Arguments and Fights: Why Won’t You Listen to Me?
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How many times have you been in a situation with someone you know pretty well, maybe your spouse or your best friend, when you just couldn’t get through to them? For some reason beyond your understanding they just refuse to listen to what you are saying. They argue, they say irrational things, they confound you with statements unrelated to what you are trying to say, they just don’t seem to hear what it is you are trying to get across.
Why is that?
Okay, we have all heard of the “Fight or Flight Syndrome”. That’s’ when your brain takes over and you feel you have to either fight or run away from the situation. But what does this mean to us on a personal level? What it means is our brains are engaged in a battle for our survival and it is sending us messages intent on helping us survive whatever the threat appears to be. That threat could be as simple as avoiding embarrassment, it could be defending against something that you said that the other person perceived as an attack. Whatever the threat, the other person is reacting to you as though you are a threat. They see you as “the bad guy” and themselves as “the victim”.
Now, if you asked them, they would deny this. They are not lying to you, they are not aware that “the bad guy” and “the victim” roles are unconsciously engrained into their way of perceiving the world. Actually, it’s a part of all of our unconscious minds. We can’t help it it’s automatic.
Picture this: A husband, let’s call him Jim, is trying to help his wife who is swamped with Christmas preparations. She told him that she has to set up the tables for their holiday dinner and gave him a vague notion of how she wanted it done. Without asking for more details, Jim thinks he can help his wife; lets call her Susan, by setting up the tables for her. He hurries around hastily setting up the tables before she comes back from Christmas shopping, hoping to surprise her. Well, boy, was she surprised. Susan says, “What is this?”
Jim proudly says, “I set the tables up for you.” Suddenly, without warning, Susan explodes on him, telling him this is not at all what she wanted, and why did he think this is how she wanted it? And why didn’t he let her do it? Jim was dumbfounded. He starts yelling back at her how he was just trying to help, and didn’t she want his help? Susan is aghast that he can’t see this is not what she wanted. She starts telling him he was just trying to horn in on her show, that this holiday dinner is important to her because her new son-in-law’s family is going to be there and she had it all planned out. Jim insists that he was trying to help her and she is just being petty.
The discussion erodes from there into an all out fight.
What happened here? Both people were trying to accomplish the same goal, but they got seriously derailed. Why? It’s because their brains kicked into survival mode. The whole argument escalated because neither of them realized how suddenly they had become each other’s enemy. Each saw the other as “the bad guy” and themselves as “the victim”. Whatever understanding they may have had of each other’s stress was out the window and they were each solely focused on surviving the current threat.
So what is the alternative? The alternative is… Continued on next page >>
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The whole fight or flight thing is a seriously instinctive process. I wonder how hard it is to surpress that urge when it comes right down to it. Looking back, I absolutely see how that the ForF instint is often what set me off when I was married and let’s just say I’m not one to run, …so fight was my reaction.
A relationship can often go stale but that doesn’t mean it has to be over. Draw a line on a piece of paper and on one side right the reasons you fell in love with this person in the first place and on the other write what appears to keep you from feeling the way you once did. Put the paper away for 24 hours and then re-read it and see if you feel the same, if so, make a time to discuss it and create a plan for making it better. If you get no response from your partner - you can’t fix it alone.
[…] Brooke answers the age old relationship question ‘Why Won’t You Listen To Me?’. Just in time for our ‘How Can I Get Through To You‘ post. The key is […]
I don’t agree that it is normal to always blame others for difficulties and I think we should be tougher on ourselves. Its important to set up a ‘blame free zone’ in ourselves initially and then to agree it in a relationship. Blame is crippling and de-moralising and I have never seen it serve anyone. I am currently based in the UK and notice that it is very strong & prevalent in this culture. I have not seen anyone served through blame. It’s important to just ask the question in the midst of any problem: ‘What can I do here to make a difference?’ and then to listen & action the inner response. Once that inner conversation has happened then the outer conversation with a partner is going to be much more constructive. As individuals we are all responsible for our own behavior & problems firstly as a partner is for theirs. It is icing on the cake when we can lovingly support each other in a relationship once these boundaries are identified. It is also important not to dance around in a relationship that does not show initial potential at its foundation anyway.