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After years of studying men and women, I've come to realize that a key to a happy relationship
with the opposite sex is to recognize that we have two natures. One I call "human animal"
and the other "human spirit." Human spirit is the elevated part of us.
It enables us to be our best selves. Human animal is the more primitive part, the instinctive
part that lashes out, often in response to a primal fear of scarcity or competition.
When that happens, I call it an attack of human animal. It's a cave woman or a caveman attack.
And what happens is there's literally an eclipse of human spirit. So human spirit
is still there, but it's in the background, overshadowed by the animal reaction that is
driven by a perception of a threat to one's survival.
So, when men and women perceive a threat to their survival, they react by instinct,
and instinct is defined as a primal, biological urge, impelling a response that brings relief of tension.
Now, I bring that up because It's a good place to look.
Whenever you are experiencing tension, there's a very good chance that you're
reacting instinctively from your caveman or cavewoman, and not from human spirit.
Now, if we're going to bring out the best in ourselves and in each other, we have to
understand what causes an attack of human animal; and what does that, is anytime that we perceive
that our survival is in jeopardy. So it could be a threat to our physical safety,
it could be a threat to property we're attached to, it could be a threat to our identity,
to our sense of self. Now, if we're going to bring out the best in each other, we have
to understand that the masculine and feminine aspects of our natures experience survival,
and therefore safety and security, in different ways.
For the masculine, survival depends upon one's ability to produce results. So the masculine
will feel safe and secure when they have the greatest opportunity to produce results.
And that comes when they are respected and trusted by the people that they work with and the
people they care for. The feminine on the other hand, experiences
safety and security when she feels connected, when she's getting the attention and the interest
that she needs from the people around her that give her a nearly constant sense of being
connected and therefore safe and secure. Now one of the problems is that men and women
have instincts that literally antagonize the other's caveman or cavewoman. So, for example,
the way that a man thinks, which we call "single focus", will cause him to pay attention to
one thing at a time. So if he's watching television the woman in
his life may feel ignored, and she'll get this incredible sense of tension in her body,
and she'll try to do things to try to connect with him, and connect with him, and connect with him,
which, as a "single focus", he's going to experience as an interruption
and be annoyed by it, and cause a downward spiral. On the other hand, women have an instinct
that causes them to want to be scrupulously accurate in their details. So, if a man is
telling a story and he says something happened on a Tuesday, that she thinks happened on
a Wednesday, she'll interrupt him and correct that story. If this is in front of other people,
it's going to cause a problem, because if it's someone whose respect and trust he needs,
and she's now intimated that he lies or exaggerates, that's going to be a problem.
Now, on the other hand, by understanding these ways that we antagonize each other's instincts,
we can behave in a way that instead brings out the best in each other. So, for example,
for a man to overcome his natural respect for privacy, and instead ask questions that
show that he's interested in her. He can even ask her, what are her favorite
questions to be asked, and for a woman to recognize the tension she feels about the
accuracy of details and realize that maybe this isn't so important. Just let him tell
the story. You don't have to correct him on that, and
then he can maintain the respect and trust that he needs. By understanding the differences
in the way that men and women think, communicate, process information, and solve problems,
men and women can learn to bring out the best in each other instead of causing an attack
of human animal.
I'm Alison Armstrong, for Prager University.