Why do we end up fighting over my requests for change?

by Nathan Chua

You will never be like our friend Joe.  He knows how to make Valentine’s day special for his wife.  I clean your closet for you and you never even try!  I need you to change or else I will never be happy in this relationship.  I have done so much for this relationship so why can’t you do the same for me?      

These are just some examples of how couples end up escalating their fights.  They end up not just fighting about the issue at hand, but also the way they fight about it.  In the following article I will be writing about a few common requests that couples make that usually backfire.  Here is a short list of some of these ineffective petitions for change that couples use:

Did you notice how sweet Joe is to his wife?  Why can’t you be more like that?  

The problem with this type of request is that it immediately makes your partner defensive.  Your partner, just like everyone else will then make comparisons to other people who are less thoughtful to their partners than him or herself.  We all have the ability to make both upward and downward comparisons.  Comparisons usually make way for even more comparisons that will defend your partner’s position and invalidate yours.

After all of the work I have done to keep this household clean, you can’t even pick up after yourself!  When will you learn not to dump the dirty dishes in the sink and leave them there for hours? 

The problem with this demand is that you turn your partner’s differences into defects.  It may not take you much to clean up, but it can take quite a bit of effort for your partner.  What may seem easy and logical for you, may not be as evident to your partner.  

There are quite a few more of these, but I will now turn to ways in which you can make your requests more likely to be granted.  Please note that I don’t claim certainty here.  But at least these types of requests will be less likely to compound the issues by turning your fights into fights about the way you fight.  You might be surprised at its simplicity.

Make simple requests for no other reasons but for the fact that such changes will make you happy!  Most, if not all of us, go into a pair-bonding relationship for the simple reason that we want to make our partners happy.  It gives us pleasure to know that we have done something that makes our partners smile.  

In some cases though, you may find it hard to talk about these requests for change without ending up in a major altercation.  In such instances, you might have to be a bit more creative.  Do something different in the way you make your requests, like handwriting an open letter or sending an email.

If all else fails, there are a few things that have less to do with how your partner is, but more to do with how you are in the relationship.  One is being able to accept the fact that in all relationships, there are bound to be inequalities.  Your partner will be unpleasantly surprised if you suddenly demand for something that was never there in the first place.  Secondly, come to terms with the fact that change is bound to happen in any relationship.  In fact, keeping things as they are will take more effort than accepting that change will happen over time.  To use a metaphor, keeping a car or house in its original state is much harder than accepting the fact that they will eventually break down in certain areas.

Finally, the only thing that I can guarantee will make changes in your relationship, is a change in yourself.  Do what your partner has been asking for.  Do it without asking anything in return.  Give your partner an incentive to do what you’ve been requesting for.  Be kinder, sweeter, and show your partner that you have come to accept many of the differences that he or she brings into the relationship.  

Attempts to change your partner by sheer force of command usually backfires.  You can only influence change not demand it to happen in order for it to happen.  If you change, there is a greater likelihood that your partner will notice how much you have come to accept him or her, and thus show changes too.  It’s just up to you to be more mindful of the changes you see in your partner and appreciate your partner’s efforts.  As humans we all harbor aspirations of becoming the best person we want to be, most especially in this one special relationship that is like no other.  Your partner is no exception.  

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