Therapists working with a couple hear and understand two
equally valid perspectives, often when each partner sees themselves as «right» and the other «wrong,» or when both partners believe one person is to blame.
Not exact matches
Rather than sweeping women's peculiar moral
perspective — which is intimately tied to their reproductive capacity — under the rug, these feminists celebrate it as an
equally valid or even superior kind of rationality.
Yet judging by the heightened appreciation for artists like Giorgio Morandi, Elizabeth Murray, Richard Tuttle, Ellen Phelan, and Amy Sillman — who, like MacIver, have all invested everyday things and experiences with extraordinary emotion — her
perspective turns out to have been
equally valid.
I'd like to create space for us both to have our own,
equally valid and important
perspectives around this.
When I work with individuals in relationship counseling, I always keep in mind that there are two
equally valid, subjective
perspectives in any relationship.
If they instead took turns expressing their feelings with a «both / and»
perspective that allows for two different and
equally valid viewpoints, they could turn the argument into a conversation where each person takes a turn listening and empathizing with the other.