Break the [wounds + unawareness] cycle and guard your descendents

Dig Down Below Surface Problems to Identify Your Primary Needs - p. 3 of 4

10 Dig-down Tips

By Peter K. Gerlach, MSW

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The Web address of this four-page article is http://sfhelp.org/02/dig-down.htm

        This is the third of four Web pages illustrating a common block to resolving relationship problems (unfilled needs). The block is unawareness of (a) the vital difference between surface "problems" and the underlying primary needs (discomforts) that cause them, and (b) how to "dig down" to discern current primary needs. Once aware of this block, people (you) can reduce it and teach kids and interested others how to avoid it! 

        The first page (a) outlines six premises about family "problems," and (b) illustrates four levels of awareness with a typical family loyalty conflict. The second page illustrates digging down below surface needs with co-parent conflicts over a "hostile ex mate," and "money." This page (a) proposes a theme in all three examples and probably in your life, and (b) offers tips to help you dig down effectively.

The Common Problem-solving Pattern

        There are common themes to these examples which probably occur in the way your family members try to resolve personal and mutual "problems" (unfilled needs). They include...

1)  Partners aren't aware of...

often being dominated by a false self, and...

the difference between surface needs and primary needs; and...

what they and the others really need; and...

their communication process, and...

these unawarenesses; so...

They focus endlessly on their surface conflicts, just as their childhood caregivers and mentors probably  did; and...

2) Each partner blames and resents one or more other people for their problems (unmet needs), instead of (a) digging down to learn what they really need, and (b) taking responsibility for filling theirs. Their deepest (level 4) needs are to...

  • empower their true Selves to lead their other subselves (personalities), 

  • help other adults and kids do the same, without taking responsibility for the other adults; and partners need to...

  • become skilled at effective internal and interpersonal problem-solving - i.e. at discerning and filling primary needs; 

        Other common facets of how typical adults try to problem-solve are...

3)  They argue, fight, explain, deny, debate, blame, defocus, or withdraw, rather than digging down and doing win-win problem-solving together as mutually-respectful partners. Each adult is unaware of how their well-meaning false selves keep them focused on surface conflicts; and...

4) People's' false selves use other adults and kids as weapons, messengers, pawns, or supporters in the adults' surface battles. One family result: dependent kids are growing up in a low-nurturance environment of caregiver mistrust, disrespect, guilt, frustration, repression, and anger. That promotes developing their own false-self wounds a day at a time. No one is aware this is happening; and...

5)  Most (all?) family members and supporters are unaware of these communication themes and what to do about them. This significantly hampers their ability to problem-solve effectively together, so stress accumulates as their primary needs go unfilled. This is probably a major reason for our U.S. divorce epidemic, "troubled kids," and other major personal and social problems.

        Does this outline make sense to you? If so, how can you and your communication partners avoid  trying fruitlessly to solve surface problems, like endlessly clipping off weed-tops vs. pulling out their roots. Enduring this risks gradual erosion of your marital harmony and family nurturance level, and unintentionally wounding your dependent kids.

        If you choose to try out this powerful communication skill, here are some suggestions to raise your success rate.

 
  Tips for "Digging Down" Effectively

        Scan all of these options, and imagine trying them out. Then note your reaction. If it's interest, enthusiasm, and commitment, your true Self is probably guiding you. If not, "someone else" may be controlling your thoughts and decisions...

         1)  The biggest blocks to effective communication are false-self wounds and ignorance of communication basics and skills. Committing to work at patiently Projects 1 and 2 will reduce both blocks, over time. Are you committed to that yet? Are your other family adults?

        2)  Accept that being alive means constantly having needs (discomforts). Being needy is not a weakness, it's human! Not asserting your needs is self-neglect, and usually indicates a disabled true Self. Not noticing or respecting other people's needs equally (including kids) is inherently disrespectful, and a relationship stressor. Do your ruling subselves usually have a mutually-respectful attitude about you and the other key people in your life now?

        3)  Try out this belief about your relationship and family-role stressors:

When we have a "problem" (unmet needs), you and I need to help each other dig down below surface problems to identify our respective primary needs. Then we adults need to accept responsibility for filling our own needs - with help, at times. Some personal disabilities and crises are exceptions.

The great challenge to living from this belief is taking full responsibility for your own comfort. When the going gets tough, typical protective false selves seek to put this responsibility on other people.

        4)  Edit the primary needs suggested here and evolve your own list. Stay aware that in every situation, your and other people's primary needs come from your dominant subselves.

        Tip 5)   Apply this four-level hierarchy of problem-perceptions to help dig-down with any significant conflict among your subselves or with kids or other adults:

Level 1: surface problems: blame someone else (e.g. a child, a parent, a partner, an ex mate, a lawyer,...) for your current problem/s - i.e.

  • expect them to care about and want to fill your surface needs. Then...

  • focus on the other person's failings and your surface "problems," and...

  • ignore how you're trying to solve your problems.

Occasionally or often, take responsibility for filling the needs of other adults you love (codependence), vs. encouraging them to take responsibility for themselves and helping and affirming them as they do;

Level 2: blame yourself and other people for causing your problems. Deny that a well-meaning false self governs your personality, and that a core primary need is to empower your true Self to lead and harmonize your other subselves.

Level 3: work to keep your Self consistently in charge of your other subselves over time, and take full responsibility for filling your own daily needs. View "problems" and "conflicts" as being unfilled primary needs among your and other people's subselves.

        In important situations, dig down below surface needs to discern what you and any partners really need, and help each other brainstorm as teammates to fill your respective primary needs well enough. Encourage people you care about to do the same. Help each other keep your true Selves in charge as the environment ceaselessly changes and causes you all new needs (discomforts).

Level 4: Assume you have primary needs that even effective digging down will not identify - i.e. assume you don't know what you need to know for fully satisfying relationships and some problem-solutions.

        Study these foundation concepts, quizzes, and Q&A items at your own pace, with the unbiased curiosity of a self-motivated student. They'll guide you toward discerning and filling your level-4 awareness needs.

        Tip 6)  Distinguish first-order (superficial) from second-order (core attitude) changes as you identify and fill your and any partners' primary needs. Help each other accept that first-order changes are clever false-self attempts to change without risking real changing. E.g. a "new diet" is usually a first-order change. Wanting to (a) eat less fat, salt, sugar, and bulk and more fruits and vegetables, and (b) exercise regularly, is a second-order attitude change.

        7)  Practice identifying your expectations about other people and yourself (as far as their filling your current needs.) Often, interpersonal problems are rise from unrealistic expectations of other people or ourselves - e.g. I expect myself to love my disrespectful stepchild, and I expect her (him) and my partner to love me and appreciate the sacrifices I make as a stepparent."

        Typical co-parents who deny (a) their stepfamily identity and (b) what that means are at high risk of living from unrealistic expectations without knowing it. Co-parent Projects 3 and 4 provide an effective way to gain realistic stepfamily expectations and alert other family members and supporters to them.

        Tip 8)  Evolve an authentic Bill of Personal Rights for yourself, and use it to assert and problem-solve when your Self is in charge. If other people can't or won't help you fill your needs, patiently build your skills at awareness, empathic listening, and respectful assertion; and (b) heed these wise guidelines without undue guilt, shame, resentment, or anxiety. You may not be able to do that until your Self (capital "S") consistently guides your personality See Project 1.

        9)  When you're conflicted, experiment with this technique: once your E(motion) level is "below your ears" and you can listen, ask yourself and/or your conflict partner "What do you need right now?" Trust the first response to that, and ask or say...

  • "OK, why do you need that?" or ask...

  • "And you need that now in order to...?" or

  • "If you don't get that need filled, what (bad thing) might happen?" and...

  • "If that (bad thing) happened, what would that mean to you?" 

        Repeat this sequence nonjudgmentally with each answer that appears. Expect some anxiety and confusion. When people first try digging down, they often reach a point where the answer is "I don't know (what I need or feel)." Practicing breath-awareness, meditation, and listening to your self-talk usually improves that. For example...

Myra says to Manuel: "Do you have early Alzheimer's? How many times do I have to ask you to tell me if you withdraw ATM cash from our bank account?" This is a Level-1 surface problem: Myra (i.e. her Inner Criticsubself) sees Manuel as "the problem." Normal reactions: Manny explains, defends, asks for examples (then explains) argues, whines, plays "Yes, but...", and counterattacks ("Well how about you remembering where you leave the car keys, Bright Eyes?")

        Same problem, with digging down

Manuel (sincerely, vs. sarcastically) - "Why do you need me to do that?"

Myra - "So I can balance our checkbook and stay on top of our money."

Manny (digging down) - "And why do you need to do that?"

Myra - "Because I get frustrated if the checkbook doesn't balance, and I don't like not knowing how much money we have."

Manny - "OK, Why do you need to know how much money we have?" (Here's where it gets interesting)

Myra - "Duh - because... because if I don't, we could get into trouble." (fuzzy thinking)

Manny (respectfully) - "What kind of trouble are you worried about?"

Myra - "You know, Manny - not being able to pay our bills." (more fuzzy thinking) 

Manny (patiently) - "Stay with me, Myra - what do you feel might happen if we don't pay our bills?"

Myra (probably her Sarcastic Teen subself) - "Oh, minor stuff like our home and car being dispossessed, and our credit rating disappearing."

Manny (still sincerely) - "And if those happened, what would it mean to you?"

Myra - "We couldn't live, Manny! (I'm afraid) we'd be homeless street people, and the kids would starve in rags...!" Level-3 needs unearthed: some of Myra's subselves are scared, and her Self and Guardian subselves need to acknowledge and reduce their fears. This is (part of) her primary problem. Another part is that neither she nor Manny have built the habit of digging down like this, so far.

        If Manny and Myra knew the subselves who comprised their respective personalities, they could agree that Myra's primary (Level 4) needs here were filling

an inner child's terror of being homeless and starving, so...

her Catastrophizer subself wouldn't have to generate semi-conscious images of doom and death, so...

her protective Inner Critic and Harpy subselves wouldn't activate and start making sarcastic inner and vocal judgments about Manny's "Alzheimer-ness" -  so...

her true Self could take charge and do effective problem solving with Manuel's Self  - if present. 

        There's more to this than the example shows. For instance, another core need Myra has is to feel respected  (worthy) by herself and her husband If he ignores ("forgets") her need to know of his cash withdrawals, some of her subselves feel disrespected, and lose respect for him. The disrespect activates various other subselves like her Practical Adult and Shamed Girl. 

        That risks other subselves disabling (blending with) her true Self and behaving "impulsively," like name-calling, sarcasm, ignoring Manny's needs, or withholding sex as a "motivator." This and the couple not knowing communication basics and seven related skills lowers the odds that each of them will fill their primary needs. Over time, this relentlessly degrades their relationship and their family's nurturance level.

      For more perspective on how your and other people's subselves interact, read this interesting excerpt by Michael Ventura, and Embracing Each Other, by Hal Stone and Sidra Winkleman-Stone. All the articles in Family Project 1 are about how to meet and harmonize your subselves under the wise guidance of your expert Self. Family Project 2 offers many Web articles on communication basics and skills to help your harmonizing and filling primary relationship and other needs effectively. 

        Tip 10) Help each other expand and use some new problem-solving terms and phrases. In addition to learning the metatalk vocabulary-builders, experiment with these together...

  • "What do you need from me now?" (then use empathic listening to see if you heard clearly!)

  • "What I need from you now is..."

  • "I'm not clear on what you need form me now."

  • "So you need me to..."

  • "I'm not sure that you understand what I need from you now."

  • "Who do you feel is responsible for filling that need (of yours)?"

  • "That feels like a surface need to me. Let's do some digging."

  • "I think we're focusing on surface problems and needs. Will you (I need you to) help me dig down to Level 3?"

  • "Whoa! I sense that you and I are on different (perception) levels. Let's check to see if our true Selves are disabled, OK?"

  • "Which of your subselves needs to feel heard (or whatever) now?"

  • "I feel like we're struggling here. Let's see if your communication needs and mine match, OK? What do you need from me as we're talking right now besides respect?"

        You and the key people in your life probably aren't used to using terms and phrases like these to help each other fill your personal and relationship needs - right? What do you think might happen if you intentionally experimented with phrases like these with adults and kids?

        These dig-down tips complement other options your family adults have to improve your communication effectiveness together. As you explore and learn together, enjoy modeling your learnings for your kids and teaching them effective communication and problem solving basics - a priceless gift!

Reality Check

        Take a moment to see where you stand with these ideas. A = "I agree;" D = "I disagree," and ? = "I'm not sure," or "It depends on (what?)"

My true Self is answering these questions now. (A  D  ?)

I can clearly explain and illustrate the concept of surface problems and underlying primary needs to a high school freshman now. (A  D  ?)

I accept that I every adult is responsible for filling their own primary needs unless they're disabled. (A  D  ?)

I accept that adults and kids communicate to fill (satisfy) their primary needs, and I can clearly define what effective communication is now. (A  D  ?)

I can explain the concept of "digging down" through four levels of perception to a typical early teen. (A  D  ?). 

I'm motivated to (a) forge my own list of primary human needs now, and to (b) try digging down with various people and situations to see if it "works" (helps to identify primary needs) (A  D  ?)

I'm interested in alerting other adults to the communication basics and skills, and teaching them to the young people in my life. (A  D  ?)

Learning to think and communicate effectively is among my top life priorities now.
(A  D  ?)

        Pause and reflect  what did you just learn?

  Recap

        This Project-2 article proposes that typical adults and older kids have major trouble solving relationship "problems" partly because they (you) focus on surface problems (discomforts) rather than the primary needs that cause them.

        Page 1 offers five other foundation premises about relationship problem-solving. Pages 1 and 2 offer three examples of "digging down" through several levels of adult-partner needs toward taking personal responsibility for identifying and filling each person's current primary needs well enough.

        This third page builds on these examples to outline a common theme that's true of most internal and social conflicts. The article closes with (a) 10 tips you and your partners can experiment with to help you dig down and resolve your primary problems well enough, and (b) an illustration of dig-down questions in action.

        To dig down effectively, you and any partners must choose to...

  • free your true Self to lead your other subselves (personality), 

  • grow and use the skill of awareness over time, and...

  • learn and use the other six communication skills to help harmonize your personalities and fill your respective primary needs.

        Notice your self-talk now. What are your subselves saying about these ideas and your life's quality?

Options...

  • try out this dig-down practice with a partner, and/or...

  • select another resource from this Project-2 link-index, and/or...

  • review these Questions and Answers about communication, or follow a link below.

        Pause and recall why you began reading this article. Did you get what you needed? If not - what do you need now? Dig down to find out!

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Updated  January 02, 2009