Charging Neutral: Beach and Taxes

Charging neutral is a skill I teach that is at the core of presenting self in a way that often generates powerful results.

Here are two examples of charging neutral in action:

My husband likes to party at the beach with his “friends” who happen to be girls in their mid to late twenties. He is in his mid fifties. He knows I do not like it. He needed to spend the night and he said he would stay at one of the girls’ houses. I said, “That’s not appropriate,” and walked out of the room. I came back later and said, “If you want to go to the beach, go ahead. I don’t want you to stay home if you don’t want to.” I went into the bathroom to get ready for bed and did not say anything more about it. My tone was level and matter of fact. The next day he decided not to go.

When I had been in a car accident and didn’t recover instantly, my spouse justified dating by, of course, “the marriage made me do it” reasoning. “My girlfriend can do things with me that my wife can’t. She admires me for all the athletic things I can do that my wife doesn’t want (!) to do with me anymore, etc.” When he screwed up our taxes by filing a joint return and faking my signature on it, making me liable for his immense taxes, which I could never pay, this was too much. He also kept saying he had cut off communication with the woman and I found evidence that he had not. When I asked him about this, he said, “She admires me more than you do!” I simply said, “You haven’t done her taxes, have you?” And he said no more about it, and their association began to get some reality into it and after a few more truth-seeking expeditions, was evaporated.

Have you Had an Affair with Tiger?

There is a problem in our culture with hero(ine) worship.

We look at that someone (usually an achiever and/or charmer) and wish we had what s/he had. Sh/e’s got it and we want it. S/he’s got and we don’t have it and think we probably never will have it, but it sure drains off some of the tension by watching him/her have it.

This “hero(ine)” we don’t know personally. There is a persona we know. But, that’s about it. (I suppose tabloids make a ton of money off us… as we try to get to “know” this hero(ine.)

We idealize this hero(ine.) We believe that being next to this “hero(ine),” adapting his/her mannerisms, wearing his/her jersey, or using his/her brand of golf club will somehow at some level make us more “complete.”

Many marital affairs are like this. The other person is idealized, not truly known. The cheating spouse believes that being with the other person will give him/her what she is truly seeking. The other person is the answer! The other person is the hero(ine.)

Eventually, the frailty of humanity emerges, the hero(ine) is exposed and the great disappointment settles in that this person also, is not the answer to my internal emptiness, confusion and lostness.

So, I say, be done with hero(ine) worship.

The only hero(ine) is within you… somewhere. Your power, the essence of who you are, your gifts, your ability to see beauty, your capacity to care, your desire to love and your desire to live this life with it’s moments of pain and moments of joy…that’s the hero(ine.)

I wonder what our lives and our world would be like if our journey consisted of uncovering, embracing and allowing that inner hero(ine) to emerge?

THE Question that MUST be Asked

When discovering infidelity in a marriage there is one important and first question that must be asked.

Not asking this question and attempting to answer it honestly often slows the healing and change process.