In psychological terms mixed messages are called “double binds” and they were discussed extensively way back by Gregory Bateson (http://www.anecologyofmind.com/). Analytical people will enjoy Bateson.
Let’s look at Mary Lou, who delivers mixed messages. We met her in an earlier post. She may have had an ulterior motive to doing so and she may not even be consciously aware of it.
Ulterior Motives for Mixed Messages
Let’s look at the ulterior motive possibility.
Mary Lou knows very well that something is wrong. She asks her husband to ”be honest” with her although she actually is too frightened and fragile to handle honest feedback. If she’s unable to handle painful feedback, why does she ask for it? The answer is because when she admits—to herself—that she could be hurt by some kinds of feedback, she becomes frightened.
In other words, Mary Lou can’t handle the feedback and the act of admitting she can’t handle it hurts and frightens her as much as the feedback itself.
Family History of People Who Give Mixed Messages
Mary Lou grew up in a family with high standards. You had to excel. Her sense of her own identity was tied up with excelling. Her parents were so disappointed when she didn’t measure up to their expectations, that she would feel crushed. Because they were kind and loving parents, she certainly wanted to please them. And I would expect that in holding such high standards, Mary Lou’s parents thought they were doing something positive for her. Maybe they thought that they were bringing out the best in her that way.
Mary Lou was a person who excelled. She had risen high in her chosen field, going beyond practicing dentistry to being an oral surgeon. Nevertheless, early childhood influences are potent enough to unseat current achievements. The moments in her life when she did not measure up continue to feed her subconscious with fears that she will once again not measure up.
But the fears must be kept under cover. They must remain out of Mary Lou’s conscious awareness or those feelings of childhood inadequacy and fear will return. To complicate matters, since she needs to think of herself as successful and smart—which she is—she can’t be afraid of honest feedback, at least not consciously. Inviting honest feedback “proves” to her more than anyone else that she has not done anything wrong.
The bottom line is that not only does Mary Lou give mixed messages to her family, but she gives them to herself. On the one hand, she knows deep down that something is wrong. On the other hand, she can’t allow herself to be aware of this or it will crush her like it did in childhood. Yet, she must invite the very thing she fears in order to “prove” that nothing is wrong.
And now we come to the way this Houdini wiggles out of the ropes: When finally given the feared message, the one she can’t handle, she deflects the entire problem onto her unwitting husband. If she can convince herself that the problem is his fault, then she doesn’t have to feel like a failure.
She even gets the benefit of playing the victim of his mistakes so she can soothe herself. In soothing herself, she is being nurturing to herself instead of beating herself up. Obviously, that’s a better choice from her perspective.
Advice For Spouses of People Who Give Mixed Messages
Of course, it’s not a better choice at all. Underneath it all, she “knows” something is wrong with her. She’s depressed over it and she’s further depressed by the victimization that she has received from her husband. Notice that this victimization is real. He’s angry at her! Well, of course he would be, but that’s not helping either. That, by the way, is his second mistake.
This brings me to how her husband, Lloyd, should handle things. When Lloyd tells Mary Lou “I am not hiding!” it’s his first mistake. Why do I say that?
The answer is that that is a defensive response. The rule I tell my clients always is: Never go on the defensive. It just doesn’t work and you feel like a loser. It fuels anger, too.
His second mistake was to get angry at her. See, it may feel to him like she has set him up and she has—subconsciously. Not only is it not something she did on purpose but the very act of being aware that she needed to do that would cause her to be aware of her “failings.” It would be almost as if she told herself, “I need to make Lloyd the bad guy so I don’t have to think about my mistakes.” Obviously, that’s impossible! The minute she says this to herself, she is thinking about her mistakes—the one thing she can’t do.
She did not consciously set him up so being angry at her is quite unfair. It’s like being angry at your child for not getting a homework problem right. The child didn’t go and make a mistake on purpose. But that’s another discussion.
The worst part of Lloyd’s anger is that it plays into Mary Lou’s hands. Now, he’s the bad guy.
So what should he do?
My approach is always to put things on the table. When the air is cleared and the feared message is given, it’s not so terrible. It’s something you can face. Whether Lloyd has chosen to deflect the discussion, as he did in the first scenario, or whether he is honest, he needs to talk about the pattern rather than the original topic they were discussing.
Let’s follow discussion #1. He says, “Oh, no,” and Mary Lou responds that she doesn’t trust him because he is not honest and then accuses him of hiding from conversations. Instead of denying this, he needs to refocus the whole discussion. Here is a possibility:
“Mary Lou, you are correct. I don’t like entering into conversations with you in which whether I chose (A) or (B) I’m going to be wrong. This time I deflected the topic and it didn’t work. If I were honest, that would hurt your feelings. Until we can really have an open discussion and your feelings are not going to be hurt, I will have to choose this option.”
Now, granted Mary Lou can’t handle this because it throws the ball into her court where she does not want it, but it is truthful. That is a more adult way for Lloyd to handle the problem. If Mary Lou tries to deflect it again, he can say, “See, it’s happening again,” and then perhaps offer that she get some help. He can suggest they work together on my book, The Healing Is Mutual, or get direct help from me. Mary Lou is so afraid of facing what is inside her that it is unlikely Lloyd will be able to turn this troubling situation around on his own.
Hello Dr. Deb,
Thanks for your blog posts. I am finding them very helpful. I am someone recovering from an abusive family background and a resulting anger management problem, so they are quite applicable to my life.
In this post, you said something that could imply that someone was not responsible for their subconscious actions. “She did not consciously set him up so being angry at her is quite unfair.” I have previously used comments like this as an excuse to be abusive, even if the statement did not mean what I wanted it to mean.
My relatively recent understanding of the subconscious is that it is the ‘pre-thinking’ or ‘habit’ section of the brain. In other words, the choices in the subconscious are ones that have been made before. I think this is the same as the concept of training yourself into compassion you wrote about.
While your example describes a child who does not know how to get their homework problem answered correctly (a lack of knowledge), Mary Lou’s problem seems to be that she learned how to answer the problem incorrectly (wrong training). What I found to be working well for me is to learn correct ways to handle difficult situations that come into my life.
I am commenting because I can see how your post could be taken in a way that, I believe, is different than you intended.
Thanks again for helping,
Thanks so much for writing.
Let me clarify “responsibility.” If you’re tired and you’re driving and you hit someone, God forbid, you are responsible. The fact that you didn’t intend to hit someone is no excuse. There are no excuses for hurting someone else. At the same time, for Lloyd to be angry at his wife is not right. Anger brings back her anger at him. It feeds into her willingness to shift the blame back to him. That is the worst thing he can do on his own behalf.
I am so glad that you have figured out how to untangle yourself from this dilemma. Keep it up!
This is one of the main issues that i deal with in marriage. My spouse was raised in an environment that didn’t allow him to express many emotional needs and after a couple decades of trying to defend myself and fam from accusations that r a twisted up version of the truth, i have finally realized that my responses to try to right his “wrong thinking” r getting nowhere. I think i will try this now even if it doesn’t change his thinking it will be less exhausting and frustrating for me.
“It’s a shame that you see it that way.”
I would appreciate more examples of what to say when spouse makes untrue accusations about how fam or others feel about him or any more thoughts on this topic. For example” everyone is happier when I’m not around”. “your parents hate me”.
I have been married for 26 years and found out 7 months ago my husband had an affair for 3 yrs 8 mos. He has been lying to her and lying to me and our 3 daughters. His “affair partner” came to me because he was telling her he was going to leave me for her. No evidence of this whatsoever but he admitted it and I have it on my smart phone. Now he is denying it and trying to spin it back that I believe everything she says. After researching I find that he has a covert aggressive personality. I always knew he thought differently. We went to a counselor but my husband would not show any emotions or empathy. He has said he was sorry for all he had done and to forgive him. He still doesn’t admit what he needs forgiveness for. For 6 months I tried but he said he didn’t want to talk about it anymore and it was over and done with, however, not for me. I heard him tell my youngest daughter when she ask him with tears to please just admit it and he told her he did not have an affair. It was then I decided to cut off all contact with him until he could be honest, make a commitment to our marriage and our family. All he said was he did not meet my standards. And I replied if our marriage vows was too high of a standard for him. I do not want a divorce but I cannot live in a marriage that he continues to be so dishonest with me and our 3 daughters. Any other alternatives?
His actions has broken our family immensely. Two of my daughters have nothing to do with him. He still tries to show no emotion. He continues to be at church where he didn’t before. I don’t know what it will take–I would have broken a long time ago knowing how hurt my family was.