Becky Rose's friend came to her to unload a jumble of feelings — chief among them, anguish and anger: Her marriage was breaking up after her husband abruptly announced he wanted out.
"My natural impulse would have been to tell her, 'You're better off without him,' to join her in dumping on him," said Rose. But "I stayed in the gray zone. I said, 'This is really painful. What can I do?' "
Rose, a 65-year-old St. Paulite who's been married for more than 40 years, was following an approach she learned through Marital First Responders. The program is for friends, family members and co-workers of people who are struggling in their marriages. Created by Bill Doherty, a longtime family social science professor at the University of Minnesota, it's not intended to supplant professional counseling, but to quickly offer a confidant.
"From research, we know that people turn first to those they know and trust," said Doherty. As a licensed marriage counselor who also trains other marriage counselors, he very much believes in what professionals can do. The problem is that most couples wait too long to seek help.
"They only go to marriage counseling when they're in a lot of trouble, when it's probably too late," he said. "With marriage counseling, both people have to agree. Marital First Responders are one-to-one, you don't have to get the spouse on board. Someone in a painful marriage values a confidant to help them sort out their relationship."
Responders aren't intended to deal with what Doherty calls "hard problems," such as toxic marriages plagued by abuse, addiction and affairs.
"But most divorces happen today because of what we call 'soft problems,' " he said. "That's money conflicts, growing apart, incompatibility, the sex isn't any good anymore. There's hope for these couples to work it out, if they can be steered back to what brought them together in the first place."
Good listeners
While you'd think that this kind of training might appeal to buttinskis, Doherty insists that's not the case.