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Five Communication Lapses Among Couples

Did you know that even though you speak and understand the same language, misunderstandings and even arguments still occur due to communication lapses? What are these communication lapses?

It’s truly pissing when you’re busy doing something and is so engrossed when suddenly, out of nowhere, your partner approaches and talks about stuff that needs to be dealt with head-on. The thing is when you kind of dismissed your partner, this certainly leads to misunderstanding and then arguments. Being aware of this lapse could make you more sensitive to situations and circumstances, eliminating possibilities of arguments.

The Talk Reeks of Doom

“Women like to prepare for a problem, to warm up to it rather than abruptly tackle it, even with issues that aren’t that major,” explains Stephens. “But men hear it as a signal to gear up to get defensive, thus making it a self-fulfilling prophecy.” Thus, having a preface that sounds something like this: “I know you won’t like this, but…” will definitely make a wrong impression — misunderstanding occurs. As a result, instead of getting a positive or open response, you get yourself into an argument.

It Turns Into A Monologue

“Guys have a three-minute window where they can listen closely, but when your description goes on for longer than that, you’ve lost him,” says Stephens. “Then you inevitably end up getting mad at him for not paying attention to you or not chiming in.”

This is a bit peculiar in our relationship, because as a girl, I think and my partner thinks that it’s me who have the “three-minute window” and not him. In fact, it is him who would always say, “Am I alone here? C’mon, talk to me.” It’s true that when the partner wards off in the middle of the conversation, the other felt pissed and insulted — dismissed in a way. This definitely leads to hard feelings and sometimes, big arguments.

There Are No Boundaries

“Couples make the mistake of thinking that they have to learn everything about each other and share all their thoughts and have no secrets, but that’s simply not true,” says Stephens. “I call it reckless honesty when you’re revealing stuff that doesn’t have a constructive purpose and will do more harm than good.”

I agree with this. I keep hearing other couples telling each other that honesty is the best policy and no secrets should be kept from each other, which means that what the girl knows, the guy has the right to know too and vice versa is really overrated at certain times.

I am not an exemption. In fact, there was one time when I told my partner of what I think of his friends, and he got pissed, which leads into an argument. My point is, if you think it’s unnecessary to voice it out, better keep that to yourself and let it die. If it doesn’t benefit your relationship or the both of you, better let it slip rather than share it.

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  1. Rumi

    On October 10, 2008 at 2:37 am


    I found here very interesting information!The article is very well written!

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