Skip to main content Skip to header navigation

Secrets healthy couples use to resolve conflict

Ever wonder how you can improve communication with your partner and feel more heard? Find out!

If a couple tells you they never fight, do you raise an eyebrow? Do you assume one partner is a doormat and just gives in to the other, hence no fighting? Or do you think they fight silently, giving each other the cold shoulder for days (or weeks) on end, and never vent? Perhaps you assume they are lying and pretending to you (and to themselves) that their relationship is “perfect.”

Your raised eyebrow is an appropriate response. Conflict is inevitable in all relationships. Why? Because no two individuals have identical values, interests, preferences, habits or thought paths. Conflicts can flare up over big decisions (whether to have children and how to raise them), chronic issues (frequency of sex, how you spend money, time spent with relatives) or smaller issues (time spent on the computer, cleaning the den).

Everyone has a unique history, a different “rule book” from their own childhood and different ways of coping with conflict (e.g., sarcasm, the silent treatment, lecturing, nagging). Very few people are masters of communication.

How do you become more skilled at resolving conflict in your relationship? First, understand the common types of differences that cause conflict:

  • Turning reasonable, optional differences into moral ones. (“I can’t believe you left the lights on again! What is wrong with you?”) 
  • Expecting your partner to read your mind. (“But you should just know that I don’t want to go out tonight.”)
  • Violating the “trader relationship.” (“I do all the work and you just sit on the couch.”)
  • Not spending enough time together. (“She’s always on the run, taking the kids here and there and visiting with friends or her parents. There’s no time for us.”)

Becoming more skilled at communication also involves knowing what methods sabotage relationships. These include sarcasm, name calling, threats, lecturing and turning everything into a catastrophe.

They also include global attacks (You always…, You never….) and “you language” (You make me angry! You frustrate me!). A surefire way to sabotage a relationship is to fake “niceness.” If your partner sees you scowling and asks, “Hey, what’s up hon? Do you not want to take the camping trip?” and you respond with an enthusiastic yes while thinking about how you don’t want to take this stupid trip and sleep with the mosquitoes, your relationship is in trouble. Sweet dishonesty destroys relationships — and your self-esteem.

How do you rescue your relationship? First, nip escalating tensions in the bud. Don’t let your anger or hurt feelings fester and resentments build. Then, learn how to communicate with one another in ways that express how you feel, without attacking your loved one. Instead of using “you language,” use “I language” (I feel angry. I feel ignored.).

Like learning a foreign language, you won’t become “fluent” in good communication skills overnight. Be good to yourself and your partner and set realistic goals. You can learn new skills, grow together and become closer while doing so.

You may think that all this is a lot of work, but gently remind yourself that heated, unresolved arguments are a lot of work and generate enough stress to power an eventual divorce.

You can change the way you resolve conflict. Together you can learn respectful ways to understand and manage your differences. You may then experience one another as loving friends (not foes) even when differences arise. And that’s an incredible achievement — you will have become more fluent in good communication skills.

Edwin Locke, PhD, a world-renowned psychologist, and Ellen Kenner, PhD, a clinical psychologist and host of the nationally-syndicated radio talk show, The Rational Basis of Happiness®, have co-authored The Selfish Path to Romance: How to Love with Passion and Reason. Both are experts on Ayn Rand’s philosophy of Objectivism. For more information visit www.selfishromance.com.

More Love

How to let go of your ego and improve your relationships
The rise of interracial marriage
4 Ways to keep money issues from harming your relationship

Leave a Comment

Comments are closed.