Daily Mail

Shout at him!

Furious with your other half? For a healthier marriage, this psychother­apist says don’t give him the silent treatment . . .

- by Dr Jenn Mann

TIMe and again I speak to women who tell me: ‘I don’t like the person my husband turns me into.’

They claim that the awful things he says and does brings out the worst in them, pushing them into behaving in ways they can hardly understand.

They are quick to tell me that they never openly fight back, never have blazing rows. But then come the confession­s, all too often a litany of acts of passive aggression: snide comments, spending money they can’t afford from joint funds, or deliberate­ly turning up late to events that are important to him out of spite.

These women honestly believe that, because they never scream and shout, their role in the marriage is that of peacekeepe­r. In reality, their actions demonstrat­e that they are anything but.

That’s not to say their husbands are faultless. Almost always, this unreasonab­leness is playing out in a relationsh­ip where the husband repeatedly says and does things that deeply upset his wife. While she sees her silence as a way of keeping the peace, it is actually making matters worse.

Just because the feelings his words or actions provoke haven’t been voiced doesn’t mean they simply disappear. Instead they snowball undergroun­d, resurfacin­g in the form of bitterness and resentment that spills out in other ways. So the relationsh­ip ends up in a far worse place than if she’d expressed her feelings at the time.

Which is why I believe in couples having a good old-fashioned row once in a while. Of course, I’m not suggesting they scream and shout at each other until one person’s righteous indignatio­n drowns out the other.

Nor would I condone endless rows that are more about fighting for control and petty point scoring than tackling justified grievances and searching for solutions.

And there is no place for confrontat­ions that are physical, nasty or personal, with one party bullied by the other.

Those are the kind of conflicts that will have you heading in the direction of the divorce courts.

But when one or both of you is no longer prepared to argue a point, stand up for what you believe in or insist that your partner treats you better, then that, too, is a recipe for disaster. Couples in healthy relationsh­ips keep disagreeme­nts out in the open — they feel safe enough to be able to air grievances despite the row it might cause.

Neither sees their role as peacekeepe­r, too insecure to risk getting involved in a disagreeme­nt.

They understand that a row can be cathartic — it releases tension and halts brewing resentment. It demonstrat­es that you value yourself and your relationsh­ip, and teaches you what matters to the person you are with.

Point scoring and tit-for-tat passive aggressive behaviour, on the other hand, is corrosive. But it’s an easy pattern for couples to fall into without acknowledg­ing it to each other, or themselves.

What starts out with one deciding to take the path of least resistance, keeping quiet even though you’re genuinely hurt by something the other has said or done because you can’t face a row, easily becomes a destructiv­e pattern of behaviour.

I had one client who admitted deliberate­ly burning her husband’s favourite shirt with the iron, telling him it was an accident. Somehow, it was easier to vent her frustratio­n at him choosing a work event over dinner with her parents, than tell him how hurt she felt face to face.

And, of course, men are just as guilty — I’ve had male clients tell me they’ve stopped helping around the house and deliberate­ly double-book themselves so they’ll be unavailabl­e to childmind or attend social events their wife has arranged. All this inevitably impacts on the children. Instead of watching and learning as parents confront relationsh­ip problems and work together to find resolution, they see difference­s being covered up with fake smiles and snide comments. And end up thinking that is normal. I have counselled thousands of couples with plenty of occasions where I’ve witnessed dreadful vitriol between people who, deep down, are very much in love and want to save their relationsh­ip. But they have fallen into destructiv­e patterns of behaviour to punish their partner or gain control. Take Jenny and Steven, who ran a successful publishing business together. Jenny was withholdin­g sex to punish Steven for showing more interest in his golf handicap than her; Steven would perpetuall­y tease and make jokes at Jenny’s expense without her ever telling him that she found them hurtful, not funny.

Inevitably this damaged the self-esteem of both, and ate away at the loving and emotional connection they once shared.

You could be forgiven for thinking their situation was hopeless. But any couple who can find the energy to shout about being unhappy in their marriage is invested in it enough to want to find a way to put things right.

They just needed to improve the way they went about it. Six months on and Jenny and Steven no longer need couples therapy, having learnt to voice their grievances and resolve them in a reasonable way.

I once counselled a couple that couldn’t understand why their marriage was soulless.

‘We never share a cross word,’ Susan, a doctor, told me, before tellingly adding that over the decade they’d been together she and her accountant husband had found it easier to always agree than challenge one another.

There was plenty of passive aggression though. Susan’s husband would procrastin­ate over getting jobs done around the house or even agreeing on where they might go on holiday.

SuSANmight not pick fights with her husband, but she had become expert at being uncommunic­ative, giving him the silent treatment for days without ever saying: ‘You’ve really upset me.’

Meanwhile, by persistent­ly taking the path of least resistance, this couple failed to truly get to know each other.

Neither knew what truly mattered to their partner; they had no inkling of their passions and found each other bland and uninspirin­g.

This couple had checked out of their relationsh­ip long ago. Now they wanted help splitting amicably, not therapy to keep them in a long-dead marriage.

If indifferen­ce is allowed to take root in a relationsh­ip, then you’re as likely to end up with a decree absolute as the couple who rows so bitterly you wonder how they ever got together initially. The Relationsh­ip Fix by Dr Jenn Mann (Sterling, rrp £19.99).

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