the no conclusion intervention for couples in conflict

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The no conclusion intervention for couples in conflict Dialogical conference Leuven march 8 2013 Lieven Migerode

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Page 1: The no conclusion intervention for couples in conflict

The no conclusion intervention for couples in conflict

Dialogical conference Leuven

march 8 2013

Lieven Migerode

Page 2: The no conclusion intervention for couples in conflict

[email protected]

Migerode, L. & Hooghe, A., (2012). “I love you” How to

understand love in couple therapy. Exploring love in context.

Journal of Family Therapy, 34, 371-386. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-

6427.2011.00557.x

Migerode, L. (2012). The no conclusion intervention for couples in conflict. Journal of Marital and Family Therapy. Doi: 10,111/jmft,12.004

12/03/2013 Lieven Migerode Context UZLeuven 2

Page 3: The no conclusion intervention for couples in conflict

Change the other

Anxiety reduction

Change the other

Anxiety reduction

How do I participate in the impasse

Looking in the mirror, feel.

Own changes, risk taking.

How do I participate in the impasse

Looking in the mirror, feel.

Own changes, risk taking.

Speaking and listening Speaking and listening

Validating (of risk taking)

3 Figure 7

Falling and getting up Falling and getting up

DIFFERENCE

ACTION

Love/Bonding over difference

Love/growth

REACTION REACTION

Validating (of risk taking)

Page 4: The no conclusion intervention for couples in conflict

• Love is at the core of couples

• Couples are constituted in dialogue

• You are always different/unique

• When stuck couples get dua=logical

– Twice monological

– Seemingly devide tensions over the partners

• One hour time: lets get do-a-logical

Page 5: The no conclusion intervention for couples in conflict

• We can only see well with the heart. The essence is invisible for the eyes.(The little prince, de Saint Exupéry, 1943,).

Lieven Migerode Context UZLeuven

Page 6: The no conclusion intervention for couples in conflict

Love Always circular

Give opposing force

Autonomy and Bonding

• …

Knowing and Mystery

• …

Stability and Change

• growth…

Migerode,L. & Hooghe, A. (In press). How to understand love in couple therapy. Journal of Family Therapy.

Page 7: The no conclusion intervention for couples in conflict

How to visualise opposing forces?

closeness distance closeness

distance

Lieven Migerode, Context UZLeuven, IFTA march 2011.

Page 8: The no conclusion intervention for couples in conflict

No conclusion intervention exercise:

Step 1

•Both partners , seperately,

•name down two areas of difference that lead to conflict.

Step 2

•Seperately, qualify the conflicting differences either as trivial or important

•Important = touching on ‘who you are’

•Important= touching on ‘who your are as a couple’

•Important=touching on ‘how the world is’

•Trivial= neither of the above applies.

Step 3

•Exchange the areas of difference

•Ask question to understand what is named

•Qualify the areas your partner chose

•Four kinds of differences ensue: Trivial-Trivial; trivial-Important; Important-Trivial, Important-Important

Lieven Migerode, Context UZLeuven, IFTA march 2011.

Page 9: The no conclusion intervention for couples in conflict

Trivial-Trivial

Take 5’ time

Solve it!

Use cultural methods

Life is to short

Trivial- Important

Decide not to come to a conclusion

Make ample time.

Explain Trivial/

Listen as good as you can, show understanding

Explain Important, ,

Listen as good as you can, show understanding

Put aside

Let it Rise.

Start all over

Important– Trvial

Decide not to come to a conclusion

Make ample time.

Explain Trivial/

Listen as good as you can, show understanding

Explain Important ,

Listen as good as you can, show understanding

Put aside

Let it Rise.

Start all over

Important-Important

Decide not to come to a conclusion

Make ample time.

Explain important/

Listen as good as you can, show understanding

Explain Important, ,

Listen as good as you can, show understanding

Put aside

Let it Rise.

No conclusion intervention

Migerode

Page 10: The no conclusion intervention for couples in conflict

12/03/2013 Lieven Migerode Context UZLeuven 10

Cultureel geleerde ‘oplossingen’. terug

Page 11: The no conclusion intervention for couples in conflict

Therapist actions

• Help partners to make choices

• Help partners to stay with choices

• Help partners to stick to outline

• Help partners to change their choices if necesarry

• Help partners to show what they understand

• Ask : Is there more you want to explain?

• Ask : Is there more you want to know?

Page 12: The no conclusion intervention for couples in conflict

• Dis-solved

• Solved

Trivial/Trivial Trivial/Important

Important /Important

Important/Trivial

Figure 6

Page 13: The no conclusion intervention for couples in conflict

Love absent in MFT.

• Love is a noun and a verb, a thing and an action, a concept and an organized set of behavior, and a subject that clinicians generally avoid (Levine, 2007)

• Love is rarely directly addressed in couple therapy and investigated in couple research (Riehl-Emde, e.a. 2003)

• Love about which is relatively little written in couple family therapy literature (Grunebaum, 1997)

• In general psychotherapist have a conflicting relationship to love (Willi, 1997)

• The lack of attention in the marriage therapy literature to romantic love and sexual attraction (Roberts, 1992)

Lieven Migerode Context UZLeuven

http://www.rein-art.be/

Page 14: The no conclusion intervention for couples in conflict

Love important for couples

• Former spouses name ‘the death of love’ as primary cause of divorce (Gigy en Kelly, 1992, Kayser, 1993; In Berscheid 2010, p 6)

• Love matters not only because it can make our lives better but also because it is a major source of misery and pain and can make life worse (Reis & Aron, 2008).

• A love relationship has become the central emotional relationship in most people’s lives (Johnson, 2008).

• The couples assessment of their love was the first and foremost variable for predicting whether a couple belonged to the group with high or low level well being= a greater degree of love was associated with a greater well being (Riehhl-Emde, 2003).

• Being in love seems to be me of greater importance for the prognosis of marriage the marriage happiness and satisfaction (Willi, 1997).

• The most frequent reason for both marriage and divorce is love and the loss of love (Scoresby, 1977 in Roberts, 1992). Lieven Migerode Context UZLeuven

http://www.rein-art.be/

Page 15: The no conclusion intervention for couples in conflict

Do we know what love is?

• Because out of the millions, trillions, perhaps even centillions of sentences written about love , very few can stand alone and still strike us a “true”. One of those few is “Love is a word”. (Bersheid,1995)

• Love is synthetic rather than analytic.(Sternberg 1998)

Lieven Migerode Context UZLeuven

http://www.rein-art.be/

Page 16: The no conclusion intervention for couples in conflict

Can we then talk about love in therapy?

• “.Despite the fact that love is one of the most polysemous words in English language, people generally know what the person using the word is trying to communicate.” (Bersheid & Meyers, 1996, p.171).

• Theoretically we find support for this in the work of Fehr & Russel (1991). They propose that love is one of those concepts that can best be understood in a prototypical way. People ‘know’ if an experience matches a concept through its resemblance with a model, a prototype. (Migerode & Hooghe, in press).

Lieven Migerode Context UZLeuven

http://www.rein-art.be/