How the little things that make or break a relationship.
He
comes home from work exhausted again. He crashes onto the living room
sofa, lets out a deep breath, and turns on his favorite show. All he
wants to do is decompress in silence.
As
if on cue, he hears the back door open. His wife is home and somehow
she's more chipper than ever. As she enters the room and removes her
coat, she takes a moment to pause at the front window, saying, “What
beautiful weather — it’s just lovely today.”
What should he do next? The answer, according to most relationship advice, may matter more than you think.
John
Gottman has spent his career studying what makes relationships work and
what he has discovered is as practical as it is important. Through his
research, he has been able to identify what qualities and practices make
a couple masters of their relationship, as well as what can make a
relationship turn into a disaster.
He
found a subtle but significant difference between the masters and
disasters that strongly predicts the future of their relationships: In
the small, everyday moments of life together, relationship masters are
much more responsive to their partner’s attempts to engage with them.
These
attempts at engagement, or emotional bids, are any effort on the part
of one partner to connect or get their partner’s attention. These bids
can be as glaringly obvious as a direct request for cuddling at bedtime
or as subtle as an indirect comment about the weather, addressed to no
one in particular.
Gottman
found that partners who consistently responded positively — or turned
toward — each other’s emotional bids, or the little things in a
relationship, were significantly more likely to feel satisfied and stay
together over time than those who did not.
In fact, In a six years study of newlyweds,
Gottman discovered that couples who stayed together turned toward each
other’s emotional bids 86 percent of the time, while those who went on
to divorce turned toward each other’s bids only 33 percent of the time.
Over
time, all of the little things in a relationship and seemingly
insignificant moments of daily life turn into something of immense
importance.
Gottman
identified four different responses that people typically utilize when
their partner sends an emotional bid in their direction. Each can either
support or tear down a relationship’s sense of togetherness and
security. We can turn toward our partner, turn enthusiastically toward
our partner, turn away from our partner, or turn against our partner.
In
the introductory example, a husband worn out from his day receives an
emotional bid from his wife when she comments about the weather. He has a
choice: He can turn toward his wife with a short and simple “Yes, it
is,” acknowledging her bid; he can turn enthusiastically toward her by
engaging her in a longer conversation about the day; turn away from her
by ignoring the comment; or turn against her by gruffly asking for some
peace and quiet.
Although
an enthusiastic response to an emotional bid is almost always
appreciated, more often than not, a simple acknowledgment of your
partner’s bid is enough to deepen your connection. You don’t have to
deliver endless energy, attention, and focus to be a relationship
master.
How
is it that the little things in a relationship make such a big
difference? By consistently turning toward your partner when they reach
for you in small ways, you fortify your relationship against the
stresses and obstacles of life.
Essentially,
an emotional bid is a small way that we daily ask our partners, “Are
you here with me?” or, “Do I matter to you?” The answer to these
questions becomes even more important if there has been
previous infidelity or if either partner has a history of trauma.
Pay
attention to the small ways in which your partner reaches for you and
attempts to connect — intentionally looking for ways to turn toward your
partner will help you be more effective in connecting with them. Every
time you turn toward your partner in response to an emotional bid, you
invest in the health and security of your relationship.
This
sense of security, of feeling truly able to know and be known by your
partner, created by intentionally and consistently turning toward your
partner, deepens your shared sense of intimacy and is correlated with
increased marriage satisfaction.
As
John Gottman reminds us in his work, it’s the small things done often
that make the biggest difference in relationships. By turning toward
your partner’s emotional bids, you safeguard your relationship against
disrepair and deepen the love you share.

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