My husband snores sometimes.
Back in the day, when we were newly married, this drove me crazy. I thought we were going to end up in separate bedrooms—not something I aspired to that first year (or now, for that matter.)
I would lie in bed in the middle of the night, listening to Tom snore, and feel so angry and powerless, especially if I was on call the next day. Finally, I’d give up and go out to try to sleep on the couch. The next day I’d be cranky and tired, and blame it all on Tom’s snoring.
That was then.
Recently, my husband was at work and we were chatting on the phone. “Hey,” I said, “last night you came up with some new sounds.”
“New snores, you mean?”
“Yes,” I said. “At first I thought the wind knocked over the garbage cans outside the window, but when the sound came again I realized it was just you snoring.”
After he stopped laughing, he apologized to me for keeping me up.
“Oh, you didn’t keep me up,” I said. “I was just awake. I went right back to sleep.”
This is now.
The difference? My thoughts about Tom’s snoring.
In the intervening years, I found The Work of Byron Katie. When I did a workshop with her and someone’s cell phone rang, I thought, How rude.
Katie said, “Oh, how nice, someone wants to speak to you.”
I decided to try thinking of my husband’s snores as “just a noise.” Every time he snored, I said to myself, “It’s just a noise, like the cars passing on the road. It’s just a noise.”
I realized that I had trained myself to react to my husband’s snores as if they were a personal attack. I reacted like it was some deliberate plot of the part of the Universe (or, on really bad nights, on Tom’s part) to make sure I didn’t get a good night’s sleep. And I had so much work to do! How was I going to get it all done?
Once I started telling myself the snores were just a noise, it got better. It didn’t happen overnight (get it?), but gradually I stopped reacting to my husband’s snores. Once I stopped thinking all those really charged thoughts about the snoring, I was able to go to sleep, snores or no snores.
Now my husband’s snores do not interfere with my sleep at all. Really. If he snores, it is a sound like my own breathing, or a plane flying overhead, neither good nor bad, just there.
My life and my sleep are so much better since I decided to consciously change the way I think–actually, what I think.
What is the “noise” in your life that you have turned into a personal attack on you?
Let me know in the comments.
Thanks again for allowing me to post the CaregiverPitfalls on my blog. It was posted today, and I appreciate all the wonderful and inspiring information.
Hi Marylin,
You are welcome! I’m so glad you found it useful. For anyone else who would like to read the article, it’s a free download if you sign up for my newsletter. If you’d like it without signing up for the newsletter (or you’re already signed up) just email me and I’ll send it to you. Or check out Marylin’s latest blog post!
Thanks for the good work you are doing in the world, Marylin!
Warmly,
Diane
Dangerous question…but I’d have to say it would my mother’s constant criticism and bossy ways of telling me what to do. After all, I’m 53 years old, I used to tell myself and would get seriously annoyed because she couldn’t seem to acknowledge I’d learned a thing or two through the decades. At one point I was so annoyed I wanted to avoid interacting with her unless I absolutely HAD to…but then…
I realized she won’t be around forever and instead of looking at her criticism as a way for her to bring me down and make me feel bad, I looked at INTENT rather than style of communication. And the intent was flawless. When I matched her intent with her history of doing wonderful things that were concrete demonstrations of how much she cared, those harsh words became weak, a false show for something else – LOVE.
Hi Laura,
Yes, I’ve used this technique in many situations, with many family members as well as others. Always, when I ask myself why a particular person needs to express themselves in a certain way, the answer is about them, not me. When I can focus on that, it takes all the sting out of the words or actions.
Thanks for sharing your example with us. Real world examples are always helpful.
Warmly,
Diane