These 7 basic skills will help you avoid—or recover from—a big fight.
From the outside looking in, relationships seem pretty straightforward. Once you couple up, you have a built-in person to watch Brooklyn Nine-Nine
with and wrap your arms around at night. But the hard truth is that
relationships take work. Any relationship therapist will tell you that
approximately 90 percent of having a successful, healthy relationship is
about communication.
So what happens if you
never learned how to effectively communicate, especially when it comes
to telling your partner how you feel (about them, about your shitty day
at work, about the way you feel when they make googly eyes at that one
celebrity with the rock-hard abs...)?
Generally
what happens when you can’t or won’t communicate properly is a bunch of
blow-out fights. “Most [cisgender] men don’t understand the importance
of validating their significant others’ emotions, and therefore
arguments can become very heated very quickly,” says Monte Drenner,
LHMC, a licensed counselor and therapist with MTC Counseling in Florida.
And a big fight typically means your communication skills suffer even
more, because who’s really good at talking out their feelings when
they’re seething mad?
Learning how to
communicate is key if you want to avoid those big fights, or if you want
to patch up a recent argument. Of course, changing the way you interact
with your partner isn’t going to be easy, and it’ll take some time. But
these seven steps will get you started.
Embrace the awkward.
Most
people (men especially) haven’t learned how to talk about their
feelings directly and honestly, so that makes trying to communicate a
little awkward and clunky at first. It’s not intuitive to us to ask
someone if we can kiss them, for example. But recent conversations about
consent have made it clear that direct communication (literally saying
“Can I kiss you?”) is the best form of communication. That holds up for
any kind of conversation, whether you’re asking for consent, explaining
why you’re in a sour mood, or feeling insecure about your relationship
and trying to explain why. Although she recognizes that it’s clunky, sex
therapist Rosara Torrisi, PhD, suggests using Marshall Rosenberg's Non Violent Communication
method. “It encourages everyone to have better vocabulary about their
needs, emotions, and values,” she says. You can watch videos explaining
Rosenberg’s method on on YouTube. But whether you decide to try his approach, to use the classic “I feel” statements
(focusing on how you feel, rather than projecting how you feel onto
your partner), or to try something else, recognize that it’s going to
feel weird at first. And that’s okay.
When in doubt, over-communicate.
If
you’re not sure how much you should be sharing, start with the
assumption that you should share everything. “Most of the men who I work
with tend to withhold rather than indulge, and communicate
telepathically rather than expressly,” says marriage and family
therapist Paul Hokemeyer, Ph.D. “For these reasons I encourage them to
say the very things they feel don't need to be said and over-explain their experiences and feelings.”
If the moment is charged, take a step back.
Anger
and communication don’t mix. Think back to the times you’ve hurt your
partner — you were probably angry when it happened. “When we’re fighting
with our partners, we’re being ruled by the most base and primitive
part of our central nervous system,” Hokemeyer says. So rather than
trying to fix the problem, we tend to say whatever we know will make our
partners feel terrible. “It's a very destructive dynamic,” he says.
In
order to avoid this damaging spiral, he suggests taking a step back
from the intensity of the fight. Walk away and give both yourself and
your partner time to cool down. It’s okay to say, “I’m not in a good
place to talk about this right now. I’m going to take a walk and clear
my head.” Ideally, you take at least 30 minutes away from the fight to
let your heart rate rest, your mind to calm down, and to think of a
better way to express yourself, Torrisi says.
If
your partner really won’t allow you to walk away, Hokemeyer suggests
counting to 50 two times in your head before responding. “The point is
to allow reason to intervene in the situation and to move your reactions
from those of your primitive brain to the more elevated part of your
brain that provides you with an intelligent strategy to resolve the
conflict,” he says.
Don’t try to fix everything.
One
of the biggest mistakes men tend to make in communication is trying to
fix a problem that might not even exist, Drenner says. “Many times,
their significant other is merely sharing a struggle or venting about
something,” he says. “They’re not really looking for a solution.” When
you give them a solution instead of a shoulder to lean on or an
attentive ear, they might be disappointed because what they wanted was
to be heard, not fixed. “A good rule to live by is don’t attempt to fix
something unless specifically asked to do so,” Drenner says.
Don’t just speak. Listen.
When
couples argue, it’s often because one or both people haven’t tried to
hear their partner out. You may be so focused on proving your own point,
that you’re not really listening to your partner’s. Even if you don’t
agree with what your partner is saying, it’s important to listen and
actively try to understand their perspective. “Work harder to understand
than to be understood,” Drenner says. “It’s hard to argue with someone
who’s trying to understand your point of view.” And if you truly believe
you’re in the right, you’ll be able to make more effective
counter-arguments if you’re listening to their points.
Let yourself be vulnerable.
“Men
have been acculturated to think rather than feel,” Hokemeyer says.
Because young boys are told both consciously and subconsciously that
they’re weak for showing emotion, men tend to struggle with being
vulnerable. But if you really want to be good at communicating with your
partner, you’ll need to learn how to share your feelings.
“Communication, especially communication in the realm of intimate
relationships, requires a level of vulnerability that often invokes
uncomfortable and out of control feelings,” Hokemeyer says.
In
fact, being able to talk rationally and honestly about your feelings is
more attractive than coming off as an emotionless automaton. “Women
view emotional vulnerability as a strength,” Drenner says. So while it’s
scary to let someone see your vulnerability, it’s also essential for a
healthy and lasting relationship.
Ask for help.
The
great thing about learning to communicate while in a relationship is
that you’re not alone. Maybe your partner is already a master
communicator, or maybe they’re learning, too. Either way, they should be
open to helping you, even if that just means being patient while you
figure it out. “Men can ask their partners to be patient and help hold
them accountable while they struggle to improve their communication
skills, rather than criticize and shame them for their stumbles and
imperfections,” Hokemeyer says. Learning to communicate more directly,
honestly, and emotionally is a process, and part of it is acknowledging
that you’re not going to be perfect right away. That doesn’t give you
permission to stop trying, but it does afford you some leeway from your
partner as you work through it.
Source: https://www.menshealth.com/sex-women/a26090182/communicate-better-relationship-girlfriend-wife/
Source: https://www.menshealth.com/sex-women/a26090182/communicate-better-relationship-girlfriend-wife/