This one won’t be a favorite of animal lovers, but it illustrates an important aspect of human life. In an experiment, a dog was placed in a cage with metal grating as the floor and a divider to make two sides. The first part involved turning on an electric current on both sides of the cage. The dog would jump from one side to the other attempting to avoid the shock. It eventually stopped jumping and lay down, as it realized there was nothing it could do to escape the shock. After the shock was turned off and the dog had time to recover, the second part of the experiment began in which the side the dog was lying on had an electric current turned on. Instead of jumping to the other side, the dog remained lying down while getting shocked. Martin Seligman’s experiment had demonstrated that the dog had learned to be helpless – it didn’t believe there was anything it could do to avoid the negative event. Appropriately this is termed learned helplessness.
As mentioned above, this comes up more often than you may expect in my experience in treatment. Perhaps the most common experience is when a spouse is extremely frustrated by her partner. As a result, she routinely “punishes” her spouse even if their partner is making attempts to do better. This may take the form of the spouse “not understanding” adequately or not showing my client the appropriate desire to make change. As a result, her spouse ultimately feels there is nothing he can do and stops trying. This can also occur with children, as they may feel they perpetually disappoint parents or teachers and quit trying, as they perceive they are unable to escape the negative consequences.
Of course, we all have also experienced times in which we perceived we were helpless. This is often not the case but it certainly feels so. Often the perception that there is nothing we can do comes from our not wanting to experience certain emotions. For example, someone may perceive there is nothing he can do to be able to speak in front of a crowd. He’s tried everything he knows to stop feeling anxious – happy thoughts, imagining their audience naked, medication, etc. Yet he still feels the same way. In these cases, it’s often the willingness to experience a feeling while knowing that it is short-term that gets us through and allows the anxiety to ebb.
But what about the situations mentioned in which a spouse, partner, or child is doing something “wrong” and we perpetually give them negative feedback? The correct response is often shaping. Shaping is a behavioral term for reinforcing successful approximations of the desired behavior. One of the best ways I’ve seen this described is “catch them being good.” As the person makes efforts and/or gets closer to the desired change, she is reinforced – given a consequence that is likely to make her do that behavior again. If we can gently also include what we liked and suggest things to get her closer to the needed behavioral change, it can be amazing what can happen. With patience, kindness, and finding ways to tolerate our frustration without taking it out on others, great things can occur.
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