A Slacker Relates
By hezamarie on Mar 12, 2007 | In Family | 7 feedbacks »
Let's face it, not everyone has the gift for on-the-spot courteous rhetoric. Receiving the non-glamous truth from our partner hurts a lot at times, which makes us perceive that our partner's intentions are then to hurt us. This is such a preventable pitfall but can easily deepen if we never reveal our troubled interpretations. What's worse is that sometimes our closest friends and relatives wrongly encourage these doubtful perceptions, when what we really need is to go to the source, find out from our partner what they really meant and let him/her know your thoughts about what he/she said.
Too simple, you say. Really it is. But I didn't say it would be easy. Not convinced? Well alright, then. What do I know? After all, I'm just a young whippersnapper living in an unannounced committed relationship without the social comfort of the M-word to ground my observations. (What do we lose when we are so blinded and deafened by our ultimate standards and absolutes? what do we maintain?)
----
So we talk it out, as rough as it can be sometimes and we make up..with homemade chocolate cupcakes. I give the directions in German, measure out the ingredients and Alex stirs the goodies together. Team work. And will power - we ate only one. The rest were giving out to butter up his colleague at work because he's the new guy on the project. Now on to brush up my German :bye:
7 comments
@Paul: Well said. Sometimes I lose sight of things and forget our relationship is not static. Change is hard, especially when I still sometimes feel I'm surrounded by enough of it, even after living in a foreign country over 1 1/2 years. What's important is that we don't give up on each other even just a little bit. I'm also all for not 'batting the bunny' around. Thanks for the visit:-)
I probably wouldn't, but I guess even I can't be entirely certain...
My husband is Dutch, and at some point I realized that I was never really going to learn the language unless we switched over and stopped speaking English to each other.
The first six months were horrific! I was going through the same thing you mention, torn between wanting to learn to speak properly and being frustrated and hurt whenever he'd correct me. (I even remember him correcting me once during one of our rare arguments! I wanted to kill him!!!)
But in the end the effort was really worth it. Because the annoyance can be an incentive as well, and you'll eventually become fluent enough that you'll end up correcting him at some point! And that's a wonderful feeling. :P
Plus, it never hurts to have a reason to eat homemade chocolate cupcakes...
(tried to enter my URL but keep getting an error message for some reason.)
@James: Learning a foreign language as a hobby or to use some of the time is pretty difficult to achieve fluency without having more than 50-80% of the time hardcore Japanese streaming through the brain. In all honesty, you are going to find a lot of her mistakes either hilarious or painful to your ears and it will show. Sometimes she'll agree, sometimes not. Just remember it's an awesomely sweet gesture; it shows commitment and interest in her future with you.
@Betsy: I couldn't have explained it better. The first six months were pretty tough. I've got a ways to go before I correct him, but I'm gaining ground.
(I corrected the URL problem. My antispam software has issues with blogspot it seems. Sorry about that.)
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