Healthy relationships aren’t built on one partner leading and the other following. They thrive when partners are equals, each with valuable thoughts, feelings, and needs. Gottman research has shown that relationships flourish when partners accept influence from one another, meaning they are open to their partner’s opinions and perspectives.
What Accepting Influence Really Means
At its core, accepting influence is about respect and honor in a relationship. It means…
Being open to your partner’s ideas and opinions
You may not agree with everything they say, and you don’t have to. Accepting influence means that you consider their perspective in your decision making.
Do you take your partner’s feelings into consideration when making decisions?
Acknowledging your partner has a valid point of view
There are two people in your relationship, and therefore there are two sides to everything. Neither is more true or valid than the other. Even if their point of view differs from yours, accepting influence means recognizing that their thoughts and feelings are valid and grounded in their experiences and emotions.
Are you willing to acknowledge your partner makes fair points, even during disagreements?
Sending the message: you matter to me
When you take their input seriously, you show them that they are important to you. Even a small statement like, “I see why you feel that way,” communicates care and respect.
Do you take your partner’s opinions and preferences seriously?
What Accepting Influence is Not
There can often be resistance and confusion when approaching the topic of accepting influence. Phrases get thrown around like, “Anything you say, dear,” or “Happy wife, happy life.” Neither convey the true meaning of accepting influence.
It’s not compliance or obedience
You don’t need to agree with everything your partner says or wants. Healthy boundaries and individuality are essential in an equal partnership.
It’s not abandoning your own needs or opinions
Accepting influence is mutual. Both partners should feel valued and heard. It doesn’t mean sacrificing your needs or always being the flexible one. It’s about creating space for both perspectives so you can make decisions together.
It’s not saying yes to avoid conflict
A forced “yes, dear,” or “whatever you want,” isn’t acceptance, it’s avoidance. Avoiding conflict with passive agreement can create resentment over time. True acceptance comes from listening, asking questions, and working towards decisions that consider both partner’s feelings and needs.
What Happens if You Don’t Accept Influence
Gottman research has shown that when one partner resists accepting influence, relationships are far more likely to become distressed and gridlocked. Notably, partners who refuse to accept influence are more likely to escalate conflict. And when one partner resists the other’s viewpoint or tries to dominate decisions rather than share influence, that is highly correlated with later divorce or relationship breakdown.
Here’s an example:
Sam wants to explore refinancing their house because interest rates have dropped. Taylor doesn’t want to deal with it.
Sam: I looked into it today, if we refinance we could save $400 a month! I think it’s worth talking to lenders, at least.
Taylor: No, I’m not doing that. It’s too much of a hassle. We’re fine the way things are.
Sam: I get that it’s a lot of paperwork, but the savings could really help us. Maybe we could do it together?
Taylor: No, Sam. You always try to make everything complicated. I don’t need to deal with this right now.
Sam: I’m just trying to explore our options. It affects both of us.
Taylor: Oh really? Do you pay for everything then with your giant paycheck? Just let me handle things. Turns on the TV and ignores Sam further.
As you can see in this example, instead of being open to Sam’s idea and asking questions, Taylor shuts it down immediately with rigid language. Then, Taylor moves on to criticism and harmful sarcasm that turns into stonewalling and dominance. This blocks collaboration, ignores the shared financial decision, and conveys disrespect.
The Four Horsemen can often make an appearance when one partner resists accepting influence in a relationship. The resistant partner may use the four horsemen (criticism, contempt, defensiveness, and stonewalling) to drown out their partner’s feelings, effectively obliterating their point of view. This approach leads to instability in the relationship.
It’s important to note that even small moments matter in a big way. Gottman’s research shows that relationships rarely fall apart because of one major issue, it’s the steady buildup of everyday dismissals that erodes trust. When a partner repeatedly hears things like “That doesn’t make sense” or “You’re overreacting,” they slowly begin to feel unheard and unimportant. Over time, these small rejections add up, creating distance and weakening the bond. Couples who stay open, curious, and respectful in these everyday interactions are able to build trust and connection that keeps their relationship strong.
Why Accepting Influence is Important
It makes conflict resolution easier
Sharing decision-making and respecting your partner’s point of view are important steps toward healthy compromise. When you can accept influence from your partner, it becomes easier to handle conflict together. No matter what the issue is, being able to hear and acknowledge your partner’s thoughts and feelings helps keep conversations calm and strengthens your relationship.
It results in higher relationship satisfaction
Couples who act as equals in decision making, emotional discussions, and daily life are significantly more likely to stay together and report higher relationship satisfaction. When both partners feel their opinions matter, they’re more willing to communicate openly and stay emotionally connected. Mutual influence prevents power struggles and supports a sense of teamwork which makes couples feel more satisfied with their relationship over time.
It builds trust and emotional safety
Accepting influence shows your partner that their feelings, needs, and perspectives matter to you. When both partners respond to each other with openness, it creates emotional safety in the relationship. Over time, this builds trust. Partners feel more comfortable being vulnerable, bringing up concerns, and sharing openly. Trust acts as a buffer during hard times and strengthens the overall foundation of the relationship.
Here’s an example using the same scenario as above, but Taylor and Sam accept each other’s influence instead:
Sam: I looked into it today, if we refinance we could save $400 a month! I think it’s worth talking to lenders, at least.
Taylor: That’s a good chunk of money. I can see why you’d want to look into it. It seems like a lot though.
Sam: I know it’s a lot of paperwork, but the savings could really help us.
Taylor: Yeah, the paperwork and how long the process is stresses me out. But maybe if we take it one step at a time, it won’t feel too overwhelming.
Sam: That makes sense. We could start with something small like calling or emailing some lenders together to see what the process looks like?
Taylor: I can do that. Making a few calls or sending a few emails sounds manageable. Then we’ll know if it’s worth it.
In this example, Taylor acknowledges Sam’s perspective. They don’t agree in the beginning, but Taylor stays open to Sam’s idea. Taylor shares concerns without shutting down the idea, and Sam acknowledges Taylor’s concerns and provides a potential solution. They end the conversation with a reasonable plan to move forward.
How to Practice Accepting Influence in Your Relationship
Soften your startup
How a conversation begins predicts how it will end. Approaching your partner gently rather than critically makes it easier for both of you to stay open.
Listen with curiosity rather than defensiveness
Instead of preparing your counter argument, tune into what your partner feels and needs. Ask open-ended questions and show genuine interest. Emotional intelligence plays a role in accepting influence. Couples who use gentleness and validation are able to navigate disagreements or differences in opinion more successfully.
Look for areas where you can yield
Accepting influence doesn’t mean giving up everything, it means finding points where you can say:
“That makes sense.”
“I hadn’t thought of it that way.”
“I can be flexible on this part.”
Validate before problem-solving
You don’t need to agree to acknowledge your partner’s viewpoint. Statements like “I understand why this matters to you” create emotional safety.
Share the decision-making
Couples who collaborate on finances, chores, parenting, boundaries with extended family, and daily routines create a more balanced, respectful dynamic.
Notice when pride or rigidity gets in the way
A key takeaway from the Gottman findings is that stonewalling, dominance, or refusal to compromise is often rooted in stress or self-protection. Awareness around when your pride might be getting in the way can help you shift towards openness.
If you’re having difficulty accepting influence, it’s worth discussing with your partner. No one can change old habits overnight, but if you’re able to take responsibility for your difficulty with sharing power, it will help you move forward.
Remember, healthy partnerships thrive not on who “wins,”, but on how well you join together as a team.