Lol. Keep deflecting and playing semantics, see what happens. |
We never yell and we've been married 37 years. We are both very low maintenance people and we don't sweat the small stuff. Yes, we can get frustrated with each other but that doesn't lead to yelling. We do periodically enjoy a break from each other! |
Agree. I’ll take talkative, direct, transparent occasionally loud family over silent, passive, non-transparent, “sweep $hit under the rug until it snowballs” people any day. Of course the holy grail is like the GDS HoS: talkative, empathetic, somewhat patient, direct, transparent, politically correct yet action oriented whilst holding everyone accountable. |
| I think a ton of people are passive-aggressive rather than yellers. |
| I’m Italian, dh is Jewish. Lots of yelling. But we are also happily married and adore each other. I find couples who never fight to not necessarily be any happier than couples who fight |
New Yorker here. This is very accurate!! |
We're divorced but didn't yell at each other at all during our 15 year marriage |
What is your sample size for that analysis? n=1? |
+1000 |
And let’s not conflate passion & giving a damn with “yelling”. Too many people hide under a rock and hope problems go away. Rinse and repeat. |
| My DW yells her ass off when we are having sex. We worry of our kids (4 and 5) will hear and think we are fighting. |
| Once. Towards the end of covid we were taking an international flight to Lisbon. My husband was having a boarder-line panic attack because the system to check in was all wacky. He insisted we just leave and I yelled "Shut the F up" at Dulles. There was a small family nearby. It weirdly worked but I felt bad about it. |
Interesting that you seem to be confusing anger with passion. What does your therapist say about that? |
I’m not the PP, but, I don’t know. What’s wrong with experiencing and expressing each and every human emotion? Sometimes you get so angry you yell. If your partner loves you deeply and accepts that you are human and will sometimes not behave in the most optimal way for the situation…then yelling (assuming no insulting or violence) is just one type of expression that comes out of human experience. They’ll forgive you. That’s how it works in my marriage, anyway. Sometimes we yell. We apologize. We recognize it was not the perfect response, but we’re not perfect people and we don’t expect the other to be perfect. People are complex, communication between two is even more complex. In my 20 years with my partner (and plenty of yelling) I have never once questioned whether they love me, or want to be with me, or whether they’ll leave. They communicate so profusely, with such emotion, I never wonder. Just as it is perfectly clear when they are a certain kind of angry (they yell!), they are perfectly crystal clear in their love, too. It is just obvious. And a bit of yelling in the relationship almost reinforces that: we don’t only love each other when we behave perfectly. We ALSO love each other even when one makes a mistake and gets so angry they yell. And I agree that some cultures are much more tolerant of yelling than others. Some cultures even see yelling as necessary and find someone who never yells to be suspicious, inauthentic, or too tightly guarded. Other cultures are opposite and see yelling as overly emotional, or even immature. In my marriage one person comes from the former culture, one from the latter. Our solution is just to release yelling of any of those cultural deep meanings. It’s not immature, but it’s not a sign of health either. Yelling is emphatic expression from a person who is probably past their limit. We try not to do it, but sometimes we do, and then the task is to get out of it, forgive, and keep on loving each other. |
Some of us can be talkative, direct, and transparent without yelling. |