Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Conflict In Relationship? Know How To Warm Things Up

Darpan News Desk IANS, 14 Oct, 2015 12:32 PM
    If your romantic relationship is in trouble and you always want your partner to initiate reconciliation after a conflict, please read on.
     
    Researchers have found that when conflict occurs in romantic relationships, the negative emotional climate that results hinders a person's ability to recognise their partner's attempts to reach out to them.
     
    However, talking things out with your partner can undo much of the damage, the findings showed.
     
    "When conflict occurred, it influenced the way persons rated their partner's general efforts to work on their relationship,” said study co-author Brian Ogolsky, professor at the University of Illinois in the US.
     
    "If partners withdrew or become contemptuous or critical, the bad feelings lingered, and that negative emotion dampened people's ability to process or perceive their partner's attempts to repair what was wrong between them," Ogolsky noted.
     
    For the study, 98 same sex couples kept a 14-day diary in which they recorded conflict and answered questions about how they had responded to it. 
     
    For example, did they withdraw? Did they lash out? Did they blame the other person? Did they threaten to leave?
     
     
    Or did they take a more positive approach? Did they persist in their attempts to communicate? Did they prioritise solving the problem? 
     
    Answers to these questions predicted whether they were able to recognise that their partner was attempting to mend the relationship.
     
    After an argument, in a newly chilly emotional climate, communication styles can be very important, Ogolsky explained.
     
    "Hostile feelings do not gain a foothold among constructive communicators - people who talk things out and work through the problem in a constructive manner. That is a game changer for the way a couple's relationship will develop," he noted.
     
    "If you use effective strategies to manage conflicts on a daily basis when those conflicts are small, you are likely to create a warmer emotional climate and have better outcomes,” Ogolsky noted.
     
    The findings appeared in the Journal of Family Psychology.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    An abusive boss can make entire team hostile

    An abusive boss can make entire team hostile
    Is your boss abusive and does not pay much heed to even positive suggestions made by the team? Such superiors can actually throw the entire...

    An abusive boss can make entire team hostile

    Bored of sex life? Mix love to it

    Bored of sex life? Mix love to it
    The new mantra for women who feel their sex life is boring and bereft of passion: connect love with sex and enhance the pleasure between the sheets....

    Bored of sex life? Mix love to it

    Don't miss meals with kids

    Don't miss meals with kids
    Spending time at home, especially at breakfast and dinner, gives your adolescent kids healthier eating behaviour and even better exercise habits, says new research...

    Don't miss meals with kids

    Is your college going kid more active on weekends?

    Is your college going kid more active on weekends?
    Parents always suspect that their college going kids prefer weekends to weekdays. Now there is proof that college graduates are more active on weekends...

    Is your college going kid more active on weekends?

    How brain can multitask better

    How brain can multitask better
    Cooking while having a conversation, watching a movie while browsing the Web, or driving while listening to a radio show - multitasking is an essential...

    How brain can multitask better

    Never discuss ex-beau, dress code with your man

    Never discuss ex-beau, dress code with your man
    No matter how long you two have been together, when with your man you should never make references to your ex-boyfriend or tell him to open up to you, says an expert....

    Never discuss ex-beau, dress code with your man