http://blue.wellness.com/blog/20400/why-don-t-more-people-do-premarital-counseling/lisa-brookes-kift-mft
Luna - like I said in the last comment, I think most of us will attest to the fact that there are things that annoy us about our partners - and they would say the same. It's a case of "pick your battles" and work hard to shape your communication in a way that has the best chance of getting the desired effect. I think at a certain point we can benefit from accepting each other's "annoying" behavior - and consider ourselves lucky that it's not something more.
Posted by Lisa Brookes Kift, MFT
http://blue.wellness.com/blog/20400/why-don-t-more-people-do-premarital-counseling/lisa-brookes-kift-mft
Ben - I'd say most couples do things that annoy each other. Some of it you just deal with - other things that cause more distress for the partner might be things that can be worked on if the other person is willing to try.
So that leaves us with, is the person willing to try for the sake of the relationship? Usually, some awareness of a problem in the first place is necessary to implement change. Perhaps if the irritant is communicated in a way that isn't critical but comes from more of a place of "I feel ___ when you do ___," you might see some progress.
So - snoring, exaggerating and interrupting. All 3 of those seem like things that might have solutions. The second two would likely take more work in that your partner may not even be aware that they're doing it.
Maybe if you try to address them one at at time? Good luck.
Posted by Lisa Brookes Kift, MFT
http://blue.wellness.com/blog/20400/why-don-t-more-people-do-premarital-counseling/lisa-brookes-kift-mft
I feel like my partner's annoying traits do sometimes add-up to a problem. A few of them we've been able to talk through and even improve. But, not all.
Posted by Luna
http://blue.wellness.com/blog/20400/why-don-t-more-people-do-premarital-counseling/lisa-brookes-kift-mft
Is it true that there are few if any professional solutions for dealing with annoyances?
I've heard that if something about my partner really annoys me and we talk about it, but there's no resolution as the annoyance is a stylistic issue that the person has no self-awareness to change--that we're toast?
Maybe some people can deal with snoring, some can deal with exaggerating or interrupting. But what happens when you're dealing with all three?
Any ideas there?
Posted by Ben
http://blue.wellness.com/blog/20400/why-don-t-more-people-do-premarital-counseling/lisa-brookes-kift-mft
My husband and I had a great experience with pre-marital counseling. We were required to do it by our pastors that married us, which was fine with us. We definitely learned a lot from it! We entered into our marriage knowing where we needed work, we had realistic expectations of each other and our union, and really learned how to work together to make our marriage the best it can be. I agree that everyone should go through pre-marital counseling.
Posted by NatureKnows