I realize this really doesn't fall into the category of an appropriate topic here. But a lot of you are quite insightful and wise when it comes to relationships and human interactions, so here I am.
Today I was talking with my doctor and we got off on a tangent about how people deal with stress and how to control your response to stress and other "upsets". This led to an "is it worth it?" discussion about reprogramming yourself, so to speak, to just shrug off things or learn to respond to situations in a different way than you normally do.
He gave me an example of a grocery shopping incident he experienced with his wife in which she put a jar of spaghetti sauce into the cart. He asked her why she was getting it when they had 4 other jars at home, why spend $5 on another jar? She responded that it was Emeril's sauce, and she wanted to try it. He got pissy with her. She pulled him aside and said (not verbatim) "We're in the grocery store, at the check out. Is it worth it to lose hours fighting about this, for $5?"
He told me it was an excellent point and that he realized he needed to stop and think more instead of just shooting off. He decided it wasn't worth what he'd go through with her, for $5.
Admittedly, I'm over analytical, but I'm trying to be a better person, lol, so I've been thinking about it. Initially, I was nodding my head in agreement with him, it did make sense. But the more I thought about it, I began to wonder who was really "right" here? Not specifically about $5 sauce, but about the dynamics surrounding the interaction.
Granted, relationships require compromise. We do have to pick our battles and what not. It just seemed to me that even though it's a minor thing, she won on several levels. His thoughts were completely dismissed because of the threat of how he'd have to pay if he didn't back off. That is the part that I'm struggling with.
Does one person really have to just "submit", in order to not have to pay?
When things like this happen in my life, it leaves me feeling so negatively that I "submit" simply to avoid all the bad vibes and tension. In this case specifically, I'd come back later and get the damn sauce by myself. Even then, I'm left resenting that person. That resentment begins to build and therein is the heart of what I'm trying to get at. In learning to reprogram your outward response so as to avoid wasted energy and a negative experience, what happens to how you REALLY feel?
Thanks very much!
Today I was talking with my doctor and we got off on a tangent about how people deal with stress and how to control your response to stress and other "upsets". This led to an "is it worth it?" discussion about reprogramming yourself, so to speak, to just shrug off things or learn to respond to situations in a different way than you normally do.
He gave me an example of a grocery shopping incident he experienced with his wife in which she put a jar of spaghetti sauce into the cart. He asked her why she was getting it when they had 4 other jars at home, why spend $5 on another jar? She responded that it was Emeril's sauce, and she wanted to try it. He got pissy with her. She pulled him aside and said (not verbatim) "We're in the grocery store, at the check out. Is it worth it to lose hours fighting about this, for $5?"
He told me it was an excellent point and that he realized he needed to stop and think more instead of just shooting off. He decided it wasn't worth what he'd go through with her, for $5.
Admittedly, I'm over analytical, but I'm trying to be a better person, lol, so I've been thinking about it. Initially, I was nodding my head in agreement with him, it did make sense. But the more I thought about it, I began to wonder who was really "right" here? Not specifically about $5 sauce, but about the dynamics surrounding the interaction.
Granted, relationships require compromise. We do have to pick our battles and what not. It just seemed to me that even though it's a minor thing, she won on several levels. His thoughts were completely dismissed because of the threat of how he'd have to pay if he didn't back off. That is the part that I'm struggling with.
Does one person really have to just "submit", in order to not have to pay?
When things like this happen in my life, it leaves me feeling so negatively that I "submit" simply to avoid all the bad vibes and tension. In this case specifically, I'd come back later and get the damn sauce by myself. Even then, I'm left resenting that person. That resentment begins to build and therein is the heart of what I'm trying to get at. In learning to reprogram your outward response so as to avoid wasted energy and a negative experience, what happens to how you REALLY feel?
Thanks very much!
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I'll say "screw this" and walk away in a heart beat when someone is dishing out something I just cannot find a way to swallow---still I'm left with "what on earth is wrong with ME??"