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Therese Bogan, MFT |
The lift of an eyebrow or wave of a
hand can tell us all we need to know about our partner's mood. When
we see our old friend's slumped shoulders and feel them land on the
booth seat of the old diner, where we share lunch, we understand
envy, pride, or disappointment are at play. What can we hear in our
closest relationship when skin hits skin?
by, Therese Bogan, MFT
What we know in touch, with Strangers or
Intimate partners
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That hidden smile |
There are many gestures, body language
cues and facial expressions that are culturally coded and easy to
read as we walk down the street. Strangers can have an engagement
with us and give a quick read on our mood. Especially when it comes
to universal emotions, such as surprise or un/happiness, we have lots
of language to start with as strangers. Our intimate partners have
an advantage when we are expressing more of ourselves, in the touch
between us. Self emotions are feelings we are having inside that
have to do with our circumstance and our own story or experience.
An example is envy. When the
conversation veers toward your friends promotion, increase in pay and
sudden purchase of a new home your partner might pinch you or clamp
down on your hand and you get a clear hit of empathetic
understanding. You know envy is at play inside your beloved ~ maybe
even before they are ready to know it. What can we do with this
information that strangers can't do? We can develop intricate cues
and codes that no one else knows. That which is between only “US”
is a language only we know inside a partnership. And what's
fascinating is that recent research, a 2006 study by Matthew
Hertenstein, shows a real leaning toward couples knowing cues from
their partner's self based emotions: pride, envy, or embarrassment.
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Hold my hand and say . . . |
What partners can say with touch, that no one else can see
Erin
Thompson, Research Psychologist at King's College London explores
the data and significance of what Hertenstein's (2006) researchers
could not see. It sounds like there was communication between the
partners that researchers could not code, and that provided an
advantage for intimate partners, over the touch communication from a
stranger. What I know as a therapist, from watching and listening to
couples use their deepest selves to create love, trust and a working
relationship; is that knowing your partner's emotions can be an act
of altruism and self acceptance. Anything your partner might be
radiating in their touch has language in your love together ~ but
also it reflects something specific in your personal story. The way
you respond, read, and alter your own touch sends another message
into the mix and tells your partner what you might do with their
experience. And the dynamic dance of telling, acting, and knowing
between two partners is set in motion.
Labels: Attachment, Awareness, Boundaries, Embodiment, Emotional Health, Emotions, Therese Bogan