Speaking of Psychology - Lessons from the ‘Love Lab’ on how to strengthen your relationship, with John Gottman, PhD, and Julie Schwartz Gottman, PhD
Episode Date: November 20, 2024Strong, supportive relationships are key to our mental and even physical health. But what are the keys to a healthy, loving relationship? John Gottman, PhD, and Julie Schwartz Gottman, PhD, talk about... why it’s so important to pay attention to your partner’s “bids for connection,” how to have productive rather than destructive fights, whether any couple can learn to communicate better, and why it’s a myth that you should never go to bed angry. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Strong supportive relationships are a key to our mental and even physical health.
But what makes for a healthy relationship?
Today we're going to talk about that with two psychologists who've spent decades studying
the differences between relationship masters and relationship disasters and translating that
research into resources for couples and families.
So what do relationship masters do that relationship disasters don't?
What's the right way to fight with your partner?
Do fights have to be destructive, or is it possible to have a constructive fight?
Is it true that you should never go to bed angry?
And what are the most important things you can do to make sure your partner feels loved and supported
and to strengthen your relationship bond?
Welcome to Speaking of Psychology, the flagship podcast of the American Psychological Association
that examines the links between psychological science and everyday life.
I'm Kim Mills.
My guests today are Dr. John Gottman and Dr. Julie Schwartz.
Gottman, the co-founders of the Gottman Institute. Dr. John Gottman began his research on marital
stability and divorce prediction in the 1970s. He's an emeritus professor of psychology at the
University of Washington, where he founded the Love Lab and where much of his research on couples'
interactions was conducted. Dr. Gottman is the author or co-author of more than 200 academic articles
and has won numerous awards for his research. Dr. Julie Schwartz Gottman is a clinical psychologist,
with expertise working with distressed couples, abuse and trauma survivors,
and people with substance use problems and their partners.
She brings her expertise in clinical psychology to the Gottman Institute,
co-creating the art and science of love workshops for couples
and co-designing the National Clinical Training Program
in Gottman Method couples therapy.
Together, the Gottman's have translated the science of relationships into books,
workshops, trainings for therapists, and other resources for the public.
They've co-authored many books together, including their latest, Fight, Right, How to Turn Conflict into Connection.
They've also practiced what they preach in their own nearly four-decade marriage.
Dr. Gottman, Dr. Schwartz Gottman, thank you both for joining me today.
Thank you, Kim.
We're really happy to be here.
Let's start by talking about the background each of you brings to this work.
John, you're a researcher, and Julie, you've always been a practice in clinical psychologist.
How did you decide to bring your work together into what became the Gottman Institute?
Well, here's how it happened.
John and I met in 1986, married in 87.
I at the time was working with very severe trauma as well as some of the other fields.
You mentioned Kim.
But every night at dinner, I was listening to John talk about his research.
and I got sucked in.
I was desperately trying to be individuated, which was popular at the time, but it didn't happen.
We merged completely.
And now, four decades later, I have half a brain.
He has half a brain, but together we make one brain.
So basically, we were out in a canoe about six, seven years later.
And I said, honey, why don't we take this work out of the ivory tower?
and into the population who desperately needs help.
We've learned a lot from your research,
and there's no point in leaving it in the university.
Let's take it out and bring it to the people.
And that's what we did.
So, John, one of the most well-known findings of your early research
was that you were able to predict
whether a couple would divorce years later
just by analyzing a few minutes of video
of their interactions early in their marriage.
Tell us about that work.
How did you do that research
and what clues to a relationship's outcome
were evidenced so early on?
Well, this research was really done in conjunction
with my best friend, Robert Levinson,
who is a psychology professor at UC Berkeley.
And Bob and I had a lab back in the 1970s.
We had our own computer, which was very unusual.
in the 1970s. Every university had one big mainframe computer. But Bob and I had a computer called
a PDP 11, which is about the size of three refrigerators. And all it did was synchronize the video
time code to physiological measures recollecting from both people as they talk to each other.
We're measuring respiration, heart rate, blood velocity, skin conductance, how much they jiggle
and moved. And so we had couples meet at the end of a day after being apart for at least eight hours.
And once we got good physiological signals, we just asked them to talk about how their day went
and videotaped that. And then we interviewed them about the major conflict areas in their
relationship and had them pick the top area to talk about for 15 minutes. And we asked them to try
to solve the problem, and then they selected from a list of positive topics like planning a vacation,
talk for another 15 minutes. When they were done with that, they separately viewed their videotapes
and were still collecting physiological data and videotape as they watched their tapes and turned a
dial to dial to let us know inside what they were feeling, from the dial that range from very negative to
very positive. And then we basically sent them home. Bob and I had no clue of how to help anybody
at that time. And our own intuitions were terrible because we were going from one disastrous
relationship with a woman to another. And our ignorance really motivated this research because we
had no hypotheses at all. Well, three years later, we re-contact these couples. And it turned out that
we could predict with over 90% accuracy how the relationship had changed over that three-year period,
whether couples got happier or less happy, whether they broke up or not.
So the predictions were very high, and that was very unusual at that time for psychologists
to have that level of prediction.
And it turned out that just about everywhere we looked, we could tell the difference between
the people who were in disastrous relationships, like the ones Bob and I had, and the people who were
really masters of relationship. And even when they talked about how their day went, the disasters
went out of the way to communicate their boredom and lack of interest in their partners' day,
whereas the masters were totally involved and interested, asked a lot of questions, and, you know,
communicated that they really cared about how their partners' day went. During conflict, we had our best
prediction of the future of a relationship. And it turned down there that when we look just as simply
at the ratio, the number of seconds that people were nice to one another, divided by the number of
seconds that they were nasty to one another, that ratio averaged five to one among the masters
and averaged 0.8 among the disasters, a little bit more negativity. And in particular, there were four
are things that couples did in relationships that were doomed that really predicted the future very
well. They started with criticism. They used contempt. They were defensive. And when they got
physiologically aroused when their heart rates exceeded 100 pete a minute, they would withdraw
from the interaction and stonewall and not give any cues to the speaker that they were listening
and interested. So those behaviors we wound up calling the four horsemen of the apocalypse.
But I must say that Bob and I had no clue of how to help anybody. And without Julie's
clinical experience, we never would have figured out how to help people. We needed the researcher
and the therapist to really combine their knowledge. And Julie's knowledge of how to help
extremely distressed people was essential in building.
a therapy for helping people. But then that material, your research data must have been sitting there
for a while, right before you met Julie? I mean, Julie, when did you come on the scene and start
looking at all of this and then coming up with your part of the whole theory?
We started working together. So, of course, I was hearing it every night at dinner,
beginning in 1987. But then in 19, about 92,
maybe 93, we started really trying to analyze theoretically what the successful couples were doing
to create the success of their relationships. So we were already John had analyzed the data. He
discovered the four horsemen of the apocalypse. There were also really important factors involving
supporting friendships and also what created shared meaning for the couple, which meant
not only talking about what values they shared, but what each individual partner valued deeply and really
communicating that with their partner and each partner supporting the other person's dreams and
values. So we began to create our theory, which we called the sound relationship house theory,
and later on, the brilliant John Gottman began to do much more mathematics.
analyses back in about 1990 and began to discover what we called the trust metric,
which was a mathematical formulation that really predicted whether couples retained trust or
had lost it, as well as looking at commitment in the couple.
Then we looked at what did the successful couples do and combining our knowledge, our information base.
We created interventions that helped couples do what the successful couples did.
Now, mind you, nobody took relationships 101 in high school or college.
You know, we still don't, right?
So people really were at loss.
They were groping in the dark.
for what the heck do we do instead of the bad patterns and behaviors we're using with one another.
So John wrote his first popular book, when was that, honey?
Right around 1990 something, 1999.
And lo and behold, people grabbed hold of it and really, really were hungry for more.
So we worked on interventions. We created a couple's workshop, a two-day workshop that we later tested, that created a huge difference in not only sustaining friendship or creating friendship in partners, but really helping them to manage conflict in, as you said earlier, Kim, a constructive way rather than a destructive way.
replacing the four horsemen with much more listening,
much better description of I, I feel, I'm thinking,
I'm imagining, I'm fantasizing,
rather than pointing their fingers and blaming their partner.
And in our workshop, we saw that 87% of the couples who came,
and there were a thousand couples at a time that would come to this workshop,
Actually, 87% of them had major breakthroughs in gridlock conflict that they had been suffering from for many years.
So we really knew we were ought to something.
So when you talk about the four horsemen, is any one worse than the other?
And if you have three of the four, are you doomed?
I mean, how do you kind of gauge these things?
Yeah.
What contempt was the worst?
contempt is criticism, but with an error of superiority, and you're talking down to your partner.
So the masters essentially didn't do contempt at all. It was essentially zero.
And Bob and I were very interested in how relationships affected health and longevity, because there was a link there.
And it turned out that contempt was the best predictor of relationship breakup of all.
And we also found that the number of seconds that somebody listened to their partner be contemptuous toward them predicted how many infectious illnesses they would have in the next four years.
So that was the worst of the four horsemen.
So, Julie, to what degree is it possible to change these problematic patterns in a relationship?
Were some couples that you worked with particularly early on as you were learning, were they doomed to divorce from the start?
or is it possible have you found for almost any couple to change and improve the way that they interact?
That's a wonderful question, Kim.
And we were astonished to see, frankly, that many, many couples, even ones who had come back from the lawyer's offices for divorce were dramatically changing their relationships.
The real key was this.
Was there any spark of love, just a little tiny ember that still remained, that the therapist could blow on, basically, or that they could learn more tools in our workshops, that then kindled a fire, that then created the ability for these couples to change their patterns and then really talk in much more depth with much more
understanding and compassion. We had in particular an intervention that I just deeply love,
in which when a couple suffered from a gridlock conflict, meaning a conflict that came up over and
over and over again, 69% of couples' problems are perpetual problems, they never go away,
by the way, when they stopped and slowed down and then,
one person asked the other a series of six deepening questions that really ferreted out the underlying values, feelings,
childhood experience, and underlying ideal dreams in terms of their position on the issue,
with the other person just listening, and then they would trade roles. Wow, that made a huge difference.
because most people would talk about a conflict just on the surface, right? They would just argue parenting styles, for example, but they would never get into how they themselves were parented, what they appreciated and what they did not like in how they were raised themselves that then help formulate their values about parenting here and now. So when those factors were unearthed and shared with the
partner, what resulted was much greater understanding and compassion that then really helped them
arrive at a compromise. So there were tools like that that couples hadn't ever practiced before.
Now, mind you, it takes practice, right? To change anything that is habitual that you have been
practicing for years, maybe decades, it takes a lot of work to kind of resist that gravitational
pull that draws you back into the old patterns. But these couples wanted to change so badly.
They were in so much pain that then they really worked at changing and by golly they did change.
Can most couples do this on their own? Can they get your books, read,
learn and practice what you're saying, or is it really important to have a therapist to work with you?
You know, it depends on the issues. For example, if a couple suffers a terrible betrayal,
whether there's been adultery and affair, whether there's been financial betrayal, somebody hiding
a lot of debt they have, or perhaps there's an addiction within the relationship or severe trauma,
very, very severe trauma. Typically, in those cases, a therapist is really essential to create change. But for those of us who suffer from distress, maybe a bit of trauma, because most of us have had something go wrong in our upbringing, couples, I think, can get a lot of help from the books themselves. And what we are also,
doing now, which is to democratize this work, make it more accessible to people who cannot afford
to have a therapist or go to a workshop, we're putting this work, all of our interventions,
assessment methods, on a software platform. It's already completed, that couples can access
in the privacy of their own home for much less money and get help through instruction.
really hilarious videos that John and I made, 87 little tiny videos showing how to do something
and how not to do something, which we've had a lot of practice at. So they're great.
Now, one piece of advice that I've heard you both discuss is the importance of paying attention
to your partners bids for connection. You've already said this even here in our conversation.
What exactly does that mean in real life and day-to-day interaction with your partner?
So in this apartment lab that Julie and I designed,
130 newlywood couple spent 24 hours there.
And we videotaped them for 12 of those hours while they were awake.
And the camera operators noticed very quickly that there will be one person at some point
when they were hanging out just trying to get their partner.
attention and interest. And we call that making a bid for connection. Now, like somebody will look
out the window and say, oh, there's a beautiful boat. And, you know, we had this lab that was on the
Mont Lake cut in Seattle where boats were going from saltwater to Lake Washington. And all these
boats were going by the locks. And so a woman might look out the window and say, there's a beautiful
boat. And the operators of the cameras would turn one of the cameras toward the husband and see what
the response was. And, you know, in some cases, I remember one tape where the guy was having
a cereal while he was watching TV. And here's his wife saying, there's a beautiful boat,
and this guy doesn't respond at all. He just keeps eating the cereal. We call that turning away,
you know, that lack of a response.
Now, if he had looked up and said, huh, that would be turning toward, that was good enough,
you know, to count as turning toward.
If he was enthusiastic about it, if he went over to her and said, hey, baby, why don't we
get a boat and sail off together, quit our jobs, and that would be called enthusiastic
turning toward.
Or if he was irritable and said, would you be quiet?
I'm trying to watch this TV show.
That was called Turning Against.
And so six years later, when 17 couples out of 130 had divorced, we looked back six years earlier
in this lab, in this apartment lab, the love lab, and turned out those people had turned toward
bids an average of 33% of the time, whereas the people who were still married six years
earlier had turned toward their partner's bid an average of 86% of the time.
So big difference, you know, that probably over time, you know, they really filled the pages of a Russian novel with all the times that they turned toward and acknowledge their partners' immediate needs.
So that was the idea of turning toward.
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So the example that you just gave, the husbands watching TV and eating cereal,
what about what's happening today with phones and other screen devices?
Are they making it harder for couples to stay connected?
You know, that is such an interesting question, Kim, because it's two sides of a coin.
On the one hand, couples are communicating with one another a lot more frequently through texting, right?
Because it's so easy to do.
You've got your phone right at your desktop.
However, what's also happening is that couples may be sucked into their work,
into other activities on their phone, maybe they're gaming on their phone or they're watching
something on their phone. And the phone comes out at the dinner table and guess what happens?
There's a lot of turning away because one individual is really focused on their phone.
And I'm sure, you know, all of us in the audience has seen folks at a restaurant, you know,
we, especially kids, sitting at a table, four people in a booth, they're all on their phones.
What are they doing? Some are actually conversing with one another on their phones rather than opening
their mouths and uttering words. So, you know, there's the two sides. The other thing, too, is that
there's a research starting to come out that, especially with younger kids, all of the
technology and the quick little conversations folks are having over the phones is actually changing
a little bit of brain development so that the brain is getting reduced in terms of its ability
to attend. How long can the brain attend on one particular focus? It's growing shorter and shorter
because there aren't extensive long conversations that we of, shall I say, the mature generation,
not really, the older generation are used to having these deeper conversations, right,
face to face, or on the phone, talking to one another.
So the jury is really out right now.
On the other hand, in terms of the pandemic, the technology was crucial.
because especially kids in the teenage years really suffered dramatically because they couldn't see each other.
They couldn't communicate except through technology.
That was it as they were isolated.
So, you know, we still have severely depressed kids, kids who were also very anxious coming out of the pandemic,
not having developed the same kinds of social strategies, social skills that kids normally attending
school would have developed by now. So, you know, we're trying to catch up. But is technology a help?
Or is it not? You know, we're not sure yet.
Speaking of the pandemic, have you looked at all at what that did to relationships since we were
also isolated. I mean, you would be really in close quarters with your partner and very few other
people during that time frame. Did that help or hurt relationships? Do we know yet? Yeah, we know quite a
lot about that now. And it turned out if the relationship was good, the pandemic actually helped,
and they got closer. That was true for Julie and I. We traveled so much less and had so much time
together to take walks and talk to each other and cuddle. But if the relationship was ailing,
the pandemic sort of acted like a pressure cooker and they were together with no way to get
apart from each other and the relationships got worse. Domestic violence actually increased for
those unhappily married couples. So when you average it all out, it looked like there was no
change. But actually, the rich got richer and the poor got poorer in the sense of the relationship.
Let's talk for a few minutes about your most recent book, Fight Right, How to Turn Conflict Into Connection.
What does it mean to fight right?
So finding right means in a nutshell, fighting to understand.
Fighting to understand.
So, you know, even as a therapist sitting across from a client I've known for a year, let's say,
I never assume I really understand anything fully unless I ask more.
questions. I really listen much more carefully and so on. And the questions need to be the deepening
questions, not questions that remain superficial. So fighting right really means, first of all,
trying to eliminate as many of the four horsemen as we can. You know, nobody's perfect here. And we're
not going for the perfect relationship. You know, I'm always going to sink back into some criticism
every now and then, and defensiveness.
And my darling partner may as well,
though we really try hard to avoid
as much as we can.
So what takes the place of those, right?
This book really focuses in
on how to make calm,
constructive, and more compassionate
are conflict conversations.
Rather than those escalations that many of us have experienced, those times when we get flooded,
meaning we go into fight or flight, when we're so upset that our physiology is jacking up
and our heart rates are over 100 beats a minute, we can't think straight, we can't listen well,
we can't creatively problem solved at all. Our prefrontal cortex is offline. So this book,
gives very specific practical information about how to create fights as a pathway to understanding.
That doesn't mean you should, you know, seek out lots of fighting.
There's many ways of understanding one another.
But fights happen.
They happened to almost everyone.
And at the time that we started writing this book, the country was incredible.
polarized. It is still today, as all of us know. And, you know, we were, you know, very
astounded at how little listening was happening between folks in one compartment versus
folks in another who had very different ideas about the way things should be. So we thought,
well, my God, you know, we're never going to stop fighting, but we have to help folks.
if we can, learn how to fight so that there's greater understanding, even if there's still disagreement.
And that is what this book provides.
So what are the common types of fights and how should couples handle?
Here's the interesting thing.
Most couples fight about absolutely nothing.
Fights emerge out of these moments of disconnection and where people are left alone.
when they're reaching out for something their partner and it doesn't go right.
Like they're watching TV together and they've made popcorn and he's got the remote and she says,
leave it at that station.
He says, well, yeah, let me see what else is on.
She says, no, leave it.
He says, well, let me see what else is on.
She says, I said leave it.
And he says, you know, I don't even want to talk to you.
And he throws the remote down.
What are they fighting about?
They're not fighting about in-laws, money, sex.
They're fighting about the lack of connection.
And that is the thing that Julie was emphasizing.
Conflict always has a goal, which is mutual understanding.
We actually need conflict to continue to love each other over time as we both change.
And so really what we're doing in the book Fight Right is helping people understand
these situations where they're actually reaching out for one another for emotional connection most of the time and being left alone.
Let me jump in and add a little bit more here. In some of John's earliest research, and we find this still to be true, there are three types of conflicts management styles that people may have.
One is what we call avoiders, conflict avoiders.
And those are folks who, you know, of course they're going to have disagreements,
they're going to have differences, oftentimes based in lifestyle preferences or personality
differences.
But what they do, they may express just a little bit of what they think or what they feel.
But then they say, okay, not a big deal.
you know, let's drop it. Let's just agree to disagree. And they go on with their lives. Those are
conflict avoiders. Then we have conflict validators. And validators are folks who stay fairly calm and
fairly rational. However, they do express their feelings about a particular issue, but they'll do so
quickly. And then they'll move into problem solving, you know, very fast. And they work on problem
solving. So those are validators. And then we have the volatiles of which I am a proud member. And volatiles are
folks who express their feelings passionately, intensely. They immediately jump to 60 miles an hour
and they express feelings intensely. That doesn't mean that they're flooded. There's a real
difference between being physiologically flooded and expressing things passionately and intensely.
One doesn't necessarily go with the other. So volatiles will express feelings very, very intensely,
and eventually they'll get into working on compromise, but all that passionate feeling comes out first.
So those are our conflict volatiles. And people typically are mismatched.
So in our relationship, for example, John is a wonderful conflict avoider or maybe a little bit of a validator and I'm a delightful volatile.
Now, he can also be in his best moments, I should say, and then we're off and running.
So, you know, we have to talk sometimes about the differences in our style of how we want to talk about a conflict,
how we want a process trying to just understand one another's position on an issue given, let's say,
that one just doesn't want to talk about it at all.
There's our avoider.
And one passionately wants to talk about it.
There's our volatile.
How are they going to arrive at a system in which they can talk gently with one another without the volatile scaring away the,
avoider and the avoider angering the volatile. So that's a conversation in itself that is an
important one to have when there is an extreme difference. But couples work that stuff out all
the time. So, and all three types of couples can have successful relationships, all of them.
As long as they have that five to one. As long as, that's it. As long as they have. As long as they
have that five to one ratio of positive to negative interactions that they're having during the
conflict itself. So I want to go back to the couple who were having the argument over the remote.
So what is the solution? I mean, how should you work that out in a way that doesn't, I mean,
should the woman go to another room and watch a different TV? Or do that, you know, how do you
resolve that? Well, part of it is really understanding what's underneath that unhappiness around the
remote and understanding that there's there's a power struggle there and maybe there's a power struggle
in their relationship in general and it feels unfair to one or both people and that sort of gets
underneath the issue of the remote the remote is kind of a surface issue of this perceived
inequity and power in the relationship so by asking those six questions that julie mentioned earlier
they wind up really looking at the dreams within the conflict.
And once those get surfaced, there's much more empathy and understanding.
And they get to the real goal of conflict, which is mutual understanding.
Yeah.
You know, I think there's another part of this, too, which is accepting influence.
We found that it was incredibly important for people to accept influence from the other
person. And in particular, in heterosexual relationships, not surprisingly, given social conditioning
in our culture, it was more important for men to accept influence from their female partners,
typically than vice versa. So accepting influence means, okay, honey, I'll let you stay on this
channel. Let's stay on this channel and we'll see if we both like it. And then maybe
you know, we can look around a little bit more. How does that sound? So you just brought up sexual
orientation, just the idea of same-sex couples, opposite-sex couples. Do the patterns that you have
observed, do they hold true for both? Or because of socialization, will you find same-sex couples
will behave differently because two women together, they were socialized the same way? Two men together,
they were socialized the same way. What happens? Yeah, so Bob and I were quite
surprised when we studied gay and lesbian relationships for a dozen years that, in fact, gay and lesbian
couples are a lot nicer to each other than heterosexual couples. They have more of a sense of humor about
themselves. They're gentler in the way they present an issue. They can laugh at themselves more easily.
And they're much more direct when it comes to their needs about sexual intimacy than heterosexual couples.
So, you know, we were pretty surprised by that. And it turns out that that's really kind of a general finding that we heterosexual couples have a lot to learn.
John, does the advice that you've developed for couples work for other relationships? For example, parents and children, other family relationships, friendships?
Yeah, one of the things that I was very interested in, Bob wasn't too interested in parent-child interaction, but I was very interested in children.
development and to investigate how parent relationships affected children and how children affected
the parental relationships. We did some longitudinal research and looked at parent-child interaction,
and we discovered an amazing thing that there were some parents who really were emotion coaches
of their children. They really took these moments when their children were feeling strongly
about something, feeling heard or rejected. And some parents would try to minimize that and cheer their
child up and help their child get over the moment. And other parents would really focus in on that
moment and see it as an opportunity for learning or teaching or getting closer to their child.
And they would do five things as emotion coaches, you know, help their child understand
the emotions, put labels on those feelings, help their child problem solve if they were
unhappy about something, and put limits on misbehavior if it occurred. So those five steps of
emotion coaching turned out to be really critical in the longitudinal development of emotional
intelligence in their children. That was really kind of surprising. So in fact, those parents were
very different toward one another. When one of them was emotional, the other parent would really zoom in
and say, okay, baby, what are you feeling? Because when you're upset, the world stops and I listen.
And those were the emotion coaches. So we really did discover that the way people interacted with one
another was strongly related to the way they would zoom in on their child's emotions as well.
and they had big implications for the longitudinal development of emotional intelligence in their child.
So I think many of us have heard the advice that you shouldn't let the sunset on your anger.
Don't go to bed, mad.
And I know you said that's a myth.
Why is that?
Because it's impossible to do.
Here's the thing.
There's a difference between wrath and anger, right?
So, you know, the original statement really comes up in the Bible, but in the Bible, it's about wrath. And wrath is, you know, the most severe, intense anger. It's rage, you know, multiplied 100 times. So wrath also contains a lot of hatred, all kinds of stuff. So anger is hardwired in. You know, it's an emotion that is very primal to us.
And if something has happened late at night that has really angered a partner, it's almost impossible for that person to then stop feeling, angry, feel loving and warm, go to bed and have sex.
It's not going to happen.
Usually.
I mean, maybe there are a few people out there that can do that, but most of us can't.
The makeup sex, yeah.
Yeah, make up sex or just aggressive sex.
you know, whatever it is.
Anyway.
So, and couples who are successful couples don't follow that particular statement.
You know, they don't do it.
So somebody may be angry and what they need to do is make sure that they're physiologically common of to go to sleep.
They may still feel some anger, but they're not flooded.
Their heart rates are not 150 beats of.
minute. Otherwise, they'll never be able to sleep. The mistake that couples make, here's the big one.
And we can call this a myth. You're able to solve your problems late at night when you're tired.
No, you're not able to. You can't do it. People are so tired by the ends of their days, right? Most of the time,
they've worked hard or they have kids. They've been raising their kids. Kids are running around.
like crazy. So they're exhausted. They're exhausted. So to think that you can creatively problem solve,
or you can talk very gently and calmly and deeply late at night, there's your myth. And people should
not try to do that. Thus, you know, the opposite is what people really, you know, might more realistically
do, which is, yeah, you go to bed angry, but get a good night's rest and the next day, then
you talk about it when you're well rested and you actually have access to most of your
mental powers. So just to wrap up, because this has been interesting and I could go on and
on and on and I'm sure you could too, but we all have things to do. But I want to ask you this
question. You have both been working in this space for a very long time. Are there any big
research questions on relationships that you feel you still need to answer? Let's both answer that.
John, you want to start?
Yeah, you know, the important thing to say is that all of these techniques, you know, like gentle start-up,
finding out the dreams within conflict, none of them work without trust and commitment being there in the relationship.
And trust means that people really are thinking for two.
They're thinking of the benefits of their partner.
Conflict isn't a zero-sum game.
One person wins and the other one loses.
But they're really working collaboratively on the problem.
them together. And commitment really means that they've said, this is the journey of my life,
and nobody can replace you. You know, there isn't, there isn't a woman on the planet for me
that can come close to Julie. She has my whole heart for my whole life and all of my money.
And I have nothing to offer any other woman.
Am I the luckiest woman on the planet? So, you know, I mean, she's really it for me.
So, you know, Kaur Rusbalt's research showed us how important commitment was, and our research with the trust metric showed us how important that is.
Without trust and commitment, none of these techniques will work.
So we really don't understand what it is that goes into building trust and building commitment in some people and not others.
It could be insecure.
Attachment gets in the way, but we don't know the answer to that question yet.
It's a really big research question.
Okay.
And here are mine.
So so far, a couple of things we haven't had time to talk about.
But one is that we have created a treatment, a particular treatment model that looks like it's really working to treat affairs, to treat betrayal.
And we're very excited about that.
We've done the first controlled, randomized study of treatment, therapeutic treatment for affairs that's ever been done.
There hasn't been any others done up until now.
So we have pre and post.
We're starting to get follow up.
And our treatment looks very, very successful at this point.
We've also done a research study on the treatment of what's called situational domestic violence.
which is minor to moderate domestic violence without a clear perpetrator and a clear victim in which the victim can't do anything to change things.
You know, the case being there where we've got to get the victim out of the relationship.
But with situational domestic violence, we actually do have a treatment that is very successful in eliminating domestic violence,
eliminating hostility between the partners and increasing their friendship and connection.
But we still have to learn, and this, of course, is one of my big thoughts about trying to help people.
We need to help couples learn how to manage their relationships and strengthen their relationships
when one or both partners has post-traumatic stress disorder.
And these days, you know, between environmental calamities like Hurricane Helena and background abuse and combat or, you know, shootings in schools, people are so traumatized they can't see street.
And oftentimes that stress will spill over into the relationship and contaminate the connection between the partners.
So I have started to create a treatment for couples where there is PTSD,
but we haven't done a research study yet.
And I would really like to flesh out more that treatment model and test it with random controlled study.
Well, John, Julie, I want to thank you so much for joining me today.
This has been really interesting.
I think the work you do is so important and so helpful to many, many people.
Thank you.
Thank you, Kim. Thank you, Kim.
Wonderful interview.
Yeah, I was just about to say the same thing because we have the same brain.
That's right.
But this has been wonderful. Thank you so much.
Thank you, Kim. It was really fun.
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Speaking of psychology is produced by Lee Winerman.
Thank you for listening for the American Psychological Association.
I'm Kim Mills.
