Many Men:
The Remote Controller
The Controlling Man>
There is a
thin line between love and control. Does he constantly tell you when and how to
do something, and accredits it to being concerned about you? During a girl’s
night out, he calls you several times or wants you to call several times to
check in, and claims he wants you to be safe? Is your wardrobe selection a
reflection of his taste instead of your own because he picks and chooses the
clothes he thinks is best for you?
After a
hard day of work (cooking, cleaning and tending to three small children), I
often enjoyed a good reading selection such as articles within Essence magazine or a Walter Mosley
suspense novel. Once arriving home from a hard day of work (Dollinger Steel or
whichever job he was lucky enough to secure that week), Daniel would walk
through the door and take a quick glance at me reading my magazine or book.
Next he would walk over to me and snatch whatever I’m reading out of my hands.
Then in a swift robotic motion, stomp to the garbage can and loudly slam it in.
Every time he came home and saw me
reading my favorite selection, he got infuriatingly angry. Automatically, he
would proceed to one of three actions: throw the magazine or book into the
trash, tear it into pieces or hide it. The method of removal depended on the
mood of his mind when he got home from work. Eventually, I stopped reading all
together because the daily consequences became too much to bare.
His “rational” reason for not
allowing me to read was because I paid more attention to reading then I did to
him. The irrational reason was absolutely absurd since the inattentiveness
occurred while he was at work. The reality of the real reason he did not want
me to read was simple: CONTROL.
Forbidding me to read was not the only
warning sign that he was controlling. New clothes purchased without his prior
knowledge and approval resulted in the same fate as the magazines and books.
The new clothing ended up in the trash, shredded or removed from my possession.
My Posner cosmetics and make- up faced the same destiny: trashed, broken to
pieces or stashed away from me. When I returned even a minute later than he
allowed from visiting friends or grocery shopping, my face was trashed, ripped
and then hidden so no one could see the bruises.
Overcoming a relationship based on
control requires explicit action steps. A major first step involves the
recognition between a controlling and caring relationship. When someone does
not include your own viewpoints in decisions about you, that is control.
Acknowledge that a relationship of care allows mutual, two- way communication
about all decisions.
Another key
move to break away from controlling connections with others consists of
Checking Your “self”. A healthy development of self- esteem and self- love
provides healthy reinforcement and support necessary to standup to someone who
does not value or respect your individuality. A negative self- image opens the
door to toxic relationships. Build positive feelings, thoughts and concepts
about yourself, your life and your goals.
According
to Andrea Bonior Ph.D, “Preparedness and predictability equal power”. Having
someone else push the buttons that control your life is not a pleasant way to
wake up every morning. Take back the remote control to your life and determine
your own pathways and daily decisions. Have the option to make the decisions
that promote your growth and well- being.
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Are you not sure about the warning signs of a
controlling relationship?
Visit https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/friendship-20/201506/20-signs-your-partner-is-controlling
for more information about the warning signs.
For a one- on- one session providing action steps to
overcome controlling relationships, contact GinMan Consulting @ (281)904-6483
or email ginmanconsulting@gmail.com.
Reference:
Bonior, Andrea PhD. (2016). Psychology Today. “7 Steps to Breaking Free of a Controlling
Partner”. website.
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