“Islands [insecurely avoidant] tend to have both heightened
primitives and wild ambassadors. If your partner is an island, he or
she may rely too much on talking to work out issues. This often is a
consequence of not being able to connect readily on a nonverbal level.
Of course this imbalance is natural for an island and generally may not
lead to complaints in setting other than romantic relationships. When
the relationship becomes distressed, a left brain gone wild can get your
partner into hot water if he or she comes across as overly logical,
rational, arrogant, unemotional, or unexpressive, or an insufficiently
empathic. Under stress, an island can be overly terse, dismissive, and
inflexible, or too silent or too still.
“During a conflict, an island will tend focus on the future and avoid
the present and past. ‘The past is past. Why can’t we just move
forward?’ is a common island approach. In all-out war, an island’s left
grain gets hijacked by primitives and can become threatening by
communicating attack or retreat. Rendered useless to social or creative
causes, it uses words (or the withholding of words) as weapons. It
still sounds like an ambassador, but it acts like a primitive: its only
interest is survival.” – Stan Tatkin, Psy.D. in Wired for Love
How we communicate in love and war will depend on our relationship
styles. Islands are just one of three possible styles. See earlier
posts for more information on the three.
Renee Madison, MA, LPC, CSAT is a counselor in Colorado. She can be reached for appointments at 303-257-7623 or 970-324-6928
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