Conflict zen habit 2: Break the bickering habit

In the 7 Habits of Conflict Zen®, I described conflict zen as “the centered, balanced, intentional response to conflict that most people want. It’s the kind of response the minimizes relational debris, makes you feel good about how you handled it, and exponentially increases creativity for individuals and groups.”

Breaking the bickering habit is one of the ways to move closer to conflict zen in your home and work relationships. And because it takes two to bicker, the bait provided by the other can make breaking the habit a bit harder to pull off.

Breaking the bickering habit is possible with the commitment of one person in a pair or group, and more possible when everyone involved agrees to change the habit together. How do I know? This is one I’ve had to work on in my own life and marriage, and which still trips me up on occasion.

Why we bicker

Psychologists and counselors might answer this differently, but here’s the mediator’s take on bickering:

  • We bicker because we’ve avoided having the difficult conversation that’s underlying the squabbling.
  • We bicker because a problem in the relationship hasn’t really been attended to sufficiently. And like the snake under the rug, the unaddressed conflict pops out in all sorts of other moments.
  • We bicker because we know one primary way to argue: take a position, stick to it, and stick with it over time, like Dr. Seuss’ poor Zax.

Why bickering is a problem

Bickering once in a while isn’t a problem. Bickering regularly is, because:

  • Each squabble leaves a few tiny pieces of emotional debris. Over time, quite a pile can build up and the relationship can suffer.
  • It can become the way you do conflict, the way you disagree. Patterns are hard to break – not impossible, but much harder when they’re well ingrained.
  • It’s harder to leap out of bed with joy for the day ahead when you know that day has too many unpleasant moments waiting to find you.
  • It contributes to the conflict spiral, that pattern of escalating frustration and distance that marks a relationship in real trouble.
  • It can ruin your day. Your year. Your decade. Who wants to look back on a life filled with bickering as one of the hallmarks of daily existence?

Breaking the bickering habit

The approach I outlined in Kicking the Criticism Habit applies to bickering, too. But because bickering is often a joint habit, it’s best if both of you work on breaking the habit together. Here are some additional pointers:

  1. Find and agree on a “pause button” for the conversation. It’s got to be a remark or gesture that both of you know will stop you momentarily, won’t inflame, and you’ve agreed upon in advance. My husband and I use the simple, “Time out.” Either of us can invoke it and both will pause and redirect once it’s been invoked.
  2. Center yourselves. Help your mind remember how to respond with love instead of venom or bitterness by answering your own centering question.
  3. Take the time to talk out what’s underlying the bickering. Track back what the bickering’s really about and talk out the things that matter instead of squabbling over the things that don’t.

Breaking the bickering habit with a little help

Breaking the bickering habit habit will be a featured topic in my spring Conflict Zen® retreats. If you’re part of a pair that’s stuck in a bickering rut, you can even come to the retreat together (there will be a couples and group discount). Sign up now to be notified of earlybird registration.
Tammy
Conflict Zen® by Tammy Lenski is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. Based on a work at ConfictZen.Lenski.com.

Thanks to these readers for getting the conversation started...

  1. Barbara :

    I don't mean to bicker (lol), but doesn't your step no.1 adds to build up the tension? Cutting the vocal dialogue will not stop the internal dialogue to go on, and parnters may start from where they left of. My strategy at the moment is to be aware of the tension that originates the bickering mode to go off, and let my partner keep the psychological victory. It may sound surprising, but by doing that his response also softens. We end up forgetting the whole thing. That made it evident to me that the reason for the bickering fwas not, after all, worth it.

    • Barbara – love the opening line! Here's why I'm proposing the general approach described in my article:

      - Not everyone can stop bickering when their bickering partner ceases. If they've got a bone to pick, they'll pursue it.

      - If what's behind the bickering isn't fully addressed, it can create problems in the long run. Sometimes that takes both partners to decide, not one.

      - Agreeing that a pause is valuable, especially if there's agreement about this strategy in advance, is a signal that things are escalating. For couples looking to break a bickering habit, choice points like these can help them become more aware of sliding back into the habit.

      All that said, I do agree that sometimes it is the right choice for one partner to break the bickering cycle — there is no question that sometimes it only takes one to change the conflict dynamic. It certainly sounds like that approach is working for you. That's what matters most — finding the right set of reactions that changes things for the better for each individual and couple.

      Thanks for taking the time to comment!

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