How to Ask For What You Need

Understanding how you’re feelings and being able to ask for what you need is a great way to reduce conflict, resentment, and grow intimacy in your relationship

Today’s topic is one that plagues almost every couple and individual I’ve ever worked with.

Asking for what you need.

For a society that has become so focused on the individual and individual needs, we as people are really not great at asking for what we need, especially from our partners. We’ve bought into a fairytale notion that our partners should just “know” what we need and what we want from them at any given time.

It’s interesting because so often we hear in conversation or in movies the phrase “I’m not a mind-reader!” and by and large people resonate with that and it makes sense. Of course you’re not a mind-reader! You don’t have superpowers! But when we think about it when we’re in it. In the context of our own relationship. Especially in the context of our long-term relationship. We’re not quite so forgiving.

We hold our partner to the expectation of knowing what we need because they know us.

And the reality is that we’re really not that great at knowing what our partner needs in a given moment. We’re pretty good at knowing that something might be up with our partner or that something seems off, but oftentimes the rest of it, exactly what’s wrong and what they need (if anything) from us, gets lost and partners often end up fumbling to do the right thing and may inadvertently make things worse.

So much can be saved if we all learn how to ask for what we need.

This can look like a variety of things but the general formula looks like this:

1.       Identify and label your feelings

·        Ex: “I’m feeling a little frustrated with the way that work went today”

·        Ex: “I’m feeling a little overwhelmed with everything that has to get done today”

·        Or if you can’t fully identify them: “I’m feeling a little funky, but I don’t know why”

 

2.       What you need in the moment

·        Ex: “would you mind giving me a hug?”

·        Ex: “Would you mind helping me get dinner started?”

·        Ex: “I need to take a few minutes by myself to feel my feelings”

 

3.       Go about your day.

The biggest thing to remember here is that your feelings are YOURS. Your partner didn’t cause them. They did not create them. They did not MAKE you feel anything. So when you’re identifying and labeling your feelings, take responsibility for them. Use “I” statements. (Not to be confused with an “I” followed by a “you” statement like “I’m feeling frustrated because you never help me”. That is not taking responsibility for your own feelings and that is not using an I statement.)

Most of us are not waking up in the morning and wondering how we can not support our partner and make them feel like garbage. Thus, when your partner knows what you want from them or is at least clued into what’s going on and can sit with you when you don’t know what you need, they’re more often than not willing to do what they can to assist you. Give them the opportunity to make an informed choice.

 

 

 

 

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Six Hours to a Better Relationship

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Happiness Anxiety