Beyond the Honeymoon
Stage
Q: My fiancé and I get along
great. We never fight. I know, from what I have heard and read that
people in healthy relationships need to be able to fight. Because we don’t ever fight or even disagree
much, I am worried about what might happen when we eventually fight after we
are married. How can practice if we
don’t even disagree? It is almost too
good to be true.
A: Typically,
the first development stage of a relationship is called the “honeymoon” stage.
This
is a time when both partners seem to think alike, feel the same things and find
lots of common interests and experiences.
This generally lasts anywhere from a few months up to a couple of years. This probably is the stage you and your
fiancé are in. Enjoy it. This is an important time for bonding.
You
are absolutely right that fair-fighting techniques are essential for handling
the eventual and normal conflicts and differences that come up in
relationships.
My
guess is that you and your fiancé are doing something right in the way you are
handling subtle differences at the moment.
See if you can see what each of do that helps to resolve, dissipate, or
prevent conflict. You have a good point,
however, realizing that you and your fiancé need to establish ground rules to
prepare to handle bigger conflicts as they come up.
You
are already a step ahead because most married couples just allow the fights to
emerge. Marriage is one of the most
highly charged emotional relationships we can enter into with a lot at stake. Businesses and corporations outline exactly
how they will mediate and settle conflicts in a fair and reasonable way. It seems wise to transfer some of those
methods to the marriage relationship.
One
key to successful fighting and problem solving is the win-win method. Both people need to feel that they have been
heard and that they have gotten a fair deal.
If one person wins and the other loses, feelings of resentment, anger,
and hurt will eventually be expressed in destructive ways toward the “winner.”
A
good book on fair fighting is the “Intimate
Enemy.” Another is “Beyond the Marriage Fantasy.”
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