Latest and coolest news, fashion, sports, lifestyle, entertainment and gossip lol
Saturday, February 28, 2015
7 Things You Should Never, Ever Say To Your Partner
This offhand remark can easily roll off the tongue when you’re
annoyed at your partner and don’t want to listen to them, but the
indifference it shows is chillier than any ice bucket challenge. “It’s
dismissive,” says Walsh, who points out that stonewalling like this is
what marriage researcher John Gottman, PhD, who has studied partnerships
for 40 years, says is one of the top predictors of divorce. “If their
partner is not listening to them, sooner or later they will find someone who will listen to them — and it will be a divorce attorney or a lover,” says Walsh. (Ouch.)
This remark can also make your partner feel disrespected, says
relationship and marriage therapist Karen Ruskin, PsyD, LMFT, clinical
fellow with the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy and
author of Dr. Karen’s Marriage Manual.
Saying “whatever” to your S.O. sends the message that “I don’t care
about your thoughts or your opinions,” Ruskin tells Yahoo Health. “It’s a
lack of respect for the person’s voice, thoughts, and opinions.”
If your mother is painfully passive-aggressive or your father shirked
his parenting duties, having your partner tell you that the apple
doesn’t fall far from the tree is a low blow. This type of objectifying
comment is a form of name-calling, notes Walsh, so it isn’t constructive
and only serves to wound someone. “It doesn’t allow the person to be
seen or fully heard as a multifaceted human being,” she says. “It’s very
difficult to get back to a place of love when someone has been
objectified and you’ve called them a name. It’s the worst conflict
resolution style.”
Dodging responsibility by constantly blaming someone or something
else outside of the relationship and playing the victim is extremely
damaging, according to Walsh. “The partner is forced into a place of
compassion for the victim and conflict is not resolved,” she explains.
“When you have a relationship, you’re going to be constantly
compromising. Along the way there will be some treading on each other’s
boundaries a bit, and sometimes it will be both partners’ fault. The
ability to say ‘I’m sorry’ is huge.”
It also sends the message to your partner that you’re not willing to
take ownership of your mistakes, Ruskin says, and it also makes “the
mate feel stuck that there is no solution or resolution.”
“If you’re saying that it wasn’t [your fault], then basically, we’re
stuck with ‘This can happen again,’” she says. “It gives you no hope or
optimism for other scenarios” where you might be at fault.
This is an apology that’s not really an apology, says Markman. “If
your partner has a complaint, acknowledge that the complain is something
that made your partner feel bad. When you apologize and then
immediately justify your action, you are not really apologizing,” he
says. “You are explaining why the thing you did was not really wrong.”
Instead, try to see the situation from your partner’s perspective: Think
about how and why your actions may have been taken negatively,
regardless of what you think about the purity of your intentions, he
says.
By saying “calm down” (or using the phrase’s equally annoying cousin
“relax”), you’re more likely to rile up your partner than soothe ‘em.
“It’s condescending,” says Walsh. “When someone is upset, they aren’t
going to calm down because they’ve been instructed to do so.” Instead,
Walsh recommends coming from a place of sympathy, saying something like,
“I can see that this is really upsetting you, and I want to find a way
to help.” After all, the point of being in a partnership is that you’re
in it together.
Phrases like “this is why you don’t lose weight” or “this is why
you’re so stressed” can actually be expressions of contempt, and are
toxic to a relationship, David Sbarra, PhD,
associate professor in the Department of Psychology and director of
clinical training at the University of Arizona, explains to Yahoo
Health. “Making your partner feel low or inferior to you is the most
noxious of relationship behaviors,” he says.
These kinds of remarks also imply that you know all — even if you
really don’t. “You’re inferring you know the reason, but maybe that’s
not the reason,” Ruskin says. In reality, saying “This is why…” just
makes your partner feel like you don’t understand him or her.
No comments:
Post a Comment