Online Counsellor: Focus on Managing Individual Differences
As a relationship counsellor offering online and in-person counselling, coaching and couples therapy, I deal with a wide variety of challenges that the partners may encounter. One of the critical issues we often focus on in couples therapy is intolerance of individual differences. Marriage therapists view acceptance of individual differences as crucial for a healthy and lasting relationship. Individual differences refer to the variation among people regarding a particular characteristic or several characteristics that distinguish one person from another. Such differences may comprise capabilities/disabilities, physical appearance, education, cultural differences (socioeconomic background, religion, ethnicity, race, etc.), gender, age and any other attribute distinguishing among people. Furthermore, individual differences may comprise dissimilarities among people due to experience, temperament and personality traits.
The inability to accept or tolerate these differences may regularly lead to resentment or disagreements. It often results in a frustrated and unhappy marriage or its dissolution. Thus, in-person or online couples therapy and counselling typically involve interventions that aim to facilitate acceptance of essential differences or disparities between partners. Yet, no individual difference should be tolerated to the extent that it justifies abusive behaviour. Below I present an example of a therapeutic method that I might employ to address the issue of intolerance of individual differences in partners. Importantly, therapy may involve a blend of several approaches. Or, in some cases, no approach is needed at all. It depends on what the therapist deems most beneficial.
Acceptance and tolerance are achievable by developing an empathic understanding of your partner’s experience. Importantly, acceptance is attainable by working together with your partner as a team to deal with hardships.
Relationship Counsellor: Online Techniques for Navigating Disparities
Boosting Acceptance
Strategies to boost acceptance aim at suggesting partners new ways of considering their issues. To work on acceptance, I find the empathic joining and unified detachment techniques rather effective.
Empathic joining unveils each partner’s vulnerability by letting them express their standpoint on a problem while being listened to by their partner and the counsellor. Therefore, my mission as a couple’s therapist is to promote the expression of feelings instead of blaming, accusing, commenting on or criticising the partner’s behaviour. Similarly, unified detachment aims at ceasing blame or accusations by helping partners develop a more neutral and less emotional perspective on their differences and issues. Moreover, a couple learns to consider those problems as subjective rather than a deficiency, shortcoming or imperfection in the other.
Developing Tolerance
Interventions to develop tolerance aim to stop partners from endeavouring to change each other.
Change
Change strategies help strengthen and encourage positive behaviours that partners already manifest towards each other. Furthermore, change interventions address a lack of problem-solving and communication skills.
Mindfulness for Marriage Problems
Finally, as an integrative couples counsellor and therapist, I may employ mindfulness-based interventions. These techniques can enhance the acceptance of differences in a partner by promoting self-acceptance as a foundational step. Above all, mindfulness techniques aim at augmenting each partner’s non-judgemental acceptance of their own experiences. This could ultimately aid them in creating new, helpful ways of connecting. In this manner, mindfulness exercises help improve the sense of connectedness and intimacy. Mindfulness strategies typically include meditation, relaxation and breathing exercises.