
WHY do people think of visiting a psychiatrist only when everything else
fails? "It's necessary for people to undergo training and acquire a license
before driving a vehicle but they don't feel the need for any training before
driving a lifetime vehicle of marriage?" questions Dr Sameer Parikh, consultant
psychiatrist, Max Health Centre. Adds Dr Jitendra Nagpal, consulting
psychiatrist, VIMHANS (Vidyasagar Institute of Mental Health and
Neuro-Sciences), "It's not professional help but professional guidance that
couples are seeking today."
What
Is PmC?
PmC
involves helping the couple understand each other's needs better, being aware of
their own and their partner's sexuality, anticipating and preparing for the
changes that marriage brings. Sakshi Ghosh*, 25, an Area Sales Manager with an
MNC says, "Though it would be difficult, if need be, I would opt to stay away
from my fiancé and pursue my career than shift from time to time
according to his transfers and promotions." Her fiancé says, "What's the
point of getting married and staying separately?" Marriages maybe made in
heaven, but they have to work out on earth.
Case
study:
Courtship is dotted with discoveries - pleasant and unpleasant.
Rajdip and Sneha*, recently engaged, immediately faced a small hiccup. He had to
just light a cigarette and Neha would have panic attacks. "She sulks and
refuses to speak to me. And it's not like I am a chain smoker - I'm more of a
social smoker. If I am being nagged before marriage, I dread to think what will
happen after marriage." A visit to a 'shrink' followed.
Expert's
verdict
: "It's a myth that people would change after a relationship. If
your partner is drinking or smoking, chances are that he will continue to do so
even after marriage. Don't be fanatic about your spouse's habits, and try to
look at things from the other's perspective. Drinking and smoking within limits
is not a reason enough to hit the rooftop." But again, the question is... who
decides the 'limits'? These are questions that must be worked out.
PmC
is an interactive session that encourages the couple to look at their strengths
and weaknesses honestly, to understand what they are both bringing to the
marriage. Important areas of marriage like goals in life, roles and
responsibilities, decision-making, finance, sex, in-laws, conflict resolution,
etc, could be discussed with the help of a premarital counsellor.
Case
study:
Shruti Desai, 26, Graphic Designer, says, "He is too shy and too
quiet. I wish he considered me important enough to tell me what he is feeling."
Expert's
verdict
: Many women fall in love with strong, silent types and then
resent their men for the rest of their lives because they won't talk to them.
The thought that if your partner loves you, then if not today, then some day
he/she will change, is nothing but a romantic illusion. Shruti's fiancé,
Deepak, on his part found it difficult to express his feelings, and was advised
on the basics of good conversational skills.
Research
shows: that approximately 15 per cent of children are genetically introverted
and that most of them will always be that way. Don't make your partner your
photocopy. A relationship is about looking at life in the same direction but not
at the cost of the other's individuality.