in the red. And their
negative Love Bank accounts make them feel uncomfortable just
being in the same room with each other. They cannot imagine
surviving marriage for another year, let alone ever being in
love again.
But that's my
job -- to help them fall in love with each other again. I
encourage them to stop making Love Bank withdrawals, and start
making Love Bank deposits. I created all of the remaining
Basic Concepts to help couples achieve those objectives.
Basic
Concept #2: Instincts and Habits
Instincts are
behavioral patterns that we are born with, and habits are
patterns that we learn. Both of them tend to be repeated again
and again almost effortlessly. They are important in our
discussion of what it takes to be in love because it's our
behavior that makes deposits and withdrawals from Love Banks,
and our instincts and habits make up most of our behavior.
Instincts and
habits can make Love Bank deposits, so it is imperative to
know how to create those habits because once they are learned,
deposits are made repeatedly and almost effortlessly.
Unfortunately, many of our instincts and habits, such
as angry outbursts, contribute to Love Bank withdrawals. Since
they are repeated so often, they play a very important role in
the annihilation of Love Bank accounts. If we are to stop Love
Bank withdrawals, we must somehow stop destructive instincts
and habits in their tracks. Instincts are harder to stop than
habits, but they can both be avoided.
As we discuss
the remaining concepts, keep in mind the value of a good
habit, and the harm of a bad habit, because their effect on
Love Bank balances are multiplied by repetition.
Basic
Concept #3: The Most Important Emotional
Needs
How can you
deposit love units into each other's Love Banks the fastest?
That's a question I asked literally hundreds of couples when I
was first learning how to save marriages. Eventually their
answer became clear to me -- you must meet each other's most
important emotional needs.
You and your
spouse fell in love with each other because you made each
other very happy, and you made each other happy because you
met some of each other's important emotional needs. The only
way you and your spouse will stay in love is to keep meeting
those needs. Even when the feeling of love begins to fade, or
when it's gone entirely, it's not necessarily gone for good.
It can be recovered whenever you both go back to making large
Love Bank deposits.
First, be
sure you know what each other's most important emotional needs
are (complete the Emotional Needs Questionnaire). Then, learn
to meet the needs that are rated the highest in a way that is
fulfilling to your spouse, and enjoyable for you, too.
It's likely
that you and your spouse do not prioritize your needs in the
same order of importance. A highly important need for you may
not be as important to your spouse. So you may find yourself
trying to meet needs that seem unimportant to you. But your
spouse depends on you to meet those needs, and it's the most
effective and efficient way for you make large Love Bank
deposits.
Basic
Concept #4: The Policy of Undivided
Attention
Unless you
and your spouse schedule time each week for undivided
attention, it will be impossible to meet each other's most
important emotional needs. So to help you and your spouse
clear space in your schedule for each other, I have written
the Policy of Undivided Attention: Give your spouse your
undivided attention a minimum of fifteen hours each week,
using the time to meet the emotional needs of affection,
conversation, recreational companionship and sexual
fulfillment. This policy will help you avoid one of the most
common mistakes in marriage -- neglecting each other.
This Basic
Concept not only helps guarantee that you will meet each
other's emotional needs, but it also unlocks the door to the
use of all the other basic concepts. Without time for
undivided attention you will not be able to avoid Love Busters
and you will not be able to negotiate effectively. Time for
undivided attention is the necessary ingredient for everything
that's important in marriage.
And yet, as
soon as most couples marry, and especially when children
arrive, couples usually replace their time together with
activities of lesser importance. You probably did the same
thing. You tried to meet each other's needs with time "left
over," but sadly, there wasn't much time left over. Your lack
of private time together may have become a great cause of
unhappiness, and yet you felt incapable of preventing it. You
may have also found yourself bottling up your honest
expression of feelings because there was just no appropriate
time to talk.
Make your
time to be alone with each other your highest priority -- that
way it will never be replaced by activities of lesser value.
Your career, your time with your children, maintenance of your
home, and a host of other demands will all compete for your
time together. But if you follow the Policy of Undivided
Attention, you will not let anything steal from those precious
and crucial hours together.
I suggest
that you (a) spend time away from children and friends
whenever you give each other your undivided attention; (b) use
the time to meet the emotional needs of affection,
conversation, recreational companionship, and sexual
fulfillment; and (c) schedule at least fifteen hours together
each week. When you were dating, you gave each other this kind
of attention and you fell in love. When people have affairs,
they also give each other this kind of attention to keep their
love for each other alive. Why should courtship and affairs be
the only times love is created? Why can't it happen in
marriage as well? It can, if you set aside time every week to
give each other undivided attention.
Basic
Concept #5: Love Busters
When you meet
each other's most important emotional needs, you become each
other's source of greatest happiness. But if you are not
careful, you can also become each other's source of greatest
unhappiness.
It's
pointless to deposit love units if you withdraw them right
away. So in addition to meeting important emotional needs, you
must be sure to protect your spouse, and the Love Bank, from
withdrawals. And paying attention to how your everyday
behavior can make each other unhappy does that.
You and your
spouse were born to be demanding, disrespectful, angry,
annoying, independent (insensitive) and dishonest. These are
normal human traits that I call Love Busters because they
destroy the feeling of love spouses have for each other. But
if you promise to avoid being the cause of your spouse's
unhappiness, you will do whatever it takes to overcome these
destructive tendencies for your spouse's protection. By
eliminating Love Busters, you will not only be protecting your
spouse, but you will also be preserving your spouse's love for
you.
Basic
Concept #6: The Policy of Radical
Honesty
It isn't easy
to be honest. Honesty is an unpopular value these days, and
most couples have not made this commitment to each other. Many
marriage counselors and clergymen argue that honesty is not
always the best policy. They believe that it's cruel to
disclose past indiscretions and it's selfish to make such
disclosures. While it makes you feel better to get a mistake
off your chest, it causes your partner to suffer. So, they
argue, the truly caring thing to do is to lie about your
mistakes or at least keep them tucked away.
And if it's
compassionate to lie about sins of the past, why isn't it also
compassionate to lie about sins of the present -- or future?
To my way of thinking, it's like letting the proverbial
camel's nose under the tent. Eventually you will be dining
with the camel. Either honesty is always right, or you'll
always have an excuse for being dishonest.
To help
remind couples how important honesty is in marriage, I have
written the Policy of Radical Honesty: Reveal to your spouse
as much information about yourself as you know; your thoughts,
feelings, habits, likes, dislikes, personal history, daily
activities, and plans for the future.
Self-imposed
honesty with your spouse is essential to your marriage's
safety and success. Honesty will not only bring you closer to
each other emotionally, it will also prevent the creation of
destructive habits that are kept secret from your partner.
The Policy of
Radical Honesty combined with the Policy of Joint Agreement
are two guidelines that will help you create an open and
integrated lifestyle, one that will guarantee your love for
each other. They also prevent the creation of a secret second
life where infidelity, the greatest threat to your marriage,
can grow like mold in a damp, dark cellar.
Basic
Concept #7: The Giver and Taker
Have you ever
thought that your spouse is possessed? One moment he or she is
loving and thoughtful, and the next you are faced with
selfishness and thoughtlessness. Trust me, it's not a demon
you're up against, it's the two sides of our personalities. I
call them the Giver and the Taker.
All of us
want to make a difference in the lives of other. We want
others to be happy, and we want to contribute to their
happiness. When we feel that way, our Giver is influencing us.
The Giver's rule is do whatever you can to make others happy
and avoid anything that makes others unhappy, even if it makes
you unhappy. It encourages us to use that rule in our
relationships with other people.
But we also
want the best for ourselves. We want to be happy, too. When we
feel that way, our Taker is influencing us. The Taker's rule
is do whatever you can to make yourself happy, and avoid
anything that makes yourself unhappy, even if it makes others
unhappy. If that rule ever makes sense to you, it's because
your Taker is in control.
These two
primitive aspects of our personality are usually balanced in
our dealings with others. But in marriage they tend to take
turns being in charge. And that leads to most of the problems
that couples encounter. If we take the advice of our Giver, we
are willing to suffer to make our spouse happy, and if we take
the advice of our Taker, we are willing to let our spouse
suffer to make us happy. In either case the advice we are
given is short sighted because someone always gets hurt.
Basic
Concept #8: The Three States of Mind in
Marriage
The Giver and
Taker create moods that I call states of mind. These states of
mind have a tremendous influence on the way a husband and wife
try to resolve conflicts. But in each of the three states of
mind, negotiation is almost impossible. That's what makes
negotiation, in general, so tough in marriage.
When we are
in love and happy, we are usually in the State of
Intimacy. That state of mind
is controlled by the Giver, which encourages us to follow the
Giver's rule: do whatever you can to make your spouse happy
and avoid anything that makes your spouse unhappy, even if it
makes you unhappy. That rule can lead to habits that may be
good for our spouse, but can be disastrous for us because we
are not negotiating with our own interests in mind.
Sadly, flawed
agreements made in the state of Intimacy can lead to our own
unhappiness, and that in turn wakes the slumbering Taker. As
long as we are happy, our Taker has nothing to do, but when we
start feeling unhappy, our Taker rises to our rescue and
triggers the State of Conflict. With the Taker now in charge,
we are encouraged to follow the rule: do whatever you can to
make yourself happy, and avoid anything that makes yourself
unhappy, even if it makes others unhappy. The Taker also
encourages us to be demanding, disrespectful and angry in an
effort to force our spouse to make us happy. Fighting is the
Taker's favorite "negotiating" strategy.
When fighting
doesn't work, and we are still unhappy, the Taker encourages
us to take a new course of action that triggers the State of
Withdrawal. Instead of trying to force our spouse to make us
happy, our Taker wants us to give up on our spouse entirely.
We don't want our spouse to do anything for us, and we
certainly don't want to do anything for our spouse. In this
state of mind we are emotionally divorced.
How can
couples work their way back to the state of Intimacy once they
find themselves trapped in the state of Withdrawal? And once
they are back, how can they stay there? The answers to those
questions are found in the next Basic Concept.
Basic
Concept #9: The Policy of Joint
Agreement
Marital
instincts do not lead to fair negotiation. They either lead to
giving away the store (state of Intimacy) or robbing the bank
(state of Conflict). And in the state of Withdrawal, no one
even feels like negotiating. Yet, in order to meet each
other's most important needs and avoid Love Busters
consistently and effectively, fair negotiation is crucial in
marriage.
You need a
rule to help you override the shortsighted advice of your
Giver and Taker. Their advice is shortsighted because
regardless of the rule, someone gets hurt. We get hurt when we
follow the Giver's advice and our spouse gets hurt when we
follow the Taker's advice. So I've created a rule to guarantee
that no one gets hurt, and that's the ultimate goal in fair
negotiation. I call this rule the Policy of Joint Agreement:
Never do anything without an enthusiastic agreement between
you and your spouse.
Almost
everything you do affects each other. So it's very important
to know what that effect will be before you actually do it.
The Policy of Joint Agreement will help you remember to
consult with each other to be sure you avoid being the cause
of each other's unhappiness. It also makes negotiation
necessary, regardless of your state of mind. If you agree to
this policy, you will not be able to do anything without the
enthusiastic agreement of the other, so it forces you to
discuss your plans, and negotiate with each other's feelings
in mind. Without safe and pleasant negotiation, you will
simply not be able to reach an enthusiastic agreement.
Basic
Concept #10: Four Guidelines for Successful
Negotiation
If you and
your spouse are in conflict about anything, I recommend that
you do nothing until you can both agree enthusiastically about
a resolution. But how should you go about coming to that
agreement? I suggest you follow four essential guidelines.
Guideline
1: Set ground rules to make negotiation pleasant and
safe.
Ground rule 1: Try to
be pleasant and cheerful throughout negotiations
Ground rule 2: Put
safety first. Do not make demands, show disrespect, or become
angry when you negotiate, even if your spouse makes demands,
shows disrespect or becomes angry with you.
Ground rule 3: If you
reach an impasse and you do not seem to be getting anywhere,
or if one of you is starting to make demands, show disrespect
or become angry, stop negotiating and come back to the issue
later.
Guideline
2: Identify the problem from both perspectives with
mutual respect for those perspectives.
Guideline
3: Brainstorm with abandon - give your creativity a
chance to discover solutions that would make you both happy.
Carry a pad and pencil with you to jot down ideas as you think
of them throughout the day.
Guideline
4: Choose the solution that meets the conditions of the
Policy of Joint Agreement best - mutual and enthusiastic
agreement.
Whenever a
conflict arises, keep in mind the importance of finding a
solution that will deposit as many love units as possible,
while avoiding withdrawals. And be sure that the way
you find that solution also deposits love units and avoids
withdrawals.
TO LEARN ABOUT THESE
CONCEPTS IN MORE DETAIL, VISIT http://www.marriagebuilders.com/tm
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