Sunday, September 20, 2009

Deal with Complaints

It sounds easy right? Just deal with complaints as they surface. However, most couples lean toward conflict aversion. Both parties try and let issues slide, believing they can just "let it go". But, as most of you can attest to all of those suppressed issues come to life in one explosion.

How do you prevent large explosive arguments without having a small argument everyday? I learned a long time ago that there are two extremes people fall into to: conflict aversive and conflict aggressive. As balance typically serves us well in live, we need to learn to find a balance with conflict.

If you are mad at your spouse, they shouldn't have to guess why you are mad. Now, that does not give you permission to scream a list of their offenses at them. It does not give you permission to bring up all the times you have been right. It does give you permission to calmly state how you feel and explain why you are angry, hurt, disappointed, etc. For me, I need time to work out exactly how I feel and what promoted those feelings BEFORE I can talk to JohnMark. If you don't understand how and why you feel a certain emotion, you cannot except your spouse to be psychic.

Take this customer service rule and start to apply it to your everyday married life to show your COMmittment to developing and maintaing a healthy relationship with your spouse.

Lee

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