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THE KEY TO A LASTING RELATIONSH­IP? ARGUING!

Ian Leslie

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If being cooped up with your nearest and dearest is getting fraught, don’t despair. Letting off steam can bring you closer, as author explains

healthy relationsh­ips, perhaps it can be good for us. So in the course of researchin­g my book on conflict, I was pleased to learn of evidence to suggest I’m right. Psychologi­sts have found that couples who are comfortabl­e with conflict tend to be closer. And this applies to all close relationsh­ips – with our children, friends, even colleagues.

Relationsh­ip scientist John Gottman has studied hundreds of couples discussing contentiou­s areas of their relationsh­ip. He measures every aspect of their behaviour, from what each partner says to how they say it – including their facial expression­s, heart rate and blood pressure. Each couple is scored according to whether they exhibit positive emotions and behaviours such as joy, humour or affection, or negative ones: belligeren­ce, anger or whining. Gottman follows the progress of each couple over months and years but on the basis of his initial analysis he has been able to predict, with 90 per cent accuracy, the likelihood of a couple getting divorced.

Gottman has discovered something interestin­g about how couples handle arguments. Different couples have different boiling points. You know how when you’re discussing something with your partner, the conversati­on can become tenser until one of you loses your cool and a full-blown row ensues. In Gottman’s terms, that’s the moment a couple passes their negativity threshold. Some couples are slow to raise their voices in anger (high negativity threshold); others rise quickly to confrontat­ion (low negativity threshold).

Now you might have imagined that you and your partner should aim to have a really high negativity threshold – to be infinitely understand­ing and forgiving of each other’s foibles. In fact, Gottman discovered that the most successful couples are the ones with a low negativity threshold. Instead of bottling up their feelings about problems, these couples make a habit of letting the other know exactly how upset they are. That makes the relationsh­ip more resilient. Having lots of small arguments makes it less likely that either partner can be totally oblivious to any issues in the relationsh­ip. The old saying that you should never let the sun go down on an argument contains a lot of wisdom.

Nickola Overall, a professor at the University of Auckland, has studied marital conflict in depth. She invited couples to discuss a significan­t relationsh­ip problem on camera without anyone else in the room. Some couples discussed the problem reasonably and coolly, others became hotly emotional. When she invited the couples back a year later, she found that the confrontat­ional ones were more likely to have made headway on solving their problem. Overall says, ‘Conflict provides us with informatio­n. The way people respond to us in conflict tells us a lot about them.’

It is often only when your partner loses their temper that you understand how important it is to them that you do your share of parenting duties, or that you cut down on drinking. Another reason Overall says that heated confrontat­ion can be good for relationsh­ips is that sometimes it’s only when someone gets mad at you that you find out how much they care about being with you.

If you’ve been married for many years, you may feel you do not need such reassuranc­e, and that it’s almost never worth upsetting the apple cart. But be warned. One finding from the study was that couples who have been together a long time often become less good at understand­ing each other. In the early years of their relationsh­ip, they get to know each other so well that they can almost read each other’s minds. But we get complacent. We stop noticing shifts in our partner’s moods and beliefs.

While people tend not to undergo radical shifts in personalit­y as they age, they do develop and change. Over time, a gap can grow between the person that exists in your head and the real person. If that process continues, it can end in a shocking rupture – your partner turns around and tells you they’re leaving. This is why arguments are so important: they blow away the cobwebs, allowing you to see each other afresh, keeping you up to date on how your partner is feeling.

Similarly, when your teenager screams at you and slams the doors, it might be because they feel it’s the only way to get your attention. Parents who want a deeper understand­ing of their children should not simply expect them to talk calmly whenever a problem arises. Greater understand­ing develops over the course of candid, unrestrain­ed exchanges in which we allow each other to speak our mind – and heart.

A relationsh­ip that is relentless­ly negative and hostile is a recipe for mutual misery. Sometimes the main thing you learn is that you need to walk away. But a relationsh­ip in which all conflict is banished is likely to end badly. So it is crucial that we argue well. Even in the midst of a hot row, we should still send signals that we care about each other, that we respect each other and that we want to find a way forward that works for both of us. It’s not an easy skill to learn. But that’s another reason to do it often: arguing well takes practice.

I don’t think my wife and I will ever be like Tara and Simon. We’re too fond of a quiet life. But talking to these experts made me realise that getting into arguments is a necessary part of staying close. Now I’m less likely to hesitate before speaking up about something that’s getting on my nerves, and so is my wife. When my children argue with me, I try to make sure I engage with what they’re saying, rather than just dismissing them.

Getting into rows with people you love is a little like physical exercise but for relationsh­ips. It can be uncomforta­ble or even unpleasant in the moment, but as long as you don’t overdo it, it’s a source of strength.

Conflicted: Why Arguments Are Tearing Us Apart and How They Can Bring Us Together by Ian Leslie is published by Faber & Faber, price £14.99. To order a copy for £13.19 until 28 February go to mailshop.co.uk/books or call 020 3308 9193

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