Argument 1: Conflict-avoidance
3. Remain quiet as you make dinner for yourself and sit down in front of the television to watch the newest episode of your show.
Neither you nor your partner mentions the dishes. You feel resentful that you had to make your own dinner after working, and your partner feels as though you were gone all day just to come home and watch T.V.Â
Resentment builds in both of you, although neither of you are aware that the other is feeling this way. Neither of you make dinner for the other, or do the dishes for a few additional times, until the argument is explosive when it does finally happen.
If you chose this option, you want to ask yourself why you felt as though the change in routine wasn’t something worth talking about. Did it seem like too much effort after a long day at work? Conflict-avoidance often leads to the building of resentment until an explosive argument finally happens, and when couples don’t learn conflict resolution from these smaller arguments, the bigger arguments can be relationship ruining. Acknowledging that you avoid conflicts is the first step towards assuring that you confront the issues at hand.Â













