When
Values Collide
While the
majority of the issues involving value interaction within a relationship
will be addressed in the Couple's Workshop, the importance of understanding
it here, for you, is to recognize the need for compromise and compassion
in the application of your value system. That, because you were
the one who was violated, because your partner is the one who has
the addiction, that it is your values that always take precedent
is an unhealthy path to follow. Or, because you have been violated
in the past by another, that it is appropriate to establish such
rigid boundaries that it is justifiable to infringe on the values
of another. Again, such an approach--an approach that compromises
another's value system--is equally unhealthy. In other words, this
lesson is a warning to 'be careful' in your application of values
and boundaries within a developing relationship.
Be careful?
But you said that boundaries are established to protect our values.
Why should we compromise them...ever?
Ah, the
nuances of life. We are treading into some murky water here, where
your judgment and common sense will play a major role in determining
whether or not you stay afloat. And while as a general rule, you
are absolutely right: you should never compromise your value system...there
are times when, well...you must compromise your value system. Key
word: you. YOU will compromise your value system. Consciously. By
choice. So that you have the opportunity to extract higher values
by sacrificing ones of less priority. For instance, imagine that
you place the relationship with your husband above all else, followed
by a desire to have children, followed by your religious beliefs.
Lower on that same list, you also value altruism and believe that
10% of your family's earnings should be given back to the community.
Your partner on the other hand, as well values religion, has the
desire for children and cherishes you as his partner. However, he
believes that it is more important to take that money and save it
for a rainy day. This is a value collision. Two healthy values--both
legitimate. However, they oppose one another and thus, a compromise
must be reached.
Now
take this same couple and use religion as the primary value conflict.
You place a relationship with God as your top value. He, on the
other hand, believes that God is merely a social construct used
to manage the masses. Hence, another value conflict. Except here,
the value that is conflicting is of such a high priority to you
(and likely, a low priority for him), a compromise is not the best
course of action. Yet, because emotions are so easily manipulated,
you find yourself being coerced into altering your values so that
God is no longer your top priority. If you can't relate to religion,
substitute it with having a child together. You want to have a child,
he absolutely does not. A conscious compromise will not be achieved
easily. Emotional manipulation and pressure will be applied by one
or both of you to effect the value system of the other. This happens
all the time in addiction.
Value
Conflict and Addiction
Invariably,
when involved in a relationship with someone with an addiction,
your values have already been compromised. You have made exceptions
in areas of your life that you never would have made on your own.
You have minimized your values at times when to apply them would
have meant more conflict. You have subtly (and not so subtly) adjusted
them to match your partner's skewed value system--often without
even realizing it. In fact, it is one of your primary goals in the
healing process to identify which areas of your values have been
effected and work to rebuild those values to where you want them.
But what about situations where you both have legitimate, yet opposing
values? Is it fair to suggest that because you are the healthy person,
that your values take precedent? Of course not. To take such an
approach is to ensure they remain infantile in their own value management
processes--a killer for not only the recovery process, but mutual
respect as well. And yet, that is not to suggest that all values
should be applied equally, because in addiction, it is a fact that
many of your partner's values will have become so skewed that to
apply them equally 'just to be fair' will also have disastrous results.
How then
shall I manage such conflicts? First, you must develop the ability
to recognize the difference between when your values are being compromised
and when you are making the decision to compromise your values--because
it is only in the latter where healthy growth occurs. Next, you
must have a clear grasp of your existing value system and how it
is prioritized. Finally, you must learn to apply that value system
to your decision-making processes so that you are continuing to
develop in a way that enhances your overall value in the long-run...rather
than sacrificing that overall value for immediate emotional gain.
Again, the
actual application of value conflict management will be addressed
in the Couple's Workshop. Here, it is enough that you recognize--for
an existing or future relationship--that there are times when values
will conflict and that you role is to identify these times and act
in a manner that enhances who you are, not jeopardizes it.