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By Bettina Shultz-Jobe and Kate Naylor

One of my mentors and teachers, Margery Segal, once said that if you’ve made it to the end of a therapy (or coaching, wellness, etc.) session and haven’t needed to make a repair yet, that you need to hurry up and make a mistake. . . so you can make a repair.  And she meant it!

In one of her trainings we even practiced making mistakes and repairs, because the repair is where the healing takes place – it is in the repair of a mistake that we connect more deeply, grow, and strengthen ourselves and our relationships.

AND repair cannot happen without rupture.  In order to reap the benefits of repair, we must embrace mistakes, conflict, and stress.

Rupture and repair over and over again is how our muscles grow and strengthen. It’s what is needed to develop a strong, flexible, and resilient nervous system.  It is how secure attachment is formed in our earliest years, and how our relationships throughout the lifespan become more intimate, fulfilling, and able to thrive in the midst of life’s tribulations.  Indeed, the cycle of rupture and repair is needed to grow and thrive, so it is no wonder that Margery encouraged curiosity and the freedom to misattune and make mistakes (small ruptures), giving us a powerful opportunity to repair.

Practitioner:  “It seems like that situation brought so much sadness.”

Client:  “No, not really.  It made me angry. . . so angry I could hardly breathe.”

Practitioner:  “Goodness, I really missed you. I misunderstood what you were telling me.  It makes sense that you were angry – of course you were.  Can you tell me more so I can understand your anger more deeply?”

The reality is that perfection isn’t an option – much as we might like it to be.  When in relationship with ourselves and others (whether it be friends, family, colleagues, or clients) we will make mistakes – learning the art of repair is then a necessary and loving way to strengthen our connections.

Many of us need to explore our history with rupture and repair and the beliefs we therefore carry in our body, mind, and soul, if we are to embody a practice that helps our clients heal through reparative experiences.  You see, so many of us and so many of our clients have been robbed of the very important cycle of rupture and repair that is needed for growth.  So, when I say to my client “I missed you.  I didn’t get it, but I really do want to understand,” I may be the first person who has ever acknowledged a misattunement and genuinely sought to repair it in the moment.  These types of interactions over and over again are a salve for attachment wounding – it’s the stuff attachment repair is made of.

Why is this conversation important for the EAS field?

Understanding rupture and repair is important for everybody and for any person in the helping professions, but it’s particularly important for those of us who do experiential work.  When we do experiential work like Equine Assisted Services, real life happens in our sessions. If our clients are building a genuine relationship with a horse (and us), things will not always go as planned. In vivo, our clients will experience stress, misattunement, and conflict, and it will be up to us to model healthy ways to repair relationships with self and others. When we do experiential work, this stuff isn’t just theory, it is a practice in each and every session for us and for our clients.

Let’s discuss the cycle of rupture and repair further.

Rupture and Repair Grows and Strengthens our Muscles

I love the way the physical body can help us understand more abstract things like emotions, attachment, and relationships.  For example, when we lift weights, our muscles are, in essence, damaged.  Tiny injuries to the muscle fibers, called microtears, occur when we workout. However, given proper nutrition, blood supply, and rest, these ruptures will repair allowing the muscle to grow bigger and stronger than it was before. The rupture, however, has to be such that repair is possible, and there has to be a pause that allows repair to occur.

If we continue to stress the muscles without time for rest and repair, the opposite of growth occurs. Muscles can begin to break down, a condition called Rhabdomyolysis that is life-threatening.  Rupture without repair will cause our muscles to disintegrate.  That said, we can’t avoid the rupture if we are to grow our muscles.

There has to be rupture AND repair for growth to occur.

Rupture and Repair Grows and Strengthens our Nervous System

Our nervous system is the same way. Our nervous system grows and becomes flexible and strong and resilient through something called allostasis, the rhythm of stress on the nervous system.  For stress to build resilience it must be moderate, predictable, and short-term – in NL we often use the term eustress to describe this.  Eustress can be metabolized by our bodies.  We can recover from it. Eustress is a rupture for which repair is possible.

Again, the stress needs to be moderate enough that repair is possible, and there has to be a pause that allows repair to occur.  When the stress just keeps coming and coming, we can no longer metabolize it.  There is no pause to allow for repair – oftentimes this is called allostatic load, and it compromises the nervous system instead of building resilience.

That said, in order for our nervous system to develop resilience – strength and flexibility – it has to “work out.” We can’t avoid the rupture all together.  We need moderate amounts of stress AND time for repair.

There has to be rupture AND repair for growth to occur.

Rupture and Repair Helps us to Develop Secure Attachment

Rupture and repair is also what helps us to develop secure attachment, because it is a strong yet flexible nervous system that paves the way for a strong yet flexible person – a person who can better cope with, accept, and adjust to difficult situations.  Adults with secure attachment are less likely to shut down or become emotionally dysregulated when interpersonal conflict arises  – basically, they handle conflict in a way that builds relationships instead of tearing them down.

Secure attachment is formed when a baby experiences a bit of stress (an inevitable experience for any human) – hunger, discomfort, over stimulation – and a caregiver comes in and offers reparative actions of connection like holding, rocking, singing, etc. Eustress (rupture) and soothing (repair) over and over again, builds secure attachment.  Our need for soothing through relationship (co-regulation) continues throughout the lifespan, and it is the co-regulation (repair) that builds the “muscle” that eventually makes self-soothing possible at times.

In order to develop secure attachment at any stage of life, there has to be rupture AND repair.

Rupture and Repair Builds Relationships

It is conflict resolution – basically rupture and repair – that builds relationships with others throughout the lifespan.  Again, rupture and repair is at the heart of all growth.  When we have secure attachment, we believe deep in our bones that conflict resolution is about reconnecting.  When our attachment is more insecure, we tend toward two extremes:  rupture avoidant or rupture centric. This relationship with rupture is typically learned on a cellular level in our family of origin.

Growing up in a family that was rupture-centric

In a rupture-centric home there is often an enormous amount of chaos, conflict, and aggression, without the healthy modeling of repair.  Maybe feelings are expressed, but there is seldom healthy communication about those feelings or movement toward resolution.  Fear is a primary emotion in these homes, and children learn to do whatever it takes to keep their parents happy.  Oftentimes, in this kind of environment rupture is a major threat to safety.  Repair is not considered when survival is the primary concern.

Those of us who grew up in rupture-centric homes may handle conflict in a way that “just gets us through it.”  People please, appease, become defensive, withdraw and then pretend nothing happened – whatever it takes to feel better.  This is an approach that originates from survival mechanisms, and is inherently self-focused rather than relationship focused. So, we get stuck, alone with our feelings, and miss out on the relational repair; the one thing that will help us to learn that rupture doesn’t have to be so scary.

The allostatic load in this home is high because the stress just keeps coming and repair is seldom sought.

Growing up in a family that was rupture-avoidant

In a rupture-avoidant home, conflict is avoided at all costs.  Maybe you never saw your parents fight?  Or only emotions seen as “positive” were allowed.  Feelings were not discussed.  “Go to your room and when you are calm you can rejoin the family.”  Maybe image was really important.  “Don’t do that in front of your grandmother.”  If you grew up in this type of home, you may have learned to internalize feelings and check out from body sensations, because the best way to keep connection with your caregivers was to always be “okay.”

Those of us who grew up in rupture-avoidant homes, might find conflict deeply threatening and terrifying, because conflict means that the relationship will be damaged beyond repair.  We might find that we are scared of feelings that all people have, like anger, jealousy, and grief.  The repression of such emotion leads to more conflict avoidance and the cycle continues.

The allostatic load in this home is still high because pretending that everything is okay doesn’t make it so. Our nervous system still experiences stress, but when we are young we don’t have the benefit of a caregiver who helps us repair – soothes us to completion – thereby helping us learn to self-soothe.  We believe the only way to feel okay is to avoid rupture, thereby also avoiding repair.

In either childhood environment, we also miss out on the practice of conflict – so when we inevitably encounter it as adults, whether it terrifies us or feels all too familiar, we do not have the neural pathways to know what to do next.

How do we learn productive rupture and repair?

  1. Explore your relationship with rupture and with repair, and give yourself so much grace.  The building of this relationship you have with rupture and repair is not something over which you had control.  The re-model, however, is totally up to you – and it will take time
  1. Remember that we need to practice repair over and over again in order to begin to trust that mistakes and stress and conflict are truly safe.
  1. Self-care is a form of repair, and it begins with you.  If you have a stressful day, take time to pause so that you can do reparative behaviors – go on a walk, stretch, sit in a rocking chair, talk with a friend.  Notice when there is a rupture, and then listen to your body and respond by giving yourself what you need to repair.
  1. Make a request for a reparative conversation that is needed.  “We need to talk.”  For many this is the hardest part, so it takes great bravery.  So, again, exercise self-care and self-compassion first, and then say, “We need to to talk.  Is right now a good time for you?”
  1. Lastly, have a repair conversation.  Given that many of us are just beginning the practice of healthy rupture and repair in our lives, I thought a bit of guidance might be useful, which is why I wrote The 5 Steps for Repair in a Relationship. I hope you find it helpful as you begin having conversations for repair.   Remember, these conversations take practice and will likely be messy, giving you even more opportunity for repair.  🙂