Julie Schwartz Gottman

  • kyptcathas quoted10 months ago
    Intimacy inevitably creates conflict.
  • kyptcathas quoted10 months ago
    The absence of conflict doesn’t indicate a strong relationship—in fact, it can lead to exactly the opposite.
  • kyptcathas quoted10 months ago
    The absence of conflict doesn’t indicate a strong relationship—in fact, it can lead to exactly the opposite.
  • kyptcathas quoted10 months ago
    Conflict is connection. It’s how we figure out who we are, what we want, who our partners are and who they are becoming, and what they want.
  • kyptcathas quoted10 months ago
    We’ve found that you can fight with kindness, with love, and with peace at the end.
  • kyptcathas quoted10 months ago
    minutes of a fight can predict the status of the relationship six years later.[5]
  • kyptcathas quoted10 months ago
    three minutes of a fight can predict the status of the relationship six years later.[5]
  • kyptcathas quoted10 months ago
    during conflict, couples who exhibited four key behaviors we call “the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse” (criticism, contempt, stonewalling, and defensiveness) were likely to split an average of five years post-wedding.[7]
  • kyptcathas quoted10 months ago
    ow we fight is, as we’ve said, how we communicate and connect.
  • kyptcathas quoted10 months ago
    When we fight, we should be trying to create something better. That’s the ultimate goal of conflict: to create something better for yourself, for you and your partner as a couple, and for the world. Conflict doesn’t have to break us apart. Conflict and peace are not mutually exclusive. We can arrive at peace through conflict. We can combine kindness and gentleness with fighting. We can grow closer because of conflict. But to do this, we need to get to the heart of our conflicts.
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