3 Reasons Why You Should Argue With Your Spouse

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A new study by Hinnekens et al (2022) looked at couples’ ability to mindread each other during conflict. They found that partners are only moderately successful at mindreading.

Another study by Simpson et al. (2021) showed that highly avoidant individuals were less empathically accurate with their partners. Clearly, mindreading and avoidance are not effective tools to deal with marital issues and problems.

When it comes to mind reading and conflict avoidance, nobody does it better than people who were raised in emotionally neglectful families (Childhood Emotional Neglect or CEN). Having missed the opportunity to observe emotionally healthy arguing between their parents or to participate in resolving family issues in a direct and emotionally aware way, people with CEN typically rely on the primary skill available to them: avoid conflict altogether.

Avoidance may seem fairly effective for a while. That is, until the suppressed feelings of frustration, annoyance, anger, or hurt build up enough to cause a major eruption or lie under the surface for decades, driving a couple farther and farther apart.

As a couples therapist who specializes in Childhood Emotional Neglect, I often observe the great lengths that couples will go to avoid fighting. But the truth is, just like lightning crystallizes the electric charge and clears it from the air during a storm, fights can calm relationships by crystallizing and clearing the negative emotions between the partners.

There is a three-part cycle that characterizes all healthy, lasting relationships: Harmony/Rupture/Repair. It’s a common pattern that is both the way healthy couples naturally function and part of what enriches and sustains a relationship.

Phase 1: Harmony

Harmony is the phase most relationships experience episodically when there is no particular conflict dividing them. When you are in harmony, you go about your daily life acting and feeling like a team. You can do your own thing all day and look forward to seeing each other at night. There might be some times of irritation or mild friction, but overall, you feel generally good together.

But this phase cannot last forever. Something almost always gets in the way. Life throws a wrench into the works. It may be an issue about parenting, finances, sex, or anything large or small, but something intervenes to throw off the harmony. Someone is hurt, angry, or upset. This starts phase two.

Phase 2: Rupture

The rupture is the difficult and challenging part. It’s the phase that many couples, especially the ones who experienced Childhood Emotional Neglect (CEN), try their best to avoid. But it’s a requirement for having a happy marriage. You absolutely must be able to allow yourselves to rupture. Then, you begin the repair process, which is the path that gets you back to harmony.

Phase 3: Repair

During the repair process, no matter how strong your feelings or how painful the interaction is, you must both be committed to sticking together through it, as long as there is no abuse or harmful behavior going on.

During a rupture, if it’s a large one, you may feel extreme anger, even rage. You may feel hurt, judged, hopeless, helpless, or even hateful. All of these feelings are okay, have value, and matter. And what you do with your feelings before and during rupture matters very, very much.

The Goal of Repair: A Meeting of the Minds

If you can use and express your feelings in a healthy way and talk through a problem, you do not need to come to a clear answer or solution in order to come out the other side intact and in harmony. You only need to get the problem clarified and your feelings aired. This is the “meeting of the minds.”

The meeting of the minds happens when you understand your partner’s feelings and why they have them. You don’t have to agree that they’re right; you only need to see your partner’s perspective and also let your partner know that you see. You also need to receive the same understanding in return.

Sometimes it takes many ruptures, over time, to resolve a problem. In the meantime, a meeting of the minds allows you to remain a team and continue to grow and evolve together.

A 2021 study by Sels et al. showed that couples who expressed their thoughts and feelings more had more empathy for each other overall, even during arguments that threatened their relationship. In other words, it is the direct verbal exchange of thoughts and feelings that brings a couple together, not drives them apart.

What Enriches a Relationship?

It is natural to strive for more harmony, viewing it as the sign of a good relationship. But it’s the rupture phase and the repair process that feed your relationship in very important ways. Rupture makes you feel something. Yes, many of those feelings may be negative, but that’s okay. When it comes to relationships, feelings are the glue that binds and the fire that burns. You can’t feel deeply hurt by or angry at someone you do not care about. Igniting each other’s emotions is helpful and necessary for forging and maintaining passion and love.

The Repair Process Feeds Your Marriage in 3 Key Ways

  1. You get to know your partner better by learning about their way of viewing things and their feelings, and they get to know you better in the same way.
  2. You each learn what you can do, or need to do, to contribute to your partner’s happiness.
  3. When you do the work of repair, you send powerful messages to your partner that they matter to you. When you say vulnerable things, such as, “I feel hurt,” you are communicating trust to your partner. When you stick through a painful conflict, you are communicating commitment.

Harmony — Rupture — Repair. Harmony — Rupture — Repair. Every time you go through the cycle together, you make your relationship stronger, more resilient, and more emotionally rewarding.

You can find my second book, about how to manage and heal Childhood Emotional Neglect with your spouse, your children, and your parents here.

© Jonice Webb, Ph.D.

Originally published at https://www.psychologytoday.com.

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Jonice Webb, Author of the Running On Empty Books
Jonice Webb, Author of the Running On Empty Books

Written by Jonice Webb, Author of the Running On Empty Books

I’m passionate about making the whole world aware of silent Childhood Emotional Neglect (CEN). Take the CEN Test: https://drjonicewebb.com/cenquestionnairefb/.

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