ajsmithPHD

I am clinical psychologist and expert in social connection and loneliness. I am also a father, husband, Christian, Army veteran, and generally concerned citizen about our social world and community ties. I've published more than 40 peer-reviewed articles that focus on improving social functioning for individuals and communities. My mission in this life is to build a community that is deeply dedicated to re-connecting to our deepest meaning through friendships, family, and community belonging

Reclaiming Connections: The Power of Values in Relationships

By Dr. Andrew Smith, Clinical Psychologist, Professor, and Pat Tillman Scholar. To start the process of transforming your relationships now, download our free guide and checkout the REWIRE app In today’s fast-paced world, values often appear in business and organizational mission statements, but they are equally crucial in our personal lives. Personal values like honesty, authenticity, gentleness, and persistence guide our actions and choices, helping us break painful patterns and build meaningful relationships. There is a lot of talk of ‘Values’ out there. Simply defined, values are aspirational qualities of action, or desired ways of behaving. As individuals, we can have and define our own values as well. For me, this morning, my core values are definitive: Honesty, Authenticity, Gentleness, Persistence. Values are not achievable…not something we can perfect. Rather, values serve as a standard or goal by which we can measure choices or actions. And a guide for choosing new actions and breaking painful patterns and habits. Last week, my 6-year-old son broke a window on the backside of our house with a rock. I was upset. A cost calculation ran through my head. Words came out. In relationships, values are a trustworthy anchor by which we can determine how to respond and engage with others. Much more trustworthy than emotion or thoughts. Values are especially foundational in relationships that matter…because they’re the ones with the highest stakes that produce the most emotion (both positive and negative emotion). Romantic partnerships, marriages, long standing friendships, parent-child relationships, family relationships, workplace collaborations. The ones that propel meaning in our lives, without which we are left feeling isolated. Because my role as a husband and father matter so much to me, and therefore my marriage and my relationship with my children matter so much to me, these relationships also produce the most emotion on both ends of the spectrum (joy and pain).  My body produces the most powerful emotional signals, designed to keep me going back to improve, repair, and draw upon these relationships. Emotional friction in relationships is a feature, not a bug. In this model, the broken window and my painful response becomes an opportunity for connection for me and my son. This approach avoids leaving painful scars in our relationships that perpetuate disconnection in the future. In which my son learns to fear my reactions, and I learn to fear my own reactions. In which we begin to avoid one another. In which I start playing the “fathers and sons greatest hits” song about how my son doesn’t respect my hard work, and he learns to live down to that expectation. A real classic that fathers and sons have been playing for centuries. I’ll write a lot more in the future about how emotions drive us away from our values in the moment—towards patterns of hiding and withdrawal from relationships. How emotions drive us to avoid going deeper with others for short term relief (“whew…I don’t have to have that argument today”) with long term consequences for deeper connection that can only come from being known (which includes painful but worthwhile cycles of conflict and repair). But this is priming the idea. We can learn to choose values to propel us towards our aspirational or desired selves, and our relationships towards those that we envision. Rather than staying stuck in repetitive patterns that define emotion driven lives. And this is not a “you” problem…its an “us” as a human race in 2024 problem. Values are our way out. Choose your values. Notice when you are behaving in ways that are incongruent with your values. Choose an action to realign with value. Rinse. Repeat.

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The Problem and The Purpose

By Dr. Andrew Smith, Clinical Psychologist, Professor, and Pat Tillman Scholar. To start the process of transforming your relationships now, download our free guide and checkout the REWIRE app For more than a decade, we’ve been living as unwitting participants in the greatest social rewiring experiment in the history of the human race. As we have traded authentic analog connection for virtual existence, our isolation from one another has produced a kind of skepticism, mistrust, and lack of experience with one another.  Our social musculature has atrophied, involving the capacity and skills to develop and deepen real relationships that allow us to authentically share in each other’s triumphs, losses, joys, and sorrows.  Places and people with whom to celebrate. Places and people with whom to grieve. The erosion of authentic connection is juxtaposed to the rise of carefully crafted and manicured virtual connections that occur largely through social media. These virtual relationships create a way of thinking about others that makes us mistrustful, fearful, and disappointed (read: unrewarded).  Our brains are social comparison machines- and they tell us that we are not good enough, beautiful enough, or talented enough to live authentically and boldly in our friendships, families, and local communities. To have our real, messy selves revealed is terrifying. Our motivation to act towards others in authentic ways is undermined by a lack of perceived rewards that will come from interactions, manifesting in justifications such as “It is not worth is” or “I don’t have time.” My goal with this blog is explicit: To unpack the features of an intervention designed to improve relationships, communities, meaning and purpose. My goal is to build a community around a philosophy and plan to reclaim our social world. To re-engineer or RE-WIRE the ways that we ground ourselves and our young people in the meaning and thriving that can only come through relationships and community. To build the art and practice of relationships, service, and vulnerability.

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