Man Up: The Art of Marital Conversation

by Corey on April 28, 2008 · 16 comments

talking Man Up: The Art of Marital Conversation
Photo courtesy Herman Hernandez

The problem with communication … is the illusion that it has been accomplished.
~George Bernard Shaw

The day at work has been horrific. Emails never stopped. The voicemail light kept flashing. The boss needed the information yesterday. And to top it all off, you had a fight with your wife as you left this morning.

You feel the tension coming from the house when you get out of your car in the driveway. The kids are in their rooms doing homework and your wife approaches you and says the words most men dread: “we need to talk.”

It seems at this moment, most men have the fight or flight response. I can berate her about the timing of things, continue to insist that I’m right and she’s wrong. Or I can shrug it off and disappear with the TV, the Internet, alcohol, or the work I conveniently brought home.

What is it about talking that is so difficult for men? Granted, this does not apply to all men, but most have some trouble with deep conversation. Especially when it comes to conversing with our spouse.

A brief history

Men have been educated from birth to compete, judge, demand, and diagnose. We are very adept at seeing a problem that needs fixing and developing a way to fix the problem. Unfortunately, this fix is according to the man, possibly not taking into account those around him. This is due in part to our learning to think and communicate in terms of what is “right” or what is “wrong.”

To add to this, we often express our feelings in terms of what has been “done to us” rather than being independent of those around us. We mix up our needs and we ask for what we’d like using demands, guilt, or even the promise of rewards. This should come as no surprise since this is how many of us were raised by our parents.

At best, the basic ways men think and communicate hinder communication and create both misunderstanding and frustration. At worst, they can lead to anger, depression and even violence.

Communicating with your spouse do’s and don’ts

  1. Talk face to face. Anytime you are in a discussion with your spouse that is beyond the scheduling or surface level, do it face to face. If this is not possible, the phone will work, although this can limit the connection and increase the possibility of misunderstandings. Never try to cover deeper issues via email or text messages.
  2. Turn off other distractions during the conversation. If you’re working on the computer, minimize the work or better yet, shut the whole thing off. If you’re watching TV, turn it off. If you are afraid of missing something in the game, get Tivo.
  3. Don’t answer the phone. If it rings in the middle of the conversation, you have voicemail for a reason. Let it do it’s job.
  4. Take the time to listen to her point of view. You are only one part of the relationship. Consider her side of things and ask for clarity if you don’t get what she’s saying. You don’t have to agree with everything she says to still love her. But it will help to understand her if you listen.
  5. Forget about being right or wrong. As soon as the discussion turns to who’s right and who’s wrong, you’ve both lost. If you have an insatiable need to always be right when it comes to your spouse, riddle me this: what’s it like to be married to a loser? If you have to always be right, that makes your spouse always wrong. It’s not about right or wrong most of the time.

Communication leads to community, that is, to understanding, intimacy and mutual valuing.
~Rollo May

The art of non-violent communication

Do you think it is possible to connect with what is alive in ourselves and in others from moment-to-moment? Dr. Marshall Rosenberg says yes. His non-violent communication techniques focus on how we express ourselves, how we hear those around us and how to resolve conflict by focusing our consciousness on what we are observing, feeling, needing, and requesting.

In order to connect on a deeper level, we have to check ourselves throughout the conversation. Often, whenever our emotions spike during the discussion, we will change the subject or attack the other person in order to help us feel better about whatever is going on at the moment.

My grandfather once said that when a person involved in a conversation raises their voice, it’s no longer about what best for all involved and the current situation. It’s about their power and their pride.

The art of conversation at a deeper level:

  1. Focus on the intention. Most marital conversations can be simplified down into one of two categories. A chance to be closer together or a chance to be my own person. Humans vacillate between being too close together or too far apart. Conversations are often used to either bring us closer together or create some space between us. If what you are really wanting is companionship, understanding, compassion, then say so outright. If on the other hand you are wanting some space to chart your own course, speak up. Both connection and separateness are necessary parts of every relationship (for more information on this subject check out my Ebook, The Simple Marriage Matrix).
  2. Seek compassionate connection. This is done primarily by the conversations not being tied to a particular outcome, like being right or something you’d like the other person to do. Focus on being clear with your side of the conversation and then clearly hearing their side. This may mean you don’t agree. So what. You are two separate individuals. You are not going to see eye to eye on everything.

The conflict or issue may not be resolved, that’s not the point. A mutually satisfying outcome is where both people are heard and understood. Think of your conversations in terms of sex. When both people are satisfied, the connection is much deeper and lasting.

Many attempts to communicate are nullified by saying too much.
~Robert Greenleaf

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{ 7 trackbacks }

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{ 9 comments… read them below or add one }

Laurie April 28, 2008 at 2:49 pm

I find the frustration in me builds up when the hub and I begin to talk and it starts t get deep, you know, what you feel in your core deep, and he shuts up. He will not share his soul. It feels like it limits our ability to go deeper with our relationship. He also gets more childlike in his communication. Any suggestions to get him to open up?

Reply

Tammy Lenski April 28, 2008 at 5:38 pm

I’d add one more to your good lists of do’s and dont’s: Don’t try to fix it. Attentive, real listening is more important, and if there is a fix needed, that can and should be done jointly much of the time.

And the “do” to replace the don’t? Comforting noises. I’m only sort of joking…in case your readers are interested, here’s a story I wrote about that a while back:

http://lenski.com/talking-to-spouse-partner-comforting-noises/

Thanks for the great posts.

Reply

Corey April 28, 2008 at 8:55 pm

@ Laurie- In general, vulnerability in yourself will be met with vulnerability by the other. This is not all the time, or at the same level each time, but it will often pave the way to more opening. Provided your opening up is not done just to manipulate him to as well.

@ Tammy- Thanks for adding the “fixer” side of things. I like the statement of if fixing needs to be doe, it can and should be done jointly. Nicely stated.

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Clay Collins | The Growing Life May 2, 2008 at 10:47 am

This is a great post, Corey. Simple and direct with excellent advice.

Reply

Corey May 2, 2008 at 12:52 pm

@ Clay- Thanks for the compliment. I have enjoyed your work as well. Keep it up!

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a husband May 5, 2008 at 12:47 am

I just found your site and think it is awesome. I’ve linked to this article on my site because I like it so much.

Keep up the great work here, and I’ll definitely be back for more.

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Corey May 5, 2008 at 10:14 am

@ A Husband- Thanks for the kind words and linkage. Keep up your good work as well. The art of being a husband, maybe one day it can be mastered.

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A Woman May 21, 2008 at 10:29 am

Hi,
I am liking it so much to read all this, but the sad part is, its tooooooo good to be true. I wish if my man is half considerate as to what you mentioned. I am not saying, I am perfect, but I read both sides, I think I am better…..mind u I am not comparing, because definitely I dont want to be married to somebody who is less better than me.
I seriously need a heart felt prayer.
Amen.

Reply

Shauntelle May 5, 2009 at 1:16 pm

Great article… wish I’d read it before learning a lot of the don’t the hard way! LOL

My question is about Focusing on the intent. At this point in my marriage, it seems pretty clear that all my conversations are a round about way at asking for more companionship, understanding, and compassion, while my husband’s at a point in his life where he’s needing more separateness. How do you mesh those two needs? I can understand his need, but that doesn’t negate mine, ya know?

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