Hiding starts early
Case in point my own desire, from an early age, to play the
piano. I guess I never came out and told anyone but I know that any
time I got near I played on it. If the other kids were playing outside,
eating ice cream, or any other fun activity - if there was a piano
around, I was playing it instead. So I was amazed when my mother said
she never knew I wanted to play.My own inability to say what I want has shaped my life in many ways. I am not sure how I learned the lesson, but I obviously did.
Emotions make it harder
Now, don’t get me wrong its not that I can never say what I want,
because that is not true. I have learned to ask for what I want from
waiters, cashiers, and other service people. I can even ask my friends
to do things with me. But, if it is something that has some kind of
emotional weight, it has not always been easy.Women get the impression you are pushy if you make it clear what you want and don’t back down at the first sign of dissent. We get labeled as “bitchy” if we insist on getting what we want. Of course, men, in similar situations would be considered “strong”. But I don’t think men are any better, over all than women at asking for what they really want. Emotional things, things that would seem to make them “weak” are strictly forbidden for men to ask.
Divorce and truth telling
It’s no wonder our divorce rate is so high. Because if we remain
in a place of being unable to communicate what we want and need from our
partners we are stuck in the helpless, Victim, position with no hope of
escape. Unless of course our partner is astute enough to glean what it
is we want from our manipulative behaviors. Of course, hiding our
sexual reality has become such a commonplace thing that according to a
Lavalife survey even 53% of men fake orgasms (82% of women do).Rescuers often can figure out what their partners want, but we don’t always get it exactly right. Guess work is like that, sometimes you win and sometimes you don’t.
Taking ownership of our wants and needs is the only hope we have of really getting what we want instead of some close approximation. Our partner’s may be pretty good, but nobody can always guess right.
Do you know what you want?
Someone commented on the O Magazine article that she had not addressed the whole issue because she hadn’t addressed how you even KNOW what it is you want. A lot of us are so out of touch with ourselves, our bodies and our emotions that we have no clue what we want. That makes it even tougher to ask doesn’t it?
Learning to connect with our bodies and emotions is the first step in being able to identify what we want and need. I love the series Mad Men on AMC. It portrays the social environment that set us up to never say what we want or know what it is we need. My favorite characters are the mysterious Dan Draper and his wife Betty. Dan (not his real name but, that’s the identity he assumed) doesn’t have a clue what he feels and is constantly in search of something that will make him feel something. Betty, his sweet, picturesque wife is equally clueless because she is not supposed to need or want anything other than the house and home that Dan provides her. Betty reminds me of my own mother during that period, dressing up to look the part, but always a bit out of place.
Isn’t that how we all feel when we deny ourselves awareness of what we want and need? Learning connect with our bodies and emotions and then being courageous enough to speak our truths changes everything.
What are you not saying?
Almost everyone hold things back from their partners. Do you? What do you not like to say? Do you tell your friends what you do and don’t want? Your family? I’d love to hear. Comment below.
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