Sharon M. Rivkin, M.A., LMFT

Featured Appearances

O, the Oprah Magazine

O, The Oprah Magazine

"The Fight That Can Save Your Marriage"

Reader's Digest

Readers Digest

"The Fight With Many Faces"

Eve Magazine

Eve Magazine

"How to Argue Properly"

Hitched.com
DrLaura.com
BeliefNet: Inspiration, Spirituality, Faith
Health News Digest.com
eDiest: a whole new you
Wellness.com
She Knows

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The First Argument

The First Argument - Cutting to the Root of Intimate Conflict | by Sharon Rivkin

Within a couple's first argument lies the core conflict of a relationship.

Click to purchase The First Argument

"TRANSFORMATION -
The poison is the remedy.  Through our work with the first argument, we learn that the very thing we dread and avoid - the root of our conflict - is also the source of our healing."
-Excerpt from
The First Argument

Change Your Language, Change Your Relationship
How We Say Things Does Matter

By Sharon Rivkin

That old phrase, “sticks and stones may break my bones, but names will never hurt me” is not really true. Words may not inflict visible bruises like sticks and stones, but they pack a punch nonetheless. They injure our insides, our feelings, and our self-esteem. External bruises are tangible proof that we’ve been hurt. Internal bruises from verbal attacks are harder to prove, harder to acknowledge, and harder to talk about.

Words and how we say them do matter, so it’s very important to be careful how you speak to your partner and others. The misuse and carelessness of how you speak are two of the main issues that undermine and can eventually destroy a relationship.

There are many positive and compassionate ways to get your point across to someone you care about. For example, a judgmental statement such as, “I feel like I’m walking on eggshells and can’t say anything to my partner without him/her getting upset,” can instead be reframed to “I want to show my partner respect and love by speaking to them with compassion and awareness.” That doesn’t mean you can’t speak your mind, it just means you’re being respectful and mindful of another person’s feelings and vulnerabilities. It lets your partner know they’re not a bad person, but you truly want them to hear you. Use of attacking language, such as “You’re a jerk,” “You always,” “You never…,” is guaranteed to get a negative response from your partner who has no choice but to be react defensively.

When communicating, keep the following four tips in mind:

  1. Use “I” statements.
  2. Have compassion for yourself and your partner.
  3. Listen before you speak.
  4. Speak as you would like to be spoken to.

Another example of reframing negative, judgmental language to positive and compassionate language includes:

Your partner is angry and yells at you for no reason. You could say, “Shut up, you’re always yelling at me for no reason. You’re awful!”

OR you could say:

”It’s not okay to talk to me that way. I don’t deserve it and it is hurtful.”

Because this is a more neutral and uncharged way of speaking than the first accusatory example, it’s going to be much easier for your partner to hear you, to reply in an understanding manner, and maybe even change his/her behavior. You’re speaking your feelings without raking your partner over the coals.

Good communication means expressing your feelings without making another person defensive. What this ultimately means is taking responsibility for your feelings and expressing them in a way that is clear without blame, shame, or damage. The goal is to speak with consciousness and awareness. Remember…when we are compassionate in the way we speak, we can say even the hardest things to someone and still communicate our caring, love, and displeasure – altogether. Therefore, before you speak, remember:

  1. LISTEN to yourself.
  2. THINK about your partner and use words that he/she will understand.
  3. COOL down before you talk. Don’t talk in the heat of the moment. Try to express the feelings (hurt, anger, disappointment) that are hiding underneath the shame, blame, self-righteousness and judgment.
  4. REMEMBER you want resolution and peace, not necessarily to be RIGHT.
  5. KINDNESS and COMPASSION go a long way.

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Bio of Sharon Rivkin
Sharon M. Rivkin, Marriage and Family Therapist, and author of The First Argument: Cutting to the Root of Intimate Conflict, has worked with couples for 27 years. Her unique insight into the first argument was featured in O: The Oprah Magazine and Reader’s Digest, and has attracted people throughout the United States and abroad for consultation, workshops, and courses. For more information on Sharon Rivkin and her book, or to contact her, visit www.sharonrivkin.com.