
The Therapy Gents
Therapy Gents is a mental health podcast with licensed therapists Michael Medley, LPC & Andy Newman, LPC. We discuss common issues we see our clients facing every day.
The Therapy Gents
064: Fight Right- A Gottman Book Review
Ep. 064 Fight Right - A Gottman Book Review
Plato: “Be Kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a hard battle.”
Epictetus: “We have two ears and one mouth so that we can listen twice as much as we speak.”
“It is not what you say, but how you say it.”
Cicero: “In anger, nothing right or judicious can be done.”
What do we really fight about? Most often NOTHING - meaning anything can turn into a fight
Bids for Connection - “anything you do or your partner does to try to get the other person’s attention and connection with them.”
- Turn Towards - respond positively
- Turn Away - ignore or delay response, “In a minute”
- Turn Against - respond negatively
Two Types of Fights: Solvable vs Perpetual
Nearly 70% of all fights fall into the perpetual category. - “There is no magical, conflict-free relationship out there - it simply doesn’t exist. The goal then is to live well with these points of conflict - to accept that they are there and to approach them with compassion and curiosity rather than defensiveness and criticism.”
Major cause of a fight is when we dismiss our spouse’s negative emotions.
The Five Fights Everyone Has.
- The Bomb Drop: - Mistake: Starting off Wrong
- The Harsh Start-Up
- You Criticize
- You Describe Your Partner Instead of Yourself
- The Harsh Start-Up
- The Flood: - Mistake: Attacking, Defending, Withdrawing
- Express Your Needs. Don’t assume your spouse knows what they are.
- Small Repairs During Conflict
- The Shallows: - Mistake: Skimming the Surface
- Gridlock
- Conflicts leave you feeling rejected
- Talk and talk about issue and make zero progress
- Feel worse after talking, continued conflicts hurt
- Gridlock
- The Standoff: - Mistake: Competing to Win
- Trying to Persuade not Understand
- The Chasm in the Room: - Mistake: Stewing about the fight
- Feelings - your own, not your partners
- Realities - your reality, take turns, summarize and validate
- Triggers - what memories or experiences are escalating things now
- Responsibility - your part of the problem
- Constructive Planning - together, plan one way that each of you can make it better next time.