Take the initiative to invite good, solid communication.
Even though I made a study of all of this I still ran into problems when I got married.
It might surprise you to learn that my husband and I have fights.
Yup. Doozies, too.
My parents loved each other with a passion. Their pattern was to be all lovey-dovey, quiet spouses, going about their business in apparent harmony until BAM! Once in a while, that passion transformed into skin-searing fights of nuclear proportions. Educated, intellectual people, they would be appalled to have their relationship described this way but my siblings and I have compared notes and we all agree. My parents were all or nothing when it came to a serious hurt or disagreement. I did not want my relationship with my husband to be that way.
An all-out fight is not communication
So to begin the lesson, communication can only happen when our frontal lobes remain engaged. As long as we’re still able to think we have a chance to follow these four guidelines for how to have a good fight.
“Peace does not mean an absence of conflicts; differences will always be there. Peace means solving these differences through peaceful means…” READ MORE
—four Guidelines—
How to Have a Good Fight
Guideline #1
Be impeccable with your words.
You demonstrate control, by which I mean, a thinking brain, by:
• Speaking directly, not passive-aggressively, like, “You’re right. I must be a moron. I should be taken out and shot,” which can be so confusing which is the point. Or sarcastically, as in, “Whoa! Listen to you all of a sudden! Aren’t you smart!” You know, the kind of sarcasm that’s defended by “Can’t you take a joke?” Man, I could write a whole article just on this…
• At a reasonable pitch and volume, not loud enough to be heard on the other side of the house or by ships at sea. Men have those deep voices that can be hardened like a cannonball if they want to dominate. Women tend to raise their pitch as well as volume when feeling threatened. Both are primitive survival tactics developed as humans evolved. They are signs that communication is not happening anymore.
• Avoiding defining curse words. By that I mean that a well-placed “That f@#king hurts me,” gets a pass, but “You are a mother f@#king a%&-hole,” does not. Please tell me you see the difference. All name calling is off the table, come to think of it. It is not communication. The sole purpose of words used like this is to cause pain.
Guideline #2
Keep to one topic at a time. No piling on of past hurts.
I see this a lot in couples therapy where it’s a common misconception that the purpose of therapy is to have the same fight they always have but in front of a therapist. So they really pile it on. “This is just like last fall when you…” If what happened last fall is still an issue, talk about that and only that.
Piling on past transgressions only serves to distract, to diffuse the focus until it’s fog and overwhelm — none of that is communication. Awareness of how the past can sneak into a conversation will keep the fight manageable, like riding a horse at a fast gallop rather than a full-on bolt. Don’t worry if you find yourself yelling about the Thanksgiving of ’09 when the subject was what happened at dinner last night. Just take a deep breath, lower your voice and refocus. You can do this.
Guideline #3
Keep it between the two of you. .
Another way to bring in other people is to say something like, “You’re just like your father and we know what a jerk he is!” If you have an issue with your father-in-law make him a topic of another conversation because what you’re looking for is insight and this isn’t it. This is a verbal molotov cocktail disguised as insight. Insight shies away from knock-out, drag-out fights, generally speaking.
Keeping each other’s confidence is important as well. That doesn’t mean keeping secrets, it means respecting privacy. Don’t gossip with just anybody about your most intimate fights. I cringe when I see a social media post that was obviously written in the heat of an out-and-out fight. Or when I overhear someone in line behind me at the coffee shop describing what should be a private matter loudly for all to hear. If you want to lean on a friend, make it a good, trustworthy friend who will keep your, and your partner’s, confidence.
Guideline #4
Use a time out.
Rope-a-dope. This maneuver is reported to me by weary spouses who are stalked around the house like they are prey and told that they are “giving up” when they ask for a break, that what is needed is “more work, not less” and they should hammer at this even if it takes all night!
When they don’t agree or you don’t agree on a time out you’ve got a problem. Don’t chase. Be wary of being chased. You both need to trust each other that you will re-engage after the time out. When you’re afraid that the break will mean no resolution and the problem will go into hiding until it pops up again, the result can be chasing. It’s also a bully’s tactic to wear the opponent down by not allowing a break.
Keeping Your Respect for Each Other Intact.
You managed to get down in the arena, used all the tools, not weapons, available to find understanding, empathy, compassion and, yes, love. You placed the problem outside of the relationship, in front of you, not between you, or worse, inside of you, so that you can both look at it, out there, instead of blaming each other.
A good fight can end in the best, awesome make-up sex ever because together you became the victorious veterans of a well-fought battle by hearing and seeing each other through the fog of war.
Letting Go of Bitterness After Being Betrayed
By living we take risks. By trusting we take the biggest risk of all. When betrayal happens our foundation crumbles … READ MORE
Say What You Mean, Mean What You Say
“The difference between the right word and the almost right word, is the difference between lightening and a lightening bug”… READ MORE
Elvira G. Aletta, PhD.
Elvira G. Aletta, Ph.D. is a wife, mom to two adults and one horse, psychologist and writer who lives in Western New York where it’s cool to wear a cape and tall boots every day.
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