Energize Your Marriage: What To Do When Your Relationship Gets Boring
Marriage Counseling Add commentsOf course it’s great news for actors to get a prized role on Broadway and star in a play that lasts for years.
But here’s the bad news: when they play a demanding role six times a week for several years, the part can get stale. When performers start sleep walking through the role, the end is near.
The challenge is how to stay fresh and leave the audience spellbound after a thousand performances .
What do they do? They keep finding fresh ways of expressing themselves while maintaining the integrity of the character and the play. This requires creativity and the willingness to dig deep within themselves to develop the nuances to stay fresh for every performance.
Screen actors need only to hit the perfect notes once and the performance is captured forever. Live actors don’t have that luxury.
So what is the connection to your relationship? It seems to me in the beginning of a relationship, most of the right notes are hit. They are easy and effortless. True love is finally found.
Over time, the routine sets in. The script becomes predictable. You stop digging deeper to keep things fresh. The play becomes stale. The finger pointing (silently or out loud) begins. The show is in danger of shutting down.
BUT you have advantages that the best actors on Broadway don’t have. You are not limited to the same script every day. You are both the actor and director in your relationship play.
If you don’t like how a scene is being played out, you can change the dialogue, the intensity, the meaning of it, and even the timing of it. ( “Let’s finish this scene later when we both have more energy.”)
Because you and your partner are both the architects and the main actors in your play, you have enormous latitude to energize specific scenes: coming home after work, going to bed, weekend chores, vacations, holidays, parenting, daily responsibilities, managing money, etc.
Keep looking for ways to energize and stay fresh with your partner.
Till next time,
Pete
P.S. To comment on this posting, click the “comment” link under the title on the right hand side. Then scroll to the bottom of the page to share your thoughts. Remember to click “submit comment” when you are done.
Peter Pearson, Ph.D. and Ellyn Bader, Ph.D. are founders and directors of The Couples Institute in Menlo Park, California. As therapists, workshop leaders, authors, speakers, and as a married couple themselves, they are dedicated to helping couples create extraordinary relationships. They have been featured on over 80 radio and television programs including “The Today Show” and “CBS Early Morning News.” For free marriage advice visit their site The Couples Institute.


November 30th, 2009 at 11:37 am
I always love it when I receive your messages ! Thank you so much for keeping me informed. And I love Molly’s input : you are just so deep ! So wise !
Fettucini to all of you, Ellyn, Molly, Pete !
Salomon.
November 30th, 2009 at 3:28 pm
Your metaphore is brilliant. and you explain/demonstrate so well,how, unlike actors, we are not stuck in a written script (although we may feel we are!)
Thank you v.m.for sending me these “capsules” of common sense, subtle observations, humor and…hope!
All the best to Ellyn and you,
Ginette.
December 2nd, 2009 at 12:50 pm
Thanks for your input. I loved Pete’s metaphor too.
Ellyn
December 7th, 2009 at 11:30 am
Nice job as always!
December 14th, 2009 at 9:24 pm
I love the metaphor. But I think it is easier said than done. And I wonder if serial monogamists just don’t want to put the work in. It stays fresh all the time for them. Would be interested in hearing some examples of folks who found creative ways to keep it fresh without it feeling so deliberate. To me, the deliberatness of it, makes it boring.
December 17th, 2009 at 11:50 am
Jane – I think whenever we break some ingrained patterns it will require some conscious & deliberate effort. I am curious how soon you would get bored when doing something different. Could the boredom be a failure of imagination to keep something fresh by going deeper in yourself. If you get bored quickly, you may not be stretching yourself sufficiently to adopt or maintain a “beginner’s mind”
Best
Pete