Dr. Cohen says “Fight Fair” -- Dr. Phil Claims Fighting Style Predicts
Divorce
There are a number of ways in
which adults conduct their arguments: based on logic, based on emotion, etc.
One of the three most efficient
shortcuts for determining in advance whether a couple will marry or divorce is
to watch how they argue. The accuracy of this predictor is phenomenal. There
are those who fight intelligently, and those who fight, frankly, with an almost
identical state of mind as a child age four or less. Don’t underestimate this
comparison: that’s because adults who argue this way are, in the flow of
chemicals and emotions within their bloodstream, regressing into the state of
mind of a child under the age of four.
Even Phillip C. Mcgraw, a “stunt psychologist” occasionally gets
something right. He claimed in a Good Morning America interview that he can
tell with 90 percent accuracy whether a married couple is going to divorce
within five years based on how they end a fight. "It's not whether you fight or not, but how you fight,"
McGraw said on. "The No. 1 question I would ask
is how do they end their fight?"
When
there is genuine resolution to the argument, it is easier to move on with life,
and accomplish more new things each day. Until and unless outstanding issues
are dealt with and tucked away, there is little or no room left for new issues,
because the older ones are crowding the stage. When the argument is finished,
CLOSE IT.
Real and Relevant – WHEN YOU ARE ARGUING, STICK TO THE
SUBJECT
"Isn't it true that when you're fighting
about everything, you are fighting about nothing?" The woman agreed. So did the husband.
Keep it real and keep it relevant. Fighting
can be a great tension release, and good for a relationship, if done properly.
That means sticking to the present and not bringing up old grudges. "Fight
about those things that really count; that are personally important to
you. Do not major in minors.
Often one partner will disguise
what the issue really is. If a root, deep-down subject is something that we
tend to be overly sensitive to or self-conscious about, it’s so easy to lay
down smoke, arguing about something that has no connection with what’s
bothering you. A wife who’s hurt or upset about not getting enough attention or
affection is likely to create an argument about money or the children or
something that does not address that spouse’s personal grievance or fear. If a
husband or wife, a girlfriend or boyfriend is feeling rejected, they are less likely to say so than they are
to bring in an unrelated issue, using that issue as a vent, and internally,
childishly hoping that the other spouse will figure out what is really
wrong. Beyond illogical, this
constructs a whopping obstacle so like a huge boulder in the road, so identify
what is bothering you, and bring it out.
Getting Nasty – When you raise an issue by verbally (or
otherwise) attacking your spouse, you begin with a guarantee that they will NOT
be cooperative in giving you what you want. STOP NOW and consider that.
When you
begin the conversation attacking your spouse,
you
guarantee they will NOT be cooperative in giving you what you want
When something unpleasant comes out of our mouth, we are
virtually assured of receiving a response that is just as biting… correction, a
response that goes a little bit further in the “I’ll hurt you back” department.
One of the constant factors that all of us can observe in relationships filled
with arguments is the fact that, each time there is an argument, each party
tries to go a little bit further in the insult and verbal slap, illogically
hoping that the other person will be so stung by the barb or verbal slap that
they instantly give in. In all of human history, we’ve never seen an example of
this working. That is why it is both illogical, and as mentioned above,
childlike in its anti-thinking mindset. Reduce the insults; they make the
speaker sound shrewish, and reduce the likelihood of the “attacked” person
responding in kind.
Couples shouldn't fight in front of the children. Experts
have conclusively proved that, more than anything else you ever do, the way
that couples treat each other in front of their babies and young children will
determine whether the child grows up well-adjusted or filled with anger and
self-esteem issues.
REPETITION. Too many
people get stuck like a broken record repeating an argument endlessly. They
rarely win, and when they do, it comes with emotional damage that can be
expected to remain internally felt forever.
In order for the argument to be usefully effective, it
certainly has to end without one person doing a character assassination on
the other. When you say something nasty, it stays in memory, just as the
child irrevocably learns from the examples of the parent. Regardless of your opinion on the subject,
or any of our opinions, children rarely do as they are told, rather, they do
precisely what they are shown.
When we stop saying “ME” all the time, and learn to say “We”
a bit more often, the results are fast, & effective.
1) IDENTIFY WHAT IS ACTUALLY BOTHERING YOU. STATE EXACTLY WHAT IS WRONG.
2) finding fault with your spouse will never ever resolve the
argument to your satisfaction
3) IF YOUR COMPLAINT IS LEGITIMATE – OK, STOP COMPLAINING
AND SUGGEST A SOLUTION
4) EVERY TIME YOU SAY SOMETHING MEAN OR NASTY, YOUR PARTNER
WILL DO THE SAME.
5) Focus on what is wrong, or focus on fixing it. Failure to do so illuminates unhealthy self-involvement.
This next 24 hours will contain one thousand, four hundred and forty separate
opportunities for you to leave things as they are or for you to demonstrate a
better brain by producing better, balanced, reasonable answers.
1,440
separate opportunities.
Some people think of them as “just minutes.”
Others
believe they are 1,440 separate opportunities.
Which group do YOU think comes out ahead at the end of the game?