Monday, June 1, 2009

Less Is More: No MVPs Allowed In Love


If there is one thing that psychologists, therapists, and helpers in general are notorious for it’s bringing a MVP attitude into our personal relationships. As a result, we tend to do way too much work in relationships. We feel LeBron James-like because we are used to fixing everyone else’s relationships and, quite naturally, take the lead role on fixing our own.

Well, well, well…how exactly did that work out for LeBron? He took the lead role only to discover that a team without a MVP had significantly more power. Why? Because each member of the Orlando Magic simply focused on “doing his part” and allowing their teammates to do the same. It kept everyone focused, included, and HAPPY. Truth is, everyone wants to feel like a contributor by doing his/her respective part well.

The same thing holds true in relationships. Two people who commit to doing their equal share (50%) are always stronger than a couple with a 75-25, MVP-style split. As helpers, we should know that a fist is always more powerful than a finger-no matter how big or clinically skilled it is. We must commit to simply doing our part (never to exceed 50%) and rely and expect our partners to do the rest. They are not patients, clients, etc. and are fully capable-if allowed- to do their part.

We cannot single-handily fix our relationships. When we try, we always make matters worse and our partners eventually feel disempowered and ultimately do less and less since we are so driven to do it all (like LeBron’s teammates). Ironically, the team or relationship needs the MVP to fail so that the other partners can step up and shoulder the load. When we do this, our partners will appreciate us more and we’ll become a stronger team. Remember, when it comes to helpers, MVPs and love… less truly is more.
Do you find this to be true in your relationships?

3 comments:

D.Crim said...

That is so true! I feel without people letting God leading the relationship, taking the MVP stance makes the relationship sometimes completely one-sided, and eventually unsatisfying end is what will occur. The one person not doing so much will get lazy in future relationships and will seek the opposite sex to take care of them and do all the work. While the MVP person will feel used but thinks that's just the way relationships are supposed to go. The MVP person to me feels they see the prize, and the way to get it is forcefully without wisdom. For their vision has to come to past at any cost.

Jackie H. said...

I have learned the hard way, that if someone isn't calling you, isn't trying to see you and doesn't consider you in their plans...aha, there is a reason...but I do think it should be 100 percent/100 percent and not 50/50 if that makes sense!

Violette L. Reid said...

Very true but sometimes people are taught that we are to be strong for one another. We are to pick up the slack when our significant other can't. We are to be strong where the other is weak. How do you know when to be 50/50 and when to be 60/40?