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Melissa Sandfort's avatar

John Gottman, one of the top relationship researchers of our era, says that up to 70% of conflicts between people are un- resolvable. https://www.gottman.com/blog/managing-conflict-solvable-vs-perpetual-problems/#:~:text=When%20thinking%20about%20conflict%20in,and%20a%20gridlocked%20perpetual%20problem.

He calls them “perpetual problems.”

The reality that MOST relationship conflict is perpetually problematic is not part of our zeitgeist. Instead, there’s a strong (misguided) belief that “if I just communicate better” I can somehow resolve any conflict that arises between me and someone else. But the deck is stacked against me if 70% percent of the time that’s not true.

Although I’ve known this statistic for years, and known about this concept for years, it’s hitting me harder than it ever has right this minute.

70% of the time what I need to do is face the reality that this other person is going to be how they are, and I can’t change it and I have to decide what I will do in response.

I can’t change them. I can’t do better. I can’t communicate better. I just have to decide how I will be with this gap between us. Either it’s something I can live with it or not. And that’s it. There’s nothing more that can be done about it.

Yes, 30% of the time there is a solution—but deeply accepting that more than 2/3 of the time there is no solution is simultaneously horrifying and relieving. Because it gets me off the hook for trying and trying and trying and beating my head against a wall that is simply never going to change.

What a helpful re-orientation going into this holiday season, when we’re exposed to differences between us and other people that are simply impossible to fix.

What is the level of closeness I can sustain comfortably with someone who has these differences, so that I can still feel healthy and whole? With some people, it may be no contact. For some people, it may be low contact. For some people it may be that I can handle the level of contact we have through the holidays. But the more that I decide what distance works for me, the healthier I’m going to be January 1!

For me, the way to decide what I will do is to work with the parts of me who are triggered by the differences between me and this person using Internal Family Systems (IFS).

But it really doesn’t matter what technique you use—the important thing is to be aware: you get to decide what you do about this difference between you and the other person. The part of you who says “just try harder“ may not be accurately understanding that 70% of the time that won’t work.

Thanks for this incredibly timely reminder that trying harder is not always the solution, Chris!

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Megan Kwasniak's avatar

Some conflicts took a full TWO episodes to resolve them :D That's when you knew things were really bad in the sitcom world :P

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