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The PAIRS Relationship Mastery Program The full PAIRS Curriculum is divided into six main sections: 1) Communication and Problem Solving; 2) Clarifying Assumptions; 3) My History and Unique Self; 4) Emotional Re- education, Emotional Literacy and Bonding; 5) Pleasure-- Sensuality and Sexuality; and 6) Contracting—Clarifying Expectations. (The following summary has printed specific PAIRS exercises and key concepts in bold.) 1) Communication and Problem Solving PAIRS begins with a presentation of the Relationship Roadmap, the basic PAIRS model of how relationships succeed or become stuck and fail. Couples learn of the essential role of confiding in intimacy and then how to listen and speak in ways that deepen their level of confiding. They are taught the Daily Temperature Reading, in which they are expected to confide in one another each day sharing Appreciations, New Information, Puzzles, Complaints with Request for Change, and Wishes, Hope and Dreams. Participants then learn and practice Virginia Satir's (1988) Stress Styles of Communication and discover how the style one uses can be a far greater problem than the actual issue under discussion. When stressed and communicating in stress styles (Blaming, Placating, Computing, and Distracting), the underlying problem goes unresolved. Couples are then taught the Leveling Style of Communication practiced in the Congruent position (face to face, hands in hands), which is a foundation for the subsequent confiding work in the course. They cultivate the skill to slow down communication using Empathic Shared Meaning, taking turns being the Speaker and the Listener with feedback to assure understanding. They next learn how to confide a negative reaction to partner’s behavior all the way through in safety using the PAIRS Dialogue Guide. The Dialogue Guide leads the Speaker through a sequence of 18 "I-Statement" sentence stems regarding this negative reaction. Maintaining eye contact, holding hands while they speak, giving verbatim feedback, and not answering the complaint or introjecting defensiveness, helps couples to stay connected to one another and avoid misunderstandings. They discover how to speak so that the other person really wants to listen, and how to listen with empathy so that the other feels deeply heard and understood. One of the many paradoxes of PAIRS is how direct and skillful engagement of conflict builds greater closeness, trust, and confidence in the relationship. Couples are taught safe and structured ways to move into the intense emotion regarding a conflict as a first step toward resolving an issue. The “Emotional Jug” is one of the core metaphors of PAIRS. When emotions are cut off or suppressed, it is as if they are poured into a jug and stopping up with a cork—a cork that becomes the “stiff upper lip” of indifference. Partners are taught how to safely remove the cork and "blow their lid". An initial expression of anger quickly gives way to more vulnerable feelings like fear, pain, or grief, which is followed by relief and then gratitude for their partners’ listening and acceptance. This process can occur relatively quickly when couples master the tools and are not fearful of each other’s emotions. By learning how to express fully one's fear, pain and anger in safe and non-destructive ways, and to do so in the arms of their beloved, and/or with the support of peers, the bond between intimate partners powerfully deepens. The Emptying the Jug Exercise is also taught as a pre-negotiation release and as an emotional confiding tool that may be used like the Daily Temperature Reading. The PAIRS anger and conflict management tools were adapted largely from the work of George Bach (Bach and Wyden, 1969). They include the Anger Rituals (the Haircut and the Vesuvius) in which one partner asks permission of the other to vent in a time-limited fashion with as much intensity as is present. The Anger Rituals help to contain anger in those who explode or speak caustically and to give permission to be angry and assertive to those who rarely allow themselves to do this. .Once suppressed emotions around an issue are released, couples can then productively engage the Fair Fight for Change, another Bach ritual adapted by PAIRS for use as a structured negotiation. Here, couples learn to fight for the relationship, rather than against their partner. Peer couple coaches guide the partners through the fight format, prohibit dirty fighting, and enable reflective evaluation of the partners’ emerging healthy fight styles. Peer coaches learn as much about the Fair Fight process when coaching as they do when negotiating their own issues. Through a Shared Art Exercise in class and Follow- the-Leader Dates as homework, issues related to power and control, leadership and follower-ship, flexibility vs. rigidity of power roles, as well as the impact of unspoken assumptions are all brought to the surface and examined. Couples discover that they can remain connected while disagreeing and that they can grow closer through successfully addressing their differences. A potent sense of “we”, a sense of shared competence, higher self-esteem, and greater generosity and goodwill ensue from safely and successfully finding a real, mutually satisfying, win- win solution to conflict. 2) Clarifying Assumptions Partners’ expectations of one another, conscious or unconscious, are largely formed by long-past experiences. Unspoken assumptions and hidden expectations lead to great misunderstanding. A “Mind Reading” tool is taught for respectfully checking out assumptions rather than proceeding without knowing what is true for the partner or with mind reading without permission. To help couples become more aware of their hidden assumptions, Gordon (1996) catalogued the common “Love Knots,” or unexamined beliefs, that sabotage intimate relationships. (See “If You Really Loved Me…” , Gordon, 1996.) Couples learn to recognize Knots and to untangle them so that they lose their power to sabotage the relationship. 3) My History and Unique Self A study of family systems, through psychodramas enacting Family Systems Factories and what happens with the addition of children (Dyad-Triad) leads into the study of one’s own family of origin. Genograms, a three-generation family map, allows exploration of influences in the family of origin and reveals the invisible rules, scripts and loyalties that may be affecting current relationship. Participants also revisit their personal history through guided visualizations and intensive journaling to discover the impact of early messages and past decisions, especially regarding love, adequacy and worth. They uncover their Revolving Ledgers, the emotional bills of debt owed from the past that, as they walk through the revolving door of life, they hand to whoever is there. Participants look to identify intense over-reactions to relatively minor behaviors of their partner that indicate the presence of Emotional Allergies (another concept unique to PAIRS). These allergies are acute sensitivities to whatever now reminds one of pain or threats from the past. Allergic responses are accompanied in the present by protective reactions (ideas and emotions) and protective behaviors that were used to manage the pain long ago. Tools for healing allergies and past painful experience include the Healing the Ledger Exercise and the Museum Tour of Past Hurts and Disappointments. Here, partners confide previous painful or frightening experiences to one another. This confiding helps the listener to understand and have more compassion for the partner, and it helps the speaker to express pain safely to a comforting, validating and supportive partner. Partners are shown how to hold each other in a nurturing way, while they are expressing and releasing old pain. Participants may use the Letting Go of Grudges Letter as a journaling and/or confiding tool, for finding relief and freedom in working through grudges (hurts held in angry resentment to protect from risking being hurt again.) Through these experiences, participants clear up misunderstandings of one another by reclaiming their personal history rather than continuing to project and blame their partner. They re-connect with suppressed early experiences and decisions that have been interfering with their ability to trust or be intimate with their partner. Partners also learn they can help to heal instead of hurt one another. Couples also find that Emotional Allergy Infinity Loops underlie many of their unresolved conflicts. Such a loop occurs when one’s behavior triggers an emotionally allergic reaction in the partner. The partner’s allergic reaction then triggers an allergic reaction in the first partner, whose reactive behavior then retriggers the second, and so on, ad infinitum. In the throes of an Emotional Allergy Infinity Loop, each partner often re-experiences the worst pains of childhood and the helpless reactions of a small child. Typically each feels, “if it is like this, then I cannot be here!” Each forgets to see their partner as their friend and experiences them instead as the enemy. Each becomes lost in a reactive state of believing the worst about self and partner and of using primitive protective actions. Devastating distance can grow. Couples now develop concepts and a language to understand and explain what they are experiencing when they are conjointly in the grip of such emotional intensity. As participants begin to understand and discuss their Love Knots, Early Scripts and Decision, Ledgers, Grudges, Emotional Allergies and Emotional Allergy Infinity Loops, they become capable of taking responsibility for their own reactions, rather than blaming the other. Couples are helped to strategize together to devise “emergency exit ramps” from their Loops and to work together to escape those slippery slopes. Through empathy for partner’s
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