Today is my 36th wedding anniversary! Tonight I will take my wife Patti out to dinner and speak sweet nothings into her ear before during and after we dine. Why all this positive table talk? It’s because we really do try to practice what we’ve written about in our book Beyond the Bliss: Discovering Your Uniqueness in Marriage. In a chapter on communication we write:
Over the years we’ve discovered that how we communicate with one another is just as important as what we communicate. It’s not enough, says the Apostle Paul, for Christians to simply speak the truth to one another; we must do so with a loving motive and in a loving manner.
And yet, when conflicts arise, it’s amazingly easy for two loving people to lapse into communication that is marked by hostility rather than loving concern for the other. Don’t you agree? Certainly there will be moments, perhaps even seasons, of conflict in the best of marriages. We’re all capable of irritating one another, and of becoming more than a little angry when we feel wronged. We’re suggesting, however, that we should proceed with caution regarding how we express our frustrations toward one another. The rule of thumb must be to always speak the truth in love because even a minor issue, if communicated in an angry, hostile, unloving manner, can easily escalate into a major brouhaha. Furthermore, the truth is that acting and reacting to each other angrily rather than responding to one another graciously can move from being episodic in nature, to habitual and then chronic. One angry encounter builds upon another until trust wanes and the couple begins to relate to each other more as sparring partners than best friends!
Marriage specialist John Gottman believes the foundation of a successful marriage must be earmarked not only by a shared sense of purpose and meaning, but also respect, fondness, and affection.[1] So, if the negative communication pattern referred to above seems to describe your marital relationship at present, it’s important that some mid-course corrections take place immediately. The evidence seems to suggest that when the emotion of anger (rather than fondness and affection) is allowed to color too many exchanges between a husband and wife, this negative emotion doesn’t normally dissipate; it builds, eventually turning into something much more insidious and poisonous to our marriages. According to Daniel Goleman in his book Emotional Intelligence: Why It Can Matter More Than IQ, this accumulated build-up of unchecked and uncensored anger can easily turn into actual contempt—a palpable attitude of disdain for the other that is communicated between marital partners not only in the actual words they use but through their tone of voice and angry facial expressions.[2]
How familiar does this sound? We need to be honest with ourselves here because it could be an indication that a marriage is in serious trouble. Gottman contends that an evidence of contempt is the tell-tale sign that allows him to assess within just a few minutes of observing a couple in conflict whether their marriage will make it or not.[3] He believes the reason why the manifestation of contempt is so telling is that it conveys disgust (rather than love and respect). And, along with Goleman, he maintains that this attitude of disgust can be communicated in a variety of ways, such as “name-calling, eye-rolling, sneering, mockery, and hostile humor.”[4] It’s not just the words we use that can convey contempt to our marital partners, it’s the way we say them! Gottman goes on to explain that when couples communicate contempt to one another it overrides everything else, ensuring that the result of such conversations will nearly always be more conflict rather than reconciliation.[5]
Our experience over the years, as a married couple and as counselors to many other couples, resonates with the learned opinions of these relationship experts. It’s simply insane to think that we can maintain a fervent, transformative friendship with our mates when the primary earmarks of the relationship are contempt and criticism rather than love, respect, and mutual admiration.[6] Thus, we’re led to the conclusion that learning to speak the truth in love to our mates is not just nice, it’s absolutely necessary!
So what is the antidote to these negative communication patterns that couples so easily fall into? This question is so important we feel we must devote some space to it. Many popular books that deal with communication issues in marriage offer their readers various techniques designed to improve their communication skills in general and their conflict resolution capabilities in particular (e.g., praying before you converse; holding hands while arguing; always using the first-person rather than second-person pronoun; never attacking the members of your mate’s family of origin; etc.). While there are some good ideas in these “technique-oriented” discussions, we’re not convinced that such an approach to the issue of communication in marriage sufficiently gets to the heart of the matter. What if the key to breaking out of a negative, hurtful, anger-driven communication pattern is not to learn how to better manage conflict in the relationship, but to intentionally focus on the relationship’s strengths?
John Gottman, widely recognized as one of the country’s foremost relationship experts, has an interesting though somewhat counterintuitive theory about how to assist conflict-riddled marriages. His studies have concluded that “marital therapies based on conflict resolution share a very high relapse rate … only 35 percent of couples see a meaningful improvement in their marriages as a result of the therapy.”[7] In other words, the key to helping a marriage is not simply to teach couples how to manage their conflicts. Most marital fights are not about issues such as how chores are divided or how money is spent, but about much deeper issues that are “rooted in fundamental differences of lifestyle, personality, or values.”[8] It’s these “hidden issues that fuel the superficial conflicts and make them far more intense and hurtful than they would otherwise be.[9] Much more important for the health of a marriage than learning a slew of conflict resolution techniques, says Gottman, is the capacity of the marital partners to understand how they differ from one another, and to respect and honor one another by actually celebrating those differences! Thus, he argues that the key to a successful marriage is not found in the way a couple handles disagreements but how the couple relates to each other when they’re not fighting. In other words, Gottman’s work is based on his studies of “what went right in happy marriages.”[10]
Gottman suggests that couples should intentionally focus their attention on the positive aspects of their relationship rather than allowing the negative ones to become all consuming. Accordingly, he believes that expressions of thanksgiving and praise for the marriage and one another are the “antidotes to the poison of criticism and its deadly cousin, contempt.”[11] As we begin to literally count our blessings, and develop the habit of speaking in loving and affirming ways to and about our marital partners whenever possible, it will help to us to focus less on the negative aspects of our marriages and our mates. In the process, the friendship which is at the heart of any marriage will be strengthened, and the sense of hope that is so vital to a thriving marriage can be continually reborn.
Sorry, for the length of this excerpt, but it does explain why, during dinner tonight, Patti and I will focus on what’s right with our marriage.
Of course, it doesn’t have to be one’s anniversary before a husband or wife can sprinkle some sweet nothings into the dinnertime conversation. Right?
Something to think about.
[1] John M. Gottman, The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work, (NewYork: Three Rivers Press, 1999), 63.
[2] Daniel Goleman, Emotional Intelligence: Why It Can Matter More Than IQ (New York: Bantam Books, 1995), 135.
[3] Gottman, 27.
[4] Ibid, 29.
[5] Ibid, 29.
[6] As we noted in Chapter 4, Gottman maintains that successful marriages are distinctive in that they are based on a deep friendship which is characterized by mutual respect and enjoyment of each other and a shared sense of meaning for the marriage.
[7] Gottman, 10.
[8] Ibid., 23.
[9]Ibid, 23.
[10] Ibid, 46.
[11] Ibid., 265.