Kate and Joel Feldman are psychotherapists who specialize in the field of Relationships. We happen to be married (25 years) and best friends for even longer. During that time we have been lucky enough to work with and train many couples and individuals seeking to deepen their relationship journey and grow themselves.
Our fascination with the world of relationships, including our own, is an ever present delight and opportunity for endless personal development, shared satisfaction and plenty of good chuckles.

Archive for empathy

Kate and I  highly value a skill we call “Self Soothing” because we know that our partners, family members and friends are virtually guaranteed to trigger age-old reactions in us. Of this we can be certain. In order to create a safe space for our closest relations to let us know what happened, we must be willing to listen carefully to “their world” or their perspective on what happened. This is one of what we call the “willful practices” on the path of relationship. When we can’t hold onto ourselves, we are bound to interrupt our partner and usually kick-off another round of defensive behavior that often devolves into the blame game, you know how it goes, “I’m right, you’re wrong, here’s why”.

I was feeling poetic and penned this little self reminder this morning. Hope it’s helpful.

You’re upset…I can breathe and relax…IMG_2981

And let you be upset…And breathe some more….

And try to feel your pain, even if it’s me you’re upset with…

I can relax….And hear about what’s upsetting you…

I don’t need to defend myself…I don’t need to justify my behavior…

I can breathe and just be with you…In your upset….

I may have defensive thoughts from time to time…But you still are not wrong… Read More→

Mar
10

Love=Rejoicing in the Otherwise

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What else is love but understanding and rejoicing in the fact that another person lives, acts, and experiences otherwise than we do…?” Friedrich Nietzsche
Hmmmmmmm….Leave it to Nietzsche to provide us with a gem to contemplate. Are we supposed to love another because they are so incredibly different than us? How strange. Most of us think that, as a couple we should have more similarities than differences. That’s the way it was when we first got together, fell into love, right? In the best of all possible worlds wouldn’t our love affair continue on forever, two people gradually, gently, effortlessly merging into the bliss of Oneness? Help us out here, Nietzsche old boy……rejoicing in the “otherwise”??? You can’t be serious now, can you? (“Hello…. my name is Nietzsche, not Barry, serious is my middle name”)

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Alright, I can wrap my head around the understanding part; we were raised differently, schooled differently, believed differently and all that. I can understand that we’re different. But rejoicing in those differences? That’s another subject altogether! You (Nietzshe) can afford to be philosophical about all that. I mean, after all, you get paid to theorize about such things. I wonder though how you feel when your partner takes your carefully squeezed and rolled tube of toothpaste and utterly destroys all your meticulous work? Read More→

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