Making a mountain out of a couch
MAXINE COHEN
When is a couch not a couch?
No, this is not a koan (or a Cohen -- ha ha), nor have I turned
into Houdini.
There is an answer, so let me back up.
Over the holidays, my daughter, Carolyn, asked if her friend,
Deirdre, could come home with her as she had no family to celebrate
with. Despite my misgivings, I said yes. The thought of anyone being
alone was just too sad for any other answer. But I knew I’d get to
spend less time with Carolyn, whom I don’t get to see very often, and
I don’t have enough beds to accommodate everyone. I figured it’d just
have to work itself out.
So they came. And like a good hostess, Carolyn took care to show
Deirdre a good time. Instead of us cooking together, they were out
biking. Instead of us hanging out, they were at the beach. Instead of
... you get the picture. Just as I’d predicted, I saw way less of
Carolyn, and I felt sad.
As nighttime came, we were one bed short. Carolyn decided that
Deirdre could sleep on the living room couch, but being my child, she
knew she’d better check that one out with me.
True to form, I was not thrilled. I don’t like people sleeping all
over the place.
“I’m gonna have to think about it,” I said, “I’m not dead set
against it, but it’s not really OK with me either. See what else you
can think up.”
So they devised a fallback plan. They’d sleep at her sister
Barbara’s apartment. Fine with me.
It was settled. Or so I thought.
The next thing I knew, Barbara had gone home, and Carolyn was
pulling the cushions off the couch to make it into a bed.
Not so fast!
“What are you doing? I didn’t agree to this.”
Well, seems Barbara kind of took off before they’d, like, made a
plan to go with her. Duh?
I was upset. It wasn’t so much about the couch as it was about me
and my wishes not being a priority and my boundaries not being
respected. Carolyn was putting her friend’s needs before mine, yet
again. It felt like I was being marched right over, and rarely do I
take that well.
Carolyn was upset, too. After all, it is just a couch, and I would
survive the mess. She thought I should understand her desire to take
care of her friend and that I needed to be way more flexible.
So this is when a couch is not just a couch -- when it means
different things to different people.
Perception determines reality. If you stay in the right and wrong
of whether it’s OK to sleep on a couch, you’ll stay stuck there
forever. You have to get below the surface and out of the content --
the couch, garbage, children, in-laws, money, sex -- to the needs,
wants and feelings that aren’t being acknowledged. If you can then
see it from the other person’s perspective, too, then you create the
possibility for understanding and resolution.
From growing up in my house and living under my rules, Carolyn
understood only too well how I want to be treated and what my
boundaries are. And I understood how rigid I can be at times and what
it meant to Carolyn to be able to take good care of her friend.
Yes, she was upset with me. And yes, I was upset with her. But we
were able to let it go, barely discussed it, because we both knew and
were OK with what it meant to the other person.
Now that’s a real milestone for our relationship, which may mean
that the couch has yet another meaning: Carolyn and Mom can at times
understand each other well enough to let go without making a federal
case of it.
Now that’s a couch I like!
* MAXINE COHEN is a Corona del Mar resident and marriage and
family therapist practicing in Newport Beach. She can be reached at
maxinecohen@
adelphia.net or at (949) 644-6435.
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