Why You Keep Having the Same Fight: Difference between revisions
Created page with "{{Big Idea |Status=Published |Owner=Admin |Display Title=Why You Keep Having the Same Fight |Topic Tags=Tag:Emotions, Tag:Emotional Intelligence, Tag:Communication, Tag:Psychology |Description=People learned different ways to handle stress as kids, and now those same patterns are destroying relationships. |Is Featured=No |Content=Every couple has the same fight over and over. But most relationship fights aren't really about what you're arguing about. You think it's th..." |
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Because most relationship problems aren't that complicated. They just feel impossible when you're trying to solve them in completely different ways. | Because most relationship problems aren't that complicated. They just feel impossible when you're trying to solve them in completely different ways. | ||
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Latest revision as of 00:50, 30 September 2025
| Display Title | Why You Keep Having the Same Fight |
|---|---|
| Format | Big Ideas
|
| Topics | Emotions, Emotional Intelligence, Communication, Psychology |
| Status | Published |
| Featured | No |
| Owner | Admin |
| Description | People learned different ways to handle stress as kids, and now those same patterns are destroying relationships. |
Every couple has the same fight over and over. But most relationship fights aren't really about what you're arguing about.
You think it's the dishes. Or the money. Or who said what at dinner.
It's not.
You're fighting because when shit gets tense, one of you needs to talk now. The other needs to shut down and think.
One person pushes. The other pulls away. And you're both convinced the other is in the wrong.
They're not. You're just wired differently.
What’s actually happening
When your partner reacts differently than you do, your brain interprets it as rejection or disrespect.
If you need to talk and they shut down, your brain's telling you they don't care. If you need space and they follow you around demanding answers, it feels like an attack.
That feeling is real. But it's not the truth.
You're both trying to handle the stress in the only way you know how. It's a survival instinct. And you're both taking the other person's survival instinct personally.
The four regulation styles
When shit gets real, you have a default setting. Most people fall into one of these four patterns:
- The Suppressors: They go silent. They withdraw, filter everything through logic, and won't speak until they've worked it out internally. You wouldn't even know they're upset because they've trained themselves to show nothing.
- The Expressers: They process out loud. Every feeling becomes a conversation. They need to talk it through to understand it. To them, silence feels like abandonment.
- The Externalizers: They redirect the pain. When they're scared or hurt, their first instinct is to make it someone else’s fault. “You did this” is like a shield. It’s easier than saying, “I’m in pain.”
- The Internalizers: They shut down completely. They don't lash out or talk it through. They freeze. They disappear into themselves until everything passes.
These are survival strategies.
You learned them as a kid to handle the world, and you’ve been running the same program ever since.
Where this comes from
You didn’t choose your default setting. You learned it.
When you were a kid, you relied on adults to show you how to handle big emotions. If they were calm, you learned that feelings weren’t a threat. You could feel something without it wrecking you.
If they panicked or ignored you, you learned that emotions were dangerous.
So you found a way to cope on your own. You learned to suppress, hide, or shut down. Whatever it took to feel safe.
On top of that, society also taught you.
Boys learned that feelings are weak. Crying makes you soft. Fear means you're not tough enough. The only "acceptable" emotion was anger. So everything else got buried or turned into rage.
Girls learned to feel everything, but only the nice things. Sadness was okay. Anger wasn't. Your job was to be pleasant and keep everyone else comfortable.
Now, you're adults trying to connect with someone who is running a completely different emotional program. A program neither of you chose and probably never questioned.
And you're both convinced yours is the right way and the other person's is broken.
Stop trying to change each other
This is where it all goes wrong. You try to fix the problem by forcing your partner to react like you do.
And it backfires. Every. Single. Time.
You think you’re helping. But you’re not.
All you’re doing is triggering their stress response and making it worse.
Push an Internalizer to talk before they're ready and they shut down more. Tell an Expresser to be quiet and think it through, they’ll spiral.
These patterns are survival instincts hardwired into the nervous system. And you can't logic someone out of a survival instinct.
The only way forward is to stop fighting your partner’s wiring. You have to learn to work with their system, not against it.
What to do about it
Step 1: Figure out your own pattern
What do you do when you get stressed?
Be honest with yourself.
You can’t change anything if you don’t know your role in it.
Step 2: Watch what your partner does
What do they do when they get stressed?
Not what you think they should do. What they actually do.
Do they pace? Go quiet? Need to talk? Disappear?
Their way might feel off because it's not the same as yours. Get over it. Just because it's different doesn't mean it's wrong.
Step 3: Have a conversation when things are good
Wait until you're both calm. Not during a fight. Not right after.
Then talk about what you've noticed. Your pattern. Their pattern. How you keep setting each other off.
The goal is to stop making things worse.
You're building a system that works for both of you, not forcing one person to operate like the other.
Step 4: Make agreements you can keep
This is where most fail because they aren’t specific enough.
"I need space" doesn't tell your partner anything.
How long? When are you coming back? Are we done talking or just pausing?
When people don't know what to expect, they fill in the blanks with the worst possible scenario.
So be clear about it.
The specifics are up to you. Your patterns are different from everyone else's.
Figure out what works. Then test it.
If it doesn’t work, change it.
Just make sure you're both on the same page about what's happening.
The Goal
The fights don't stop just because you understand this. But something does change.
You stop making them worse.
You finally break the cycle where you both keep triggering each other’s worst reactions.
Because most relationship problems aren't that complicated. They just feel impossible when you're trying to solve them in completely different ways.