The Problem with Ultimatums

There are times you come face to face with an ultimatum. There was a time I faced one of those as well.

In my situation, I moved out of my parents home. I went to live on my own was with two roommates who didn’t pay utility bills or rent on time.  If I’d known this beforehand, I’d of made a different choice.

Between the electricity being cut off and bill collectors coming around, I had enough. The circumstances were less than desirable.

The discomfort of that living situation put me in a position of asking my father if I could move back home.

I humbled myself and asked him if I could return home. Instead of welcoming me with open arms, he issued an ultimatum to me.

Although I understand his reason for doing so, it was a turn off. With being issued an ultimatum regarding coming back home, I opted for continuing on my own.

This is the challenge with ultimatums. It’s one thing to hold people accountable, but with ultimatums, you put the other person in a bind. Ultimatums have the potential of back firing, especially when it comes to returning home.

One reader wrote me, ” so much of what I’ve heard is holding them accountable and taking a stance of ultimatums.” Although taking stances is a good idea, when you’re dealing with your marriage, its’ an area approached with caution.

When it comes to relationship repair, having one that is reliable and consistent is preferred to striving toward perfection. You’ll get further with ‘good enough’ than you will by having standards of perfection.

I’m not opposed to ultimatums, it’s that many of you aren’t comfortable with them. Managing ultimatums takes experience. With the inexperienced, the tendency is going from one extreme to another or being inconsistent.

This is why good enough marriages, where you have consistency and reliability is preferred in recovery. That will get you in a place where both of you can heal.

At the point of affair recovery, healing is more important than ultimatums and the perfection they often demand.  We heal in relationship with each other rather than separately.

It’s only when you and the cheater feel safe that good change starts happening. This is why I have a section in the downloadable “Affair Recovery Workshop” focused on creating safety in your home.

Safety in your home isn’t about switch plate covers, it’s about emotional safety. There are things you can do that enhance the emotional safety of your home that makes healing possible.

You can make your home a place where the two of you want to go rather than what the two of you avoid.

Keeping It Real,

Jeff

 

 

 

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