How to Talk So Your Partner Will NOT Listen

09:07:00 Add Comment

How to Talk So Your Partner Will NOT Listen



Do you feel like your partner does not listen to a word you say? Are you frustrated, feeling like there is no point in even trying?

When you feel like you were not being heard, consider the kinds of words you use in your relationship. Have you ever said anything hurtful to your partner? Has your partner ever said anything to you that wounded you to the core? Words may not break your bones, but they most certainly can break your heart.

Check to see if your word and behavior may be encouraging your partner not to listen. The following are ways to talk so that your partner will not listen:

Use Sarcasm
Rude, cutting remarks, sometimes disguised as humor, may pass our lips and land on our partner. Sitcom sarcasm should not be the model for your communication. The origin of the word sarcasm goes back to the Greek phrase, "to cut flesh." The dictionary describes sarcasm as "a sharp and often satirical or ironic utterance designed to cut or give pain." When we use sarcasm, we make it painful for our partner to listen to us.
Humor is a wonderful part of any great relationship. But the humor should never be at the expense of someone's feelings. It is only funny if both of you can laugh and enjoy it.

Be Brutally Honest
Sometimes people justify what they have said to their partner by saying, "I was just being honest." The truth is that when you say things to each other that hurt, it is often much less about being honest than it is about being spiteful or insensitive. If you love and care about each other, you will take into account each other's feelings before blurting out a "truth."

Honesty is an essential element in your relationship. Respect your partner enough to be honest with them, but you need to be intelligent and tactful as well as honest. Perhaps when put on the spot with a question like, "Does this make me look fat?" you could answer with something like, "The other outfit is much more flattering."

Be Harsh and Judging
Complaining is one of the best ways to get your partner to tune out or stop listening. Judging harshly builds resentment and encourages him/her to tune out. Think about how easy it is to listen to critical, judgmental or unkind comments. The famous psychologist, B. F. Skinner demonstrated through experiments that it was easier to train animals by rewarding them for good behavior than by punishing them for bad behavior. Further studies have shown that the same applies to people.

At times partners may repeat the same negative messages so often that their partner learns to simply tune out that particular frequency. They in fact don't "hear it" anymore.

Tease Mercilessly
At times people try to disguise meanness by saying, “I’m just kidding.” Mean is mean and saying I’m teasing does not make it any less mean. Thinking that your partner should “suck it up,” or “have a thicker skin” shows a lack of respect for his/her feelings. It is not fun to be on the receiving end of this kind of teasing and a wedge is driven between partners, creating greater distance over time.

Considering how to talk so your partner will not listen may help you to identify behaviors that are destructive to your relationship. If you see yourself in any of the above, it may be time to try something different.

When you talk to your partner do so respectfully and whenever possible positively. Hearing what we are doing well is so much easier to listen to. Positive comments make much better motivators than negative comments.

Susan Derry, B.Ed., M.S.Psy., R.P.C.
Professional Counselor & Life Coach

Co-author of Marriage Prep: Beginnings a downloadable marriage preparation course

Co-author of Intimate Sex: Manual for Lovemaking, a sex manual for couples

Offers a free Nurturing Marriage Ezine

Celebrate Your Love

07:52:00 Add Comment

Celebrate Your Love


“Great love is built on great sacrifice and that home where the principle of sacrifice for the welfare of each other is daily expressed is that home where there abides a great love.” Harold B Lee

At this Christmas time of year we are driven to give gifts to others. It sometimes seems that we almost believe that the bigger, the more expensive or the larger the amount of what we give proves our love. What I would like to discuss here is a gift that requires no money and no stressful evenings at the mall. The gift I would like to suggest this year is you.

As Harold B Lee stated above the giving of ones’ self is the basis of a great and abiding love. When we give of ourselves from the heart we tend to grow and swell with a positive, empowering love and that also includes a self-love. Service increases our feelings of worth; it enriches our own sense of esteem. We become better. It has been said that the best way out of a depression, a way to rid you of the blues is to find someone else to serve and do it.

So we need to serve our partners and why would we not want to, we profess to love him/her. We hear so often in counseling; “I don’t know if I believe him/her when s/he says ‘I love you.’ I want to believe and trust that to be true but I don’t know if I can.” So how to do we prove it? By showing it, our actions and our behavior should be congruent with our words, then our partners can begin to believe our love for them.

Where to start? As stated before in this ezine; acceptance is the birthplace of change. We need to accept what is, is. Arthur Rubinstein stated: “Of course there is no formula for success except perhaps an unconditional acceptance of life and what it brings.” The place to start is to accept yourself as you are and then give your partner that same gift.

Because as Dr. Robert Anthony said; “True love depends on true freedom. Only those who are free can afford to love without reservation.” This is a two-sided observation. One deals with ourselves and our view of our self. The other deals with our partner and what we expect of him/her. If we put conditions on our love (I will love you when you make more money or when you are in better shape or whatever condition we apply) we are not allowing them to be truly free. Conditions restrict our behavior, our creativity, our expressions and with conditions we are not free to be who we really are. So the first gift would be to love each other unconditionally.
Now we should deal with our own view of ourselves. What does that have to do with giving a gift to our partner? Well if you bought them a coffee maker and it didn’t work would you not return it or fix it? Yes. When our view of ourselves is skewed, when our beliefs about our self worth is twisted, when our self-esteem is in the… well you know where then the gift of “our self” is broken. We need to fix it. Gift number two is to heal our selves, to grow in maturity and strength.

Next, we need to start to heal our relationship, to grow it, to bring it to maturity. And that starts with forgiveness. Hannah Arendt said it best; “Forgiveness is the key to action and freedom.” Remember that we can’t truly love unless we are truly free. Holding grudges and hurt or hard feelings is binding us in the past; we are not free to grow and to love. Gift number three is to forgive each other and our selves.

How about a stocking stuffer? Paul Sweeney says that, “a wedding anniversary is the celebration of love, trust, partnership, tolerance and tenacity. The order varies on any given year.” We need to understand we don’t fall in love or out of love. Love is a verb and action word signifying a choice. We choose to love or not. So put that in his or her stocking, the choice you have made to love them.

Have a Merry Christmas and a happy New Year. Enjoy your lives together; celebrate the season by celebrating your love.

“If you want things to be different, perhaps the answer is to become different yourself.” Norman Vincent Peale.

Dallas Munkholm, B.A., B.Com., R.P.C.
Professional Counselor & Life Coach

Co-author of Marriage Prep: Beginnings a downloadable marriage preparation course

Co-author of Intimate Sex: Manual for Lovemaking, a sex manual for couples

Offers a free Nurturing Marriage Ezine