A More Personal Way to Coach

0

Repair is the Secret Weapon of Emotionally Connected Couples

All couples argue. Successful couples repair.

When you think about it, every couple in every relationship is set up for failure. It’s impossible to be emotionally available to your partner 100% of the time. In his book, The Science of Trust, Dr. Gottman explains that both partners in a relationship are emotionally available only 9% of the time. This leaves 91% of our relationship ripe for miscommunication.

But failure is not the problem. Even a mother who failed to be responsive and available 50% of the time can raise a child to be a healthy adult with healthy relationships. The difference between “good mothers and bad mothers,” according to Donald Winnicott, “is not the commission of errors, but what they do with them.” How a child copes with everyday failures and fluctuations is directly related to the degree in which their parent creates an environment for a secure attachment bond and how that parent repairs their errors.

This is no different in our romantic relationships. The difference between happy couples and unhappy couples is not that happy couples don’t make mistakes. We all do. How couples repair is what separates the relationship Masters from the Disasters.

Repair is key to relationship success

No matter how careful you are, you will inevitably rupture the bond in your relationship. Even in a good marriage, couples:

They do all the same things unhealthy couples do, but at some point they have a conversation where they recover from it. The difference between the Masters and the Disasters of relationships is the Masters repair their interactions effectively.

These couples are willing to admit responsibility for their part in the conflict so they can begin the process of healing their bond. They realize their relationship is more important than the problem.

The goal of repair is to understand what went wrong, and how to make your next conversation more constructive.

What makes a repair effective?

Dr. Gottman analyzed repair attempts in his Love Lab, asking the question: “How do people try to make things better?”

In the Gottman Repair Checklist, we give several examples of repair attempts, including:

Gottman Repair Checklist

After studying more than 3,000 couples, Dr. Gottman’s found that how a repair attempt was made did not necessarily predict the effectiveness of the repair attempt. Some people would make repair attempts in a beautiful way, and their partner just couldn’t hear it. Other couples made repair attempts in really clumsy ways and were successful.

In one study, Dr. Gottman observed a chemist and his wife talking about the nature of his work. The husband didn’t know exactly when he was coming home for dinner.

She said, “Well, the kids get hungry and they don’t want to start dinner without you so they get irritable and I have to put up with them.”

He said, “Why don’t you feed them a snack?”

His wife looks at him like, What do you think I am? A moron? Of course I gave them a snack.

When she did that, he realized he needed to make a repair, so he smiled with this grin. That was his repair attempt. This big, stupid grin.

And she started laughing. It was effective. It changed the way they were going into the negative downwards spiral.

Friendship is vital to good repair

It wasn’t until Dr. Gottman looked at the physiology of the partner receiving the repair that he uncovered the secret weapon of emotionally connected couples.

The real difference between the couples who repaired successfully and those who didn’t was the emotional climate between partners. In other words, your repair attempt is only going to work well if you have really been a good friend to them, especially lately.

Make positive deposits in your Emotional Bank Account by doing nice things and appreciating your partner. If you are understanding of each other, your relationship will be better fit to stand the inevitable storms that will come. If you are disrespectful, rude, and distant to each other, then your repair attempts will fail. It’s the quality of the friendship that matters most in repairing the relationship when things go wrong. Repairs don’t have to be well spoken or even complicated to be effective. Any genuine technique can work if a couple has the right foundation.

By focusing on the first three principles in The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work, you can build a friendship that will make repair attempts — even a big, stupid grin — successful and keep your relationship on track.

Principle 1: Enhance your Love Maps

Get to know your partner’s world by asking questions and remembering the answers. Update your Love Maps as things change over time.

Principle 2: Nurture your fondness and admiration

Express your fondness and admiration for your partner by letting them know how much you love and care for them. Let them know you’re proud of them, compliment them, and thank them for all the things they do for you.

Principle 3: Turn toward each other instead of away

Respond to your partner’s bids for emotional connection and attention. Hold hands. Answer their questions. Ask their opinion. Laugh at their jokes. Make eye contact.


This article was originally published on Verily and edited here from its original version.

How well do you know your partner?

Ask Gottman

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Kyle is a couples therapist and AASECT Certified Sex Therapist.  He loves nerding out on the science of relationships. When not highlighting research on a Sunday morning in his bathrobe, Kyle enjoys writing for his blog Kylebenson.net where he takes the research on successful relationships and transforms them into practical tools for romantic partners.

Recommended products

Original price was: $250.00.Current price is: $189.00.

The Gottman Relationship Adviser is a complete approach to relationship wellness. Measure your relationship health with the research-based Gottman Assessment, analyze five key areas of your partnership to identify your strengths and weaknesses, then start a tailored, step-by-step digital program proven to heal and strengthen your connection—all on your schedule and from anywhere.

The Adviser uses the legendary scientific Gottman Method to help you understand what’s really going on in your relationship—and gives you exactly what you need to improve it.

 

Original price was: $149.00.Current price is: $99.00.

You’re deciding to spend forever together.  Making a commitment to one another is a time to celebrate and prepare for the new adventure ahead of you. Your journey is one of trust and commitment as you forge a path towards lasting love. You’ll want to have shared goals and new dreams to hope for, and plenty of fun and play. Don’t forget to soak in all the intimacy and romance along the way! So, take each other’s hands and get ready. Whether you’re committing to each other after a long time of casual dating or you’ve just swept each other off your feet, committing to each other is a big step, but don’t worry. With more than 50 years of research into how relationships work, the Gottmans are here to give you the tools you need for happily ever after.

This new program will help you learn:

  • The difference between dreams and goals
  • How to have conversations around your hopes for your lives, both individually and together
  • The meaning of trust and commitment, and how to increase both in your relationship
  • How to go “all in” on your relationship, and the fruits that it can bear
  • How to introduce more fun, play, and adventure in your lives
  • How to create your own Rituals of Connection

“Buy Now” will take you to GOTTMAN CONNECT to purchase and view this product.

Original price was: $149.00.Current price is: $99.00.

So you just had an argument. Now what?  The latest program in the Gottman Relationship Coach, “Making Up After an Argument” includes a step-by-step exercise to help you and your partner process an argument and discover what you were really fighting about. In addition to our powerful “Aftermath of a Fight” exercise, “Making Up After an Argument” includes sections and exercises on feeling overloaded, taking effective breaks from conflict, and how to rebuild the lines of communication—even mid-argument. 

Solve the mystery of what you and your partner really argue about to restore, repair, and revitalize the communication in your relationship. This new program will help you learn:

  • How to process even the most difficult arguments and heal from them together.
  • What to do when you are feeling overwhelmed and overloaded, what we call “Flooding”.
  • What happens in your body when you are in conflict.
  • How to calm yourself down, in or out of conflict.
  • The importance of “repair attempts,” or ways to get the conversation back on track, plus how to notice and make them

Limited Time Offer!

“Buy Now” will take you to GOTTMAN CONNECT to purchase and view this product.

Related posts

A superbill is a detailed receipt that a therapist provides to a client after a session.

What Is a Superbill? And Can It Be Used for Therapy?

Alexander Elguren

Learn what a superbill is, how therapists create one, and how clients use superbills to get reimbursed for out-of-network couples therapy and mental health services.

Read More

A lavender marriage is historically a union that allowed LGBTQ+ individuals to live together safely

What Is a Lavender Marriage? Can It Really Work?

Alexander Elguren

Can a lavender marriage truly work? Discover the psychology, communication patterns, and trust factors that determine relationship success.

Read More

Parent helping child through a difficult situation.

Growth Mindset: Parenting for Possibility

The Gottman Institute

Learn how a growth mindset helps parents raise resilient kids through emotional coaching, effort, and everyday moments that build confidence.

Read More

Parenting adult children is a new and different stage.

It Doesn’t Get Easier. It Gets Different.

Zach Brittle, LMHC

As our children get older, our relationship shifts. Parenting becomes different but not necessarily easier.

Read More

Explore the vital link between individual behavioral health and relationship success. Learn why professional guidance is key to breaking unhelpful or toxic patterns and building a lasting bond.

Why Behavioral Health Is the Hidden Foundation of Your Relationship

Alexander Elguren

Explore the vital link between individual behavioral health and relationship success. Learn why professional guidance can be key to breaking unhelpful or toxic patterns and building a lasting bond.

Read More

A therapist working with a couple in session.

Everything You Need to Know about Therapy

Kendra Han

Are you wondering when to get therapy? Learn the Gottman signs of relationship distress, and take steps to improve communication, conflict resolution and more.

Read More

Improve your Relationship Skills with our Free Newsletters
0