Episode Summary
Most hard conversations don't go sideways because of what was said. They go sideways about ten to twenty seconds before it, when something gets triggered and your body quietly shifts into self-protection.
For a lot of couples, it isn't the conversations where you came in swinging. It's the ones you entered with good intentions, even expecting to be on the same page, and somewhere in the middle the whole thing turned. From that moment on you're not really hearing each other. You're managing a threat, and the next thing you say comes from a compromised place.
In this episode, Chad and Sarah-Gayle get honest about why this happens, the four ways we tend to protect ourselves, fight, flight, freeze, and fawn, and the simple, practical steps that move a couple out of self-preservation and back to being teammates.
What We Cover
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Full Blog Post: Why Hard Conversations in Marriage Go Sideways
The hijack happens before the words. We tend to replay what was said, but the conversation usually got compromised ten to twenty seconds earlier when a trigger fired. After that, you're reacting to a feeling, not really hearing your spouse.
Fight, flight, freeze, and fawn are all the same move. They're four different strategies for one job, protecting yourself. Fight confronts the threat, flight escapes it, freeze stalls it out, and fawn appeases it (often through people pleasing, which quietly breeds resentment).
Self-protection competes with connection. Marriage thrives on vulnerability and courage. If you feel the need to protect yourself, that need is working directly against your ability to be vulnerable. You can win the argument and lose the connection.
You don't have to keep a conversation just because it turned. If your aim in the moment isn't connection, pausing is the wise move, not avoidance. Just because a conversation turns doesn't mean you have to keep having it right then.
A peace pause buys you twenty to thirty seconds. When you feel yourself getting flooded (for Chad, the tell is his volume going up), take a short pause, breathe, and ask yourself: if we're on the same team, how would a kind person approach this right now?
A pre-agreed timeout resets a flooded moment. Agree ahead of time on a word that means we're taking a break. Make the break at least thirty minutes, and use it to actually self-soothe (breathe, pray, listen to something that fills you up), not to disappear or to win.
Proverbs 18:21 is your readiness test. Life and death are in the power of the tongue. If you head back into the conversation and your words are still bent toward blame and criticism, you're not ready yet. When you can return with life-giving words and a same-team heart, you're ready.
A game plan beats good intentions. Championship teams don't make their biggest decisions spontaneously. They plan, they focus, and they take one thing at a time. Decide how you'll handle hard conversations before you're in them, and stay willing to pivot. You're not broken. You're wise.
Celebrate the baby steps. Going from a two to a four out of ten is real growth. Celebrating it keeps you both wanting to keep working. Beating each other up over the missing six lands you right back on separate teams.
Your Next Step
One small thing this week. When you're both calm and not in the middle of anything tense, agree on your timeout word and what it will mean. Decide how long the break is, and what each of you will do during it to come back calmer rather than just distracted. That one agreement will change how your next hard conversation goes.
And if you want a coach in your corner, we offer a free 30-minute consultation. We'll ask a few questions, get a clear picture of where you are, and help you put together a plan to move forward as a team.
We're cheering you on.
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