Bids for Connection: How to make and reciprocate them
How well do you notice when your partner is reaching out to connect with you?
That process of reaching out to connect is called a bid for connection.
As human beings we are wired for connection, and in our romantic relationships we want to connect with our partner. I know you’re probably thinking, “duh, Alicia, of course!”
Even though this concept is incredibly simple, it’s amazing how many couples miss the importance of this, and end up feeling lonely in their relationships.
As simple as bids for connection are to make, they are just as simple to miss because they happen quickly. (Kind of like when you go to the grocery store and the automatic doors open, and you have a few seconds to get in, or the doors close.)
An example of a bid for connection could be: you and your partner are sitting on the couch, and your partner looks out the window, and says, “wow, there are a lot of birds out there.”
This is not a relationship altering revelation, it’s just a simple observation but one that your partner sees as a way to connect.
At that moment you can turn towards your partner by saying something like, “Oh, yeah.” Or you can turn away from your partner which would be something like continuing to scroll on your phone, or keep your gaze focused on the game you’re watching on TV.
(You don’t even have to physically turn towards your partner, that’s just the language that we use to describe reciprocating bids for connection.)
According to John Gottman, in order to maintain a healthy relationship there needs to be a 5 to 1 ratio when it comes to reciprocating bids for connection; so for every time you turn away from your partner and don’t reciprocate a bid for connection, there needs to be five times that you do.
Reciprocating your partner’s bids for connection is extremely important because when a person feels like their partner isn’t reciprocating their bids they tend to make meaning of this, and they begin to tell themselves things like, “I guess what I have to say isn’t interesting to my partner,” or, “I am not interesting to my partner.”
After continued missed bids for connection, the person who feels like they aren’t important or interesting stops making bids altogether, and one or both partners begin to feel lonely.
Loneliness in a marriage is a difficult feeling, and since I work with so many couples recovering from infidelity, it makes me worry because that loneliness can be a slippery slope that allows a person to give themself permission to begin opening up to someone else.
So, look up.
Acknowledge your partner when they are reaching out to connect to you.
Even if it’s just to point out the flock of birds outside the window. Those little connections are important even if the subject matter really isn’t.