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Dealing with Aloofs
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Article Title: Contains 780 words, 60 characters per line Contact email: ren@H... You may reprint this article in its entirety in any media. Please include the resource box below. Please email a copy of the publication the article is posted in to ren@h... Please set links as hyperlinks when posting on websites. Author: Robert Najemy -----------------------article begins----------------------- Dealing with Aloofs In the role of the aloof, we distance ourselves from others, avoiding meaningful or honest emotional contact. In this way, we are less likely to be hurt or controlled by people's negative emotions, requests or demands. 1. We hide from the intimidator's attack, the interrogator's inquisitio= n and the victim's complaints. 2. In addition to protecting ourselves by distancing ourselves, and not expressing much of our feelings, either positively or negatively, we also gain self-worth by making others seek out contact with us. Some of us aloofs are secretly hoping someone will approach us and desire our attention. We covertly desire their attention, but cannot free ourselve= s from our role to approach them. The approached receives energy and affirmation from the one who approaches him, seeking his or her company. If the victim controls others through their feelings of responsibility and guilt, the Aloof controls others through their need for contact with him as he denies his attention and emotional exchange. We can help the Aloofs in our lives by first freeing ourselves from any ideas that they are not communicating with us because we have done somethin= g wrong. If they want to wear a long silent face, let them. That is their right. Let them have accept responsibility for the reality they choose to create. How I would like to deal with an Aloof. I would like to remember that he has a problem and is closed up because he fears being open. I want also to remember that I am not to blame for this reaction. I want to remember that I am worthy and safe and can solve my problems even if he never opens up. I will stop pressuring him and give him space to be alone so that he will gradually begin to feel his own need for contact with me. I will explain to him that I need and want more communication but that I se= e the negative results of pressuring or nagging him about it. I will also explain that I will be overjoyed if he would approach me when he feels the need to communicate more deeply, but that, until that time, I am going to start taking responsibility for my needs and my life. I am going to stop feeling that I am to blame for his silence and am going to start engaging in various activities which fulfill me and give meaning t= o my life. I will also explain that I would be very happy for him to partake in any of those activities with me, should he wish. I am going to stop waiting for him to open up and will start paying attention to my responsibilities, to my creativity, to my learning and growth process. I have so many other things in my life that can give me happiness. And when he is in the mood, I will enjoy my communication with him. I-message to an Aloof We can perhaps communicate with the Aloof by expressing something like this= : "Dear, I have something important I would like to express to you, and if you want to answer me, that would be fine. There are times in when you are silent, inexpressive or even seem sad or angry. At those times, when I do not know what you are feeling or thinking, I sometimes think that perhaps I have done something that has offended or hurt you, or perhaps you do not love me anymore. I also begin thinking you do not have enough trust in me o= r do not feel close enough to me to share what you are feeling. Then I begin to doubt my self-worth as a spouse (or perhaps parent or other role)." "When I see you like this and make those interpretations, I sometimes approach in an effort to find out what is happening. Sometimes you respond and other times you do not. That bothers me even more. I feel hurt and believe you do not care about me and our relationship." "I now realize it doesn't help to pressure you to communicate with me. I = am going to try to leave that up to you. I just want you to know that I love you and I want and need to know more about what you are feeling and thinking. If, in fact, I have done or do something that has offended or hur= t you, I very much want to know about it. Do not protect me by not telling me if something I do bothers you." "I will try to leave you all the space you need to feel from within if you want to communicate with me more deeply." "Do you have anything you would like to tell me now?" From the book "Relationships of Conscious Love" http://www.HolisticHarmony.com/ebooks/index.asp by Robert Elias Najemy
Robert Elias Najemy, a life coach with 30 years of experience, has created a L i f e C o a c h T r a i n i n g Course over the Internet. Info at: http://www.HolisticHarmony.com/introholisticcoach.asp He is the author of over 20 books, 600 articles and 400 lecture cassettes o= n Human Harmony. His book The Psychology of Happiness is available at http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0971011605/holisticharmo-20 and Download FREE 100's of articles, find w o n d e r f u l e b o o k s and get g u i d a n c e at http://www.HolisticHarmony.com
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