Emotions in Marriage: The Journey Towards a Secure Connection by Surojit Bhattacharjee
Learn how to navigate marital challenges, improve family dynamics, and prioritize self-care for healthier, more fulfilling relationships.
Emotions are like seasoning in the stew of a relationship! They add flavour, depth, and sometimes a bit of a kick!
However, societal norms and personal inhibitions often create barriers to openly sharing and accepting emotions within intimate relationships.
This article examines the crucial role of normalizing emotional experiences within these connections. It explores how nurturing a culture of emotional openness can enhance communication, trust, and overall relationship satisfaction. By understanding the importance of emotional expression and implementing strategies to cultivate empathy, vulnerability, and healthy communication practices, you can achieve a more fulfilling, harmonious, and secure relationship experience.
Why is emotional communication important in relationships?
Communication of emotions plays a pivotal role in the dynamics of any relationship. They are the building blocks of deep connections and intimacy. It is important to understand how emotions shape our interactions. This knowledge helps us navigate the twists and turns of love and connection.
Sharing vulnerable thoughts, feelings, and experiences with your partner develops emotional intimacy. Establishing regular emotional check-ins to discuss concerns and needs opens the gateway towards a secure bond.
Techniques for expressing emotions in marriage.
It is crucial to embrace and normalize acceptance of emotional experiences in intimate relationships. This habit can lead to profound transformation of how you connect with your partner.
We are all vulnerable towards hurts, whether intentional or otherwise, from the special one. The key to surviving the hurt feelings & insecurity lies in dismantling communication barriers, cultivating empathy, and building a safe space.
Individuals who can successfully identify, accept, and express their emotions can bring dramatic improvement in relationship dimensions of satisfaction, intimacy, and affection.
Types of Emotions
Let us first categorize emotions for navigating through them better:
- Primary emotions
- Secondary emotions
- Instrumental emotions
Primary emotions are the unfiltered core response of individuals to situations. It can be anger at violation, sadness at loss or shame of feeling unloved. We usually regret these emotions, or at least the expressions of them, at a later stage.
Secondary emotions are defensive coping techniques we employ to cover up the primary ones. It can be aloofness covering fear or depression hiding anger.
Instrumental emotions are those we use to achieve an interpersonal goal. Say, we may use crying to elicit sympathy or shouting to instil intimidation.
Key emotions to share for a secure relationship.
First step towards securing an emotionally stable relationship is to be aware of the emotions. Everything that we suppress eventually escalates and backfires. The secret is to express the covered-up emotion in the secondary emotions bracket.
Let us illustrate this. Tell your partner you fear losing her/him due to lack of the regular talks you used to have in those early golden days. Do not act aloof just because you feel hurt. Do not hide or hold back your positive emotions.
Express these positive emotions spontaneously and frequently: Gratitude, Intimacy, Empathy, Acceptance, Forgiveness. Well, your list could be longer if you search for them.
Identifying negative emotion communication cycles
Explore how the problematic behaviours prop up. Find their root: the emotions from which they arise. Your partner’s unkind behaviour will start to make sense to you. You realize these are her/his efforts to connect with you.
Let us say, your partner feels sad about being alone. She/he thinks that showing anger is the way to attract your attention and re-establish the connection. Slow down, track and reflect as a couple what the last argument was about. Re-enter that cycle of communication. Openly acknowledge each primary emotion hidden behind the approaching, withdrawing, connecting, or running away. Discover how secondary emotions maintain this negative emotion communication cycle. Find out which primary needs they serve to express.
Normalizing acceptance of emotional experience
With each hidden emotion exposed and recognised, now is time to accept these as normal. Each emotional stage gives us a unique experience within ourselves. Experience is not just about the event, and it is not just about the personality. Experience is the impression, the effect of an event on your mind.
Between couples, each emotional feeling is associated with an experience. Identical emotions can generate different experiences in partners. Revisit, note and then spell out the experience to your partner. Re-engage with acceptance of the experience of your partner. Before you know it, you have broken the vicious cycle of negative emotional patterns!
Rebuilding interaction patterns in new emotional experiences
Through reflection, you can dismantle the negative communication cycle. This helps you remove the blame from the partner for all the troubles in the relationship. You recognize that the reason for the distress is the cycle of negative emotional expressions.
Partners more accepting of their emotional experiences can explore their needs, fears, anxieties underlying those emotions. This, in turn, helps you to assert your needs towards your partner. You can do so without apprehension, shame, or guilt.
Through this enhanced understanding and awareness, you have established the restructured emotional expressions. Now both of you can engage freely. You can shed the urge to withdraw, or neglect due to new emotional experiences.
Navigating emotions for a secure marital connection
Acknowledge that genuine emotions exist in all close relationships. Speak to your partner without embarrassment about the presence of the primary emotions within you. Reflect together at how both of you interacted when such emotional experiences occurred. Pledge to speak about them without blaming the other one. Accept them as a normal urge to feel connection and security. Recognise that those overwhelming emotional experiences were not signs of weakness. They are strengths within the bond between the two of you.
Remember: we can only feel deeply hurt when we are deeply in love. Put an honest effort to restructure the interactions. Use “we” in the centre replacing the “I” and “you.” Do it for yourself first. It heals, makes life easier and companionship sweeter for you.
Awareness of emotional need and seeking professional help
Do not deny yourself the need to feel emotionally secure. Accept that a secure relationship can only exist when both feel so, not one at the expense of the other.
When both of you are aware of your emotional needs, but unable to connect effectively, seek help from a professional. Seeking help is a sign of strength and care in the marriage, not a weakness. It means you do not want to let the bond go just like that!
Be authentic and open to each other and the professional to form an effective alliance. Do not try to bring the professional to your side. You are looking to feel secure in your love. Both of you are in the same boat!
When you know, you know!
Signs of secure attachment in your relationship:
- You communicate confidently about your connection with each other.
- You are comfortable in expressing your emotional needs.
- No topic is off-limits: emotions are the primary feelings of human beings.
- You express in a way to engage and not to blame.
- You seek support from your partner and not combat.
- You accept all the emotional expressions from your partner. You know they are genuine and not framed to prosecute you.
- You break negative interaction quickly. You take a step back, go slow, process your primary emotions. You initiate open talk to explore what lies beneath the spoken or unspoken expressions.
* * *
Let us sum it up
Vulnerability is like the glue that holds relationships together. Showing it requires courage, but it can create unbreakable bonds.
Fear of judgment is like a rain-heavy cloud hovering over your emotional parade. It dampens your willingness to express yourself authentically.
Embrace vulnerability and let go of worries like “what my partner might think” or “will she/he love me anymore when I spell it out?” Expressing the vulnerabilities actually leads to deeper connections and richer emotional experiences. Opening up and showing your true self can build trust and intimacy in ways that surface-level interactions never could.
Implement these strategies for healthy emotional expression. You can experience more fulfilling, resilient, and secure relationships built on a foundation of emotional openness and acceptance.
Article Authored By
Surojit Bhattacharjee
Surojit Bhattacharjee has over 25 years of experience dealing with different Mental Health and Developmental issues within his family context.
He is an engineer with over two decades of experience, and has recently formally entered the field of Psychology and Counselling.
Disclaimer: This article has been written by a guest author as part of a mental wellbeing awareness campaign. You are advised to properly verify any advice given with qualified practitioners before following it. Also, for that reason it may not meet our usual standards. PsychoTech Services, Psychology Learners or any of its partner organisations, members or employees cannot be held liable for any damage or loss caused due to following the advice and recommendations given herein.
Start the discussion!