Anonymous wrote:We used to internalize which is bad. We are both nonconfrontational by nature. It led to major communication errors, and it took a marriage retreat and counseling to understand the damage we were doing.
That was 11 years ago. Now we are much better about bringing up an issue. We had to learn how to do it.
I tell young couples the key to marriage is knowing how to argue. The easy stuff is easy. It's getting through the hard stuff that determines success.
Anonymous wrote:How do you achieve this? Do you and spouse naturally agree on everything? Do you disagree but rarely voice your disagreement leading to no arguments?
Anonymous wrote:Happily married 30 yrs - why on DCUM relationships board?
Anonymous wrote:I can recall 3 fights in the 10 years we’ve been together and they all revolves around me working too much pre-kids.
I don’t delegate things unless I’m prepared to let him do it his way with no commentary or judgement. I’m not a backseat driver in the car. I don’t second guess his parenting. I assume he is reasonable, capable and has good intent. I don’t nag. When he is wrong, I don’t rub it in I just move on. There are very few areas where I won’t compromise and luckily those are areas where he will compromise. I don’t keep score. I don’t hold grudges. When we make a decision, I move on and don’t dwell on it if ai don’t get my first choice.
Anonymous wrote:Happily married 30 yrs - why on DCUM relationships board?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a bad sign if couple don’t argue much. They’ve probably given up and allowed resent to build.
It’s amazing how wrong this actually is.
+100. Where do people get this nonsense? My DH and I may disagree. But we do not argue. We certainly don’t fight. We don’t bicker or call names. It’s just not who we are.
We have been married 30 years next month.
When you disagree, do you just roll over, or do you each try to persuade the to accept your position? If you do the latter, that’s constructive argumentation. So, I still contend that arguing is healthy. No way you agree with your spouse 100% of the time and less you care about absolutely nothing.
DP. We do the latter. But it still happens infrequently. And when we persuade it isn't with malice and we don't try to bully. And we work towards a quick compromise or decision if we realize we are never going to agree.
Anonymous wrote:Happily married 30 yrs - why on DCUM relationships board?