Please say more about this. My cursory look indicates to me that this is intended as a model to describe different kinds of acting out in kids (and I think you are saying that you think it can easily just be extended to adults). I also think it is intended to help a parent (or partner in your example) interpret the type of misbehavior based off the parents feelings invoked by the behavior. Does that sound right?
So the big takeaway from the mistaken goals chart is that a child acting up or causing conflict is generally attempting to achieve one of the "mistaken goals" instead of the goals of the current activity, and they are doing so out of the desire on the far right of the chart.
So lets say the goal is a "healthy and loving relationship", but the spouse forgets that this is the goal. The core issue as to why they have lost sight of the normal goal is actually on the far right. And their "mistaken goal" is on the left. So what they intend is more "Notice me", "Let me help", "Help me", "Believe in me". But their actions and words focus on the mistaken goal of "undue attention" "power" "revenge" or "assumed inadequacy".
The first four columns help you assess if there was a mistaken goal and ensuing conflict due to that mistaken goal. The last column is what you can do to help with the actual underlying issue.
So lets take revenge as an example here. (This could actually be the BS!). Your goal shouldn't generally be revenge, it's that you are hurt and need help. You have then created the mistake goal of revenge out of this feeling. But if you attempt to make WS hurt they will take that personally and escalate further. Revenge does not help to accomplish the actual goal.
Real Goal: A safe and loving relationship
Mistaken Goal: Revenge
(to get even)
Your partner will feel:
•Hurt
•Disappointed
•Disbelieving
•Disgusted
Your partner will tend to respond by:
Retaliating- Getting even
Thinking "How could you do this to me?"
Taking behavior personallyRetaliates
Hurts others
Damages property
Gets even
Escalates the same
Behavior or chooses another weapon
The belief being reinforced in this cycle is:
I don't think I belong so I'll hurt others as I feel hurt.
I can't be liked or loved.Help Me-I'm Hurting.
Alternative strategies to address the underlying issues of "Help Me-I'm hurting":
Apologize.
Avoid punishment and retaliation.
Show you care.
Encourage strengths.
Use family/ class meetings
Deal with the hurt feelings. "Your behavior tells me you must feel hurt. Can we talk about that?"
Use reflective listening.
Don't take behavior personally.
Share your feelings.
So If BS seems to be attempting revenge, the WS would say something like, "I'm sorry I've hurt you. I know this is really hard, and I won't take that personally, but remember our goal is a safe and loving relationship. Revenge is a mistaken goal if that's where we want to be."
Anyway, most people when they are feeling in these different ways (ignored, powerless, hurt, or inadequate) act up in these ways and generally cause issues in this predictable manner. If you see it happen or are proactive, you can identify this and use the positive conflict resolution tools in the last column. It's ok to do it after the conflict cycle has occurred as well. "Hey I noticed we had a power struggle, what can we do to set a boundary or rule we both agree to so that doesn't happen again?"
(FWIW, Power is my common "mistaken goal" and "assumed inadequacy" is my wife's).
[This message edited by This0is0Fine at 11:24 PM, Monday, September 9th]