
Home > Marriage > The Early Years
 Marriage Partnership, Spring 2000
One Fight,
Two Winners
Running away doesn't solve problems. Here's how to face them
together
by Les and Leslie
Parrot
"You're
trying to change me," Leslie blurted out over a dinner of macaroni and cheese.
"What are you talking about?" I asked with all the pretense of surprise I
could muster. Truth is, I was trying to change her, I just didn't
want her to know that.
It had been tense in our little apartment ever since we got home from work.
The tension between us had something to do with Leslie not being as organized
in the kitchen as I wanted her to be. I made some inane critical comment
about not being able to find something I could always find in my kitchen
growing up. Well, OK, it wasn't the first critical comment I'd
made that week, or even that evening.
"I'm talking about the way you make snippy comments," Leslie said. "No
matter what I do, it's not good enough."
"That's not true," I said defensively. "Give me one good example of
how I'm so critical." That was a mistake. For the next several minutes
she tossed out a specific example, and then I'd explain how reasonable
my critical comment was. We were playing a game of mental Ping-Pong that
no one would win. Actually, it was our first fight as a married couple. And
after the blowup, I sat helpless, not knowing where to go or what to do.
I (Leslie) knew exactly where I wanted to goback home. And I probably would
have if Chicago hadn't been 2,000 miles away. Sitting in that tiny kitchen
in the middle of Los Angeles, beginning graduate school as well as a marriage,
I wanted nothing more than to be somewhere safe and welcoming. Sure, it's
a cliché, the new bride "running home to Mom," but it wouldn't
exist if it didn't contain a kernel of truth. Turns out a lot of newly
married women, as well as their husbands, experience this urge in the aftermath
of their first fights. We've seen it countless times with the couples
we've counseled.
Safe at
Home
One pair of newlyweds we know had a big blowup, after which the bride called
her mom across town to come and pick her up. In ten minutes her dad was there
to whisk the young woman back to the house. He took a circuitous route back
and when he finally pulled into the driveway, his daughter ran to the front
door. Once inside, she found her husband standing alone in the living room.
"What are you doing here?" she asked him.
"Your mom came by as soon as you left and said she wanted me to come over,"
he said. The young couple looked at each other in bewilderment. Then they
looked out the front window to see her mom and dad driving away. That's
when they both cracked up and soon forgot what they were fighting about.
The message this seasoned couple was sending their daughter and son-in-law
was clear: you can't retreat to work out your problems. You have to
face them together. So why do so many new couples want to put distance between
themselves and their problems? Primarily because it feels safe. When new
spouses experience the jolts of their first big argument, they realize that
not everything in their marriage is going to go as planned. They feel uncertain.
But one thing they know for sure, there's a place at home. And some
naive part of us deep inside yearns to return to that place of solace.
We might retreat to the kind of ice cream we liked as kids or to a photo
album that reminds us we were once safe and protected. Whatever the method,
all couples seek a safe place. But over time, we need to learn to be safe
with each otherand this can happen when we learn to fight fair.
Pick a Better
Fight
Arguments are never pleasant. Still, we can minimize the unpleasantness and
actually see our marriages strengthened by learning how to have a good fight.
Here are three strategies that will help you the next time you find yourselves
embroiled in a heated argument.
Recognize the ways conflict can strengthen your marriage. When Les
and I had our first fight, I was convinced there was something terribly wrong
with us. I believed that loving couples didn't fight. Turns out I
couldn't have been more wrong.
The goal of marriage is not to avoid conflict, but to use it to build a stronger
relationship. In fact, conflict is the price smart couples pay for a deepening
sense of intimacy. Without conflict it is difficult to peel away the superficial
layers of a relationship and discover who we really are. When Ruth Bell Graham
was asked if she and her famous husband, Billy, ever fight, she said, "I
hope so. Otherwise we would have no differences, and life would be pretty
boring."
We're all imperfect, and so is the world we live in. So it makes sense
that there are no perfect marriages. But many of us still expect our marriage
to be different. This unrealistic expectation alone ignites countless conflicts.
Every day spouses run up against desires, big and small, that collide with
each other. It's a natural component of every healthy marriage. So start
viewing your differences as one more way you can cultivate a deeper sense
of intimacy.
Remember that it's not if you fight, it's how
you fight. If something is bothering you, it's always best to bring
it up so you can talk about it. Of equal importance is how you handle any
conflict that comes from the discussion.
First, whenever you notice tension in your relationship, plan a peace conference.
Schedule a mutually agreeable "appointment" to discuss what's bothering
you. This takes initiative, but a face-to-face meeting is critical if you
hope to resolve your differences.
Next, cultivate a win-win attitude. In other words, seek to understand your
partner's perspective before trying to "prove your case." Too many spouses
become instant attorneys, trying to convince an invisible jury that they
have been treated unjustly and that their partner should be found guilty.
Don't prove your own innocence. Instead, put yourself in your mate's
place and try to see the world from his or her perspective. In fighting fair
the point is not to win by proving your partner wrong, the goal is to understand
one another so you both win.
Without conflict it is difficult
to peel away the superficial
layers of a relationship and
discover who we really are.
Attack the problem, not the person. You are not going to change your
spouse through arguing. A natural impulse during conflict is to defend and
protect your position, not to accommodate the other person.
If you accuse your spouse of always making you late for church, it's
not likely that she'll say, "Oh, you're right. I'll be different
from now on." She will probably tell you that you only make things worse
by pressuring her, or that you are too impatient, or a hundred other reasons
why she's not at fault. So instead of making accusations, focus on the
problem of being late and work together to devise a way to avoid it.
As you seek solutions together, you'll need to compromise, be open to
new approaches and sometimes yield to your partner's preferences. In
the beginning, it won't be easy. But with a cooperative attitude, you
will save yourself and your marriage a lot of unnecessary grief. And you
won't feel like running home to Mom.
Leslie Parrott, Ed.D., and Les Parrott, Ph.D., are co-directors of the
Center for Relationship Development at Seattle Pacific University. They are
the authors of
Saving
Your Marriage Before It Starts,
Becoming
Soul Mates and
Relationships
(all published by Zondervan). Visit Les and Leslie at
www.RealRelationships.com.
Copyright © 2000 by the author or Christianity Today International/Marriage
Partnership magazine. Click here
for reprint information on Marriage Partnership.
Spring 2000, Vol. 17, No. 1, Page 74
Marriage Partnership
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