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- Why avoiding conflict is making you lonely
Why avoiding conflict is making you lonely
And only creates artificial peace.

How’s it going? We hope you’ve been able to take some time out and truly connect, especially after last month’s newsletter!
Today we’re uncovering a concept that might be new to many people. That avoiding conflict only creates more distance between us, even though it feels like peace on the surface.
You ready? Let’s go. Then, we’ve got a new podcast episode Darren was invited onto and some fresh date night questions.
// UNITY
Why Avoiding Conflict is Making You Lonely
Emma and Peter have what seems to be a happy marriage. They never seem to fight, they have a tidy house, a couple of newish cars and their kids are pretty well-behaved. On the surface, everything looks good. Other couples look at them and are a bit jealous. Some of Emma's friends wish they could be in a perfect marriage like hers. She and Peter just seem so compatible that marriage and family seem effortless.
But Emma and Peter are becoming lonely. What they present to the world isn't what’s going on underneath. On the surface, everything seems great, but there's a lack of depth. Their relationship stays at surface level. It’s shallow and, as a result, their level of emotional intimacy is low. They feel like they are becoming more and more disconnected.
Why?
Because they have created a marriage where peace is the highest value. Not intimacy or closeness.
Peace and calm look good on the outside. But if peace is valued over intimacy it can slowly create a lonely marriage.
Neither person feels the permission to open up and begin a conflict that will ultimately help them truly connect again.
At my workplace, we've been looking at the 5 Dysfunctions of Team by Patrick Lencioni and I've been considering the concepts in our most important team... marriage. On his 5-level pyramid, 'Absence of Trust' is at the base and rightly so. Relationships are established and built on trust and so are effective teams. Here it is below:

On the 2nd level up is 'Fear of Conflict' of which he says,
"The desire to preserve artificial harmony stifles productive ideological conflict within the team."
See that? Artificial harmony.
Fake peace.
This can happen in our marriages when we don't know how to engage in healthy conflict. Maybe we had a big fight that was left unresolved or we hurt each other horribly. And now we work to avoid conflict at nearly any cost. We are scared to 'rock the boat' because we haven't learned how to get on the same page, how to compromise, talk about a problem with kindness or the importance of listening to understand.
We must allow conflict to bring us closer together. Healthy conflict helps us resolve our problems, repair the relationship, understand one another and develop emotional intimacy again.
Here are three goals for restoring healthy conflict and moving towards true peace and real intimacy.
Have a culture of openness and honesty
Learn to have a loving, robust conversation
Make vulnerability normal again
Emma and Peter can restore their closeness…by letting themselves be vulnerable, brave & authentic. By beginning to share their hearts and bare their soul again (and responding in respect and kindness), the emotional intimacy will return. Learning healthy ways of disagreeing and coming together around a problem will only reinforce the safety needed to continue moving forward in vulnerability together.
How can we do this? Here are 5 ways you can put an end to artificial peace and restore your intimacy:
1. Give each other permission to feel and express feelings
Expressing how you feel is an act of vulnerability. "Hey, I'm a little worried about some stuff at work, can you help me talk through a few things?"
Also, give feedback in the moment. "Hey, when you come home really late I get worried. Can you text me if you're running behind at work?"
Expressing your feelings in your marriage is normal and healthy, especially if done with respect and without attacking the other person.
2. Learn how to have an important discussion
When you need to talk about something important your timing, tone of voice and listening skills are critical. Dive into this post here for some key aspects to include in your next serious 'chat'.
3. Start with something small and manageable
When you are learning how to fight in a healthy way, start small. Choose something that is a minor frustration and begin to discuss it together. Listen actively and love generously and you're on your way! *
4. Make it a regular check-in conversation
If we’re going to keep short accounts, stay connected and do conflict well we don’t want to go back to fake peace! Keep up the communication. Make it normal. Not incessant or nagging of course. Just work on your openness to each other. Keep it honest and keep it kind.
Maybe even have a once-a-week check-in to see if there are any potential issues. A type of weekly Festivus!
5. Go all out and talk about the way you fight
Dive in and have a future-focused conversation with your spouse. What isn't working about the way you have conflict? Why have one or both of you shut down in this area? Talk about how you talk, how you communicate, and how you disagree and fight. What will you improve? How will you give each other permission to bring up things to
Finally, send this to your spouse or read it together.
Talk about what level of openness and intimacy you want to build in your marriage. How do you want it to be?
This post is also on the blog👇. Check it out for more helpful articles.
// TRY THIS
Listen to Darren share on a new podcast
I was recently invited to share about marriage and relationships on a pretty new mental health podcast targeted towards the mining industry here in Australia by a friend Shayne. We covered a LOT of ground and answered some questions sent in by listeners too.
It’s a solid listen but I think you’ll get a lot out of it! Search for it in your podcast app or click below to listen on Spotify.
// DATE NIGHTS
Date Night Questions
Do you feel you have permission to bring up a problem? Why or why not?
What is the best way for me to raise an issue with you? (consider timing, tone, code phrase)
Are you happy with the way we fight? What should we change?
Do you sometimes choose artificial harmony over conflict?
Would a weekly check-in regarding issues be a good thing for us?
// AFFILIATE LINK
Want to start an email newsletter like this? I’ve been loving Beehiiv for over 12 months now. Use this link and you’ll get a 30-day free trial plus 20% off for 3 months. The free plan is also brilliant and is packed with features.
// MORE RESOURCES
How do you feel about your relationship?
We feel like roommates - From House Mates to Soul Mates
I feel like we’re slowly drifting apart - How to Stop Drifting Apart
We’re going through a very tough season - Weathering a Perfect Storm
We fight about housework - The Housework Problem SOLVED
We don’t know how to talk about sex - Six Types of Sex
I feel like I’m doing all the work - When Your Marriage Feels One-Sided
Until next month, stay close!
Darren & Beck Chapman
PS. Forward this to someone who might love it!
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