DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

The 5 Biggest Reasons You and Your Partner Argue So Much (and How to Stop)

April 19, 2026
in News
The 5 Biggest Reasons You and Your Partner Argue So Much (and How to Stop)

Every couple argues. That part is normal. What’s not normal, and what a lot of people accept as just “how relationships work”, is living in a near-constant state of conflict, spending entire weekends in verbal battles or days frozen in silent resentment.

According to therapist and Psychology Today contributor Robert Taibbi, L.C.S.W., the arguments themselves aren’t really the problem. They’re the symptom. Here are the five most common triggers, and what to actually do about them.

When One Person Is Carrying More Than Their Share

Relationship imbalance is one of the most common slow burns in a partnership. One person runs the household. The other feels like they’re talking to a wall when things get hard. Nobody brings it up, life keeps moving, and then one day it all comes out over something completely ridiculous. Taibbi’s take: get ahead of it. Talk about what each of you needs before it gets to that point.

When the Past Keeps Showing Up in the Present Argument

Old wounds have a way of crawling into current disagreements, whether they’re invited or not. A complaint about chores turns into a referendum on an affair from three years ago. A minor frustration reopens something that was never fully dealt with. The only way out is to actually deal with it—have the conversation, reach some kind of real resolution, and stop using old pain as ammunition.

When the Fight Isn’t Really About What You Think It’s About

Childhood baggage has a long shelf life. Someone raised by critical parents hears every complaint as an attack. Someone who always felt overlooked as a kid feels invisible again the moment their partner tunes out. These wounds get retriggered constantly in relationships, usually without either person realizing it. Taibbi’s advice: learn what each other’s sensitivities actually are, and make a conscious effort not to keep stepping on them.

When Someone Goes From Zero to Sixty Before the Conversation Even Starts

A quick temper can derail an otherwise manageable disagreement in seconds. Once someone is flooded with emotion, productive conversation is basically over. The skill here is twofold: recognize when you’re escalating before it happens, and learn to actually pump the brakes. That might mean calling a time-out, naming the emotion in the room, or just giving yourself space before re-engaging. It’s not fun, but it works.

When the Same Problems Keep Coming Back Because They Were Never Really Solved

A lot of couples have the same argument on a loop because the underlying issue was never actually resolved—just temporarily shelved. Taibbi keeps it simple: work out the chore list, have the hard conversation about whatever’s been festering, and come up with a plan you both genuinely agree to. Then check whether it’s working. Then adjust. Repeat. It’s less dramatic than another blowout and considerably more effective.

Arguing isn’t a relationship death sentence. Refusing to address the actual source of the arguing might be. The good news, as Taibbi writes, is that none of this requires rocket science—just a willingness to be honest, take some ownership, and solve problems like adults before they solve themselves in ways you won’t like.

The post The 5 Biggest Reasons You and Your Partner Argue So Much (and How to Stop) appeared first on VICE.

Nicole Kidman recalls being alone in Venice the night she learned her mom had died
News

Nicole Kidman recalls being alone in Venice the night she learned her mom had died

by Page Six
April 19, 2026

Nicole Kidman is opening up about the day she found out her mother had died. The 58-year-old actress spoke at the ...

Read more
News

Elon Musk fulfills teen’s last wish in touching X post after she was too weak to take his call

April 19, 2026
News

Why People Are Paying Thousands to Read Books Together

April 19, 2026
News

Country music icon Don Schlitz, who wrote Kenny Rogers’ hit ‘The Gambler,’ dead at 73

April 19, 2026
News

Humanoid robots crush humans during half-marathon — and set the world record

April 19, 2026
Not Everyone Has a Friend Group. Here’s What It Says About You If You Don’t.

Not Everyone Has a Friend Group. Here’s What It Says About You If You Don’t.

April 19, 2026
North Korea fires multiple ballistic missiles towards sea off its east coast

North Korea fires multiple ballistic missiles towards sea off its east coast

April 19, 2026
North Korea fires multiple ballistic missiles towards sea off its east coast

North Korea fires multiple ballistic missiles towards sea off its east coast

April 19, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026