Bill and Melinda, why didn’t you CALL ME??
It may come as no surprise that after 25 years as a last-ditch marriage therapist, my first thought at the end of Frozen II when Anna and Kristoff decide to get married was, “Sure, nice castle, but we all know you’ll be in therapy in five years.”
And when Bill and Melinda Gates, two of the richest people in the world — announced their plans to divorce after 27 years of marriage, my first thought was, “Sure, nice castle(s), but why didn’t you CALL ME??”
I mean, apart from the fact that they probably don’t have my number.
(214.357.4001 — in case someone knows them personally. It’s not too late. Really.)
Here’s the other reason. Change occurs when pain overcomes fear. Read that again. I’ll wait.
Change occurs when pain overcomes fear.
So … change occurs when pain overcomes fear. It’s true. It’s a rule in the universe. Like gravity.
This means that tolerable pain leads to longer, crummier marriages.
Also true. Also a rule in the universe. Also, like gravity.
And it’s REALLY hard to know what to do about a mediocre marriage. On average, couples let a problem simmer for six years before they seek therapy. Many of the couples I see have been married between 20 and 35 years. Meaning they’ve sometimes seen half a dozen therapists before they get to me.
Why didn’t therapy work the first half a dozen times?
Here are a few reasons marriage therapy might not work.
- When someone asks my musician dad how a song goes, he always answers, “it doesn’t go, you have to push it.” Same deal with marriage counseling. The counseling doesn’t do the work. YOU do. Sometimes people just don’t do the work. It’s too uncomfortable. Too easy to tolerate mediocrity.
- The second reason is a little embarrassing. I’m outing my entire profession here. Lots of marriage counseling out there just isn’t helpful. The interventions are trite and artificial. And they don’t stick. The couples I see need more than communication scripts and date nights. Sorry but it’s true.
- Finally – the pain hasn’t yet overcome fear. The fear of change, fear of the hard work, fear of failure — all that fear — motivates people to do just enough to relieve the most acute pain but not enough to go the full distance and find real happiness.
Here’s How Marriages Die
The truth is, most marriages die after a slow decline that erodes a relationship into tolerable but dissatisfying mediocrity.
Now I know zero about Bill and Melinda Gates’ marriage. Actually, that’s not true. I know one thing. I read an article once in which Melinda discussed how the family had fallen into gender roles. Melinda noticed one night that everyone had left the kitchen after supper and she was standing there… alone… doing the dishes… alone.
Score one for the slow decline.
(Side note: kudos to the Gates for doing their own dishes at all, right? You know they have an army of people working for them.)
According to the article, Melinda viewed this as a wake-up call. She hauled everyone back in the kitchen and they divvied up the work.
Score one for Melinda.
And yet… the slow decline had clearly begun. I wonder what would have happened if Bill and Melinda had listened to the meaning of the kitchen incident more than they listened to their fear of divorce? More than their fear of public failure? More than their fear of ruining their kids’ lives? More than their fear of selling the castle(s)? What would have happened if they’d let themselves translate the low-grade pain into a legit sense of urgency? What would have happened if that low-grade pain led to intelligent intervention?
Isn’t Trying the Right Thing
Now maybe Bill and Melinda are not afraid of any of those things. As I said, I don’t know them. But I can say with certainty that many people stay married because they don’t want to get divorced. Not because they want to stay married. The catastrophe of divorce is much scarier than trudging along, keeping it together, “not giving up.” So they keep trying — just enough to keep going but not enough to make it better.
This means that by the time people are sitting on my couch seeking last-ditch marriage counseling, not only have they tried literally everything they can think of and mowed down three or four other therapists, they are in so much pain that they are finally unafraid to do whatever it takes to end the madness. By the time people are sitting on my couch, they’ve been living in their crummy marriage for as long as they can possibly stand it. And finally, one day, something or someone snaps, and that’s it. Boom.
My clients are tired. They’re pissed off. They’re discouraged. They’re bitter. They’re fresh out of answers. In fact, after all that pithy cheese-ball therapy, they’re convinced there are no answers. And … here’s my favorite part … they’re motivated. They literally do not want to be in this marriage one more day. And that’s a good thing.
Score one for intolerable pain.
My pitch to my clients in that first session? “Hey guys, I agree with you. This marriage sucks. Let’s end this marriage. Right here, right now. What time is it?” And I look at my watch. “Okay, it’s 4:30 on Wednesday the 2nd. Let’s do this. Let’s end this marriage TODAY. “
This is the part where they blink at me in stunned silence. Because, you know, they’re paying me not to say stuff like that.
Then I say, “The question I have for you is, are you interested in doing the hard work to create an entirely DIFFERENT marriage without changing the personnel? Are you interested in doing the hard work to be better, healthier humans and finding out if you can create a better, healthier marriage with better, healthier versions of yourselves? Because we all agree this marriage has to go. We’re not saving it. We’re pulling the plug. The patient is dead.”
Last-Ditch is the Last Step to Something Better
The answer — after they get their heads around the possibility of ending the relationship without leaving the marriage — is, “Yes. Of course. Let’s dump this baby and do something better.”
This is the part where I remind them that therapy is cheaper than divorce. And now they’re REALLY in.
So we roll up our sleeves and get to work. It’s time for some intelligent intervention.
What do I mean by intelligent intervention?
Good marriage counseling is like four-dimensional chess. Lots of moving parts with a simple unifying premise: all behavior makes sense in context.
All. Behavior. Makes. Sense. In. Context.
So I roll out my four-step plan and we get to work finding the context and deconstructing the marriage, piece by piece. So we can create a new one. Piece by piece.
Step 1: We work to understand the patterns and problems in excruciating detail. Excruciating. Detail.
Step 2: We work to understand the history of the two humans who are perpetuating the problems. We look in all the nooks and crannies and find the dirt and take a good hard look at it.
Step 3: We roll out the multi-partiality and properly apportion responsibility, empowering both partners to effect real change in the marriage.
Step 4: We work to construct a new relationship in which everyone is consciously choosing to be a self-responsible grown-up and build a relationship in which their old behaviors no longer make sense.
And the truth is, it’s not as hard as it sounds.
So maybe Bill and Melinda are done. Baked. Shot-out. Waving the white flag.
But that’s exactly why they should call me. Because I think there’s a good chance that the pain has finally overcome the fear. There’s a good chance that, since they’re finally ready to end the relationship they might be ready to create a new marriage. From the ground up. They might finally have a chance at a really juicy, interesting life together.
And of course, therapy is cheaper than divorce. They could keep the castles. All of them.
About Melanie Wells
Melanie Wells, LPC, LMFT, founded Lifeologie Institute (previously The LifeWorks Group) in 2000 to offer clients a fresh, innovative approach to the everyday problems of life. She received a BA in English from Southern Methodist University; a MS in Counseling Psychology, specializing in Marriage and Family Therapy, from Our Lady of the Lake University in San Antonio; and a MA in Biblical Counseling from Dallas Theological Seminary, where she helped develop and teach in DTS’s graduate Biblical Counseling program. She is a Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC) as well as a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist (LMFT). She is a clinical fellow of the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy, a clinical fellow of the American Counseling Association, and an approved LPC and LMFT supervisor. She specializes in couples and marital therapy – particularly last ditch marriage counseling, as well as other issues, including spousal abuse, women’s issues, codependency and divorce recovery. Melanie specializes in couples and marital therapy – particularly last ditch marriage counseling. She also works with a variety of other issues, including spousal abuse, women’s issues, codependency and divorce recovery. In addition to her work at Lifeologie Counseling Dallas, Melanie is the founder of Lifeologie Franchising and The LISPY School for psychotherapeutic yoga. She is also parent to two Lifeologie therapy dogs, Gunner and George, and founder and chair of the nonprofit DAWG Project (Dallas Animal Welfare Group).
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