Your Partner’s Inner World as Sacred Ground
You would like to be a part of your partner's inner world and to contribute to their awareness and growth. You are sure that you see what's going on for them and how they are getting stuck. You want to help. With some investigation, you notice that you want to help because you would like them to be able to meet needs of yours. You imagine that you can mold them into the perfect partner for you.
Depending on how long you have been perceiving that they are stuck, you might offer your help with more or less generosity of heart. The longer you have been experiencing the pain of their stuck place, the less generosity of heart you will likely have: the more your “help” becomes an expression of your own pain.
Wherever you are on the spectrum from a true intention to help to an indirect expression of your own pain, it's helpful to bring a few things into awareness. Your partner's inner world is a vulnerable and private place, and attempting to enter can easily be experienced by your partner as trespassing on sacred ground. This is very tricky stuff. In part because it's easy to forget that offering your perspective on your partner's inner world is best done only with explicit permission (and, even then, you might be trespassing). And also because the motivations behind your thoughts about their inner world may introduce difficulties to the dynamic.
Let's begin with permission to enter sacred ground. Your partner's inner workings— history, habits, conditioning, family of origin—are an infinitely complex realm. Regardless of how much time you have spent together, you haven't been there for the formation of most of it. Remembering this, your job is to stand at the gates of this sacred ground in a humble and soft way. You have no right to enter uninvited, and if you do you will likely trigger hurt. Remaining humble and entering by explicit invitation only is an example of keeping a healthy boundary.
Even when your partner offers an explicit invitation for you to share in their inner world, it's still dicey. Your partner may be giving up their own self-respect or self-empowerment and thus acting in collusion with you. This creates a one-up / one-down relationship. If you are the one offering interpretations, analyses, and “insights,” you are in the one-up role. In this role, you will likely come to resent your partner and have thoughts that you wish they would grow up, be responsible, transform, and do their personal work.
The second part, your motivation, isn't always easy to discern in the moment. Motivation is just another way of saying universal need. Here are four of the most common motivations behind offering your perspective on your partner's inner world:
Safety: If you keep yourself in the one-up position, you create a perceived sense of control and thus imagine your need for safety will be met. This is likely safety with regard to emotional pain or perceived attacks or abandonment.
Self-acceptance: If you find fault with your partner, then it’s easier to stand in the idea that you are not the one “at fault.” Blaming others is a way to protect a sense of self-acceptance (though it is costly and not truly effective). Being “the one who knows” is also a common way to maintain a sense of self-acceptance.
Relief: You are in pain and want more of your needs met. You hope that if you can change your partner, you will have relief from pain.
Contribution: You see your partner in pain and genuinely think you have something to offer that would help alleviate their pain.
Knowing what your motivation is in the moment requires a willingness to stop and reflect before speaking. During that reflection, take the time to name your thoughts, feelings, sensations, impulses, and needs. From this compassionate witnessing of yourself, you can act authentically and directly from the need alive for you. You can consciously decide how to go about meeting that need.
Through discernment, you may decide that you really do want to contribute to the well-being of your partner. If this contribution does not rise out of your own pain and anxiety, then you can approach the gates of your partner’s inner world humbly and softly. In a soft and neutral tone, you might say something like: “I have a guess about something that might be going on for you. I don't know if it will be a fit. Would you like to hear it, or would you just like some space to be heard?” Offering a second option is a way to support your partner’s true choice, which might be to say no to your input.
In a mutually evolving relationship, offering your analysis, interpretations, and insights about your partner's inner world is likely a rare event. Instead, you spend time listening to your partner and making it safe for them to share by offering empathy and curiosity. Consistently meeting needs for safety, empathy, and acceptance in your relationship creates a secure base for you and your partner to reflect individually and honestly. From this place you can courageously embrace transformation.
Practice
If either giving your input into your partner's inner world or asking for it is a habit of yours, start practicing by just naming it when it happens. A tactile way to do this is to put a handful of beads in one pocket. Each time you catch yourself doing the behavior, transfer a bead from one pocket to the other.
Do this practice for a week and notice under what conditions the behavior increases or decreases. At the end of the day, as you remove the objects from your pocket, guess the needs that were up for you each time you engaged in the behavior.