By CAROL DWECK
MINDSET AND RELATIONSHIP
MINDSET AND RELATIONSHIP
Was
Your Relationship Meant to Be—Then Watch Out! How Relationships Get Derailed.
How to Revive a Relationship Through Mindset. Rejection: Who Recovers and Who
Doesn’t. Bullying and What to Do About It.
As
a society, we don’t understand relationship skills. Yet everything is at stake in
people’s relationships. Maybe that’s why Daniel Goleman’s Emotional
Intelligence struck such a responsive chord. It said: there are
social-emotional skills and I can tell you what they are.
Mindset
adds another dimension. They help us understand even more about why people
often don’t learn the skills they need or use the skills they have. Why people
throw themselves so hopefully into new relationships, only to undermine
themselves. Why love often turns into a battlefield where the carnage is
staggering. And, most important, they help us understand why some people are
able to build lasting and satisfying relationships.
"The growth mindset says that you, your partner and relationships are capable of growth and change"
"The growth mindset says that you, your partner and relationships are capable of growth and change"
So
far, having a fixed mindset has meant believing your personal traits are fixed.
But in relationships, two more things enter the picture–your partner and the
relationship itself... The growth mindset says all of these things can be
developed. All–you, your partner, and the relationship – are capable of growth
and change.
In
the fixed mindset, the ideal is instant, perfect, and perpetual compatibility.
Like it was meant to be. Like riding off into the sunset. Like “they lived
happily ever after.” Many people want to feel their relationship is special and
not just some chance occurrence. This seems okay. So what’s the problem with
the fixed mindset? There are two. In the fixed mindset:
#1: If You Have to Work At It, It
Wasn’t Meant to Be
One
problem is that people with the fixed mindset expect everything good to happen
automatically. It’s not that the partners will work to help each other solve
their problems or gain skills. It’s that this will magically occur through
their love, sort of the way it happened to Sleeping Beauty, whose coma was
cured by her Prince’s kiss, or to Cinderella, whose miserable life was suddenly
transformed by her Prince.
#2: Problems Indicate Character Flaws
The
second big difficulty with the fixed mindset is the belief that problems are a
sign of deep-seated flaws. But just as there are no great achievements without
setbacks, there are no great relationships without conflicts and problems along
the way.
Chapter
6 shows how a growth mindset can get people out of this bind.
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