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Communication and Conflict Resolution Introduction Verbal and Non-Verbal Communication Gender Differences in Communication Developing Communication Skills Power, Conflict, and Intimacy Intimacy and Conflict Experiencing and Managing Conflict Introduction • Intimacy and communication are inextricably connected. • Communication for its own sake involves the pleasure of being in each other’s company, the excitement of conversation, the exchange of touches and smiles, and loving silence. Verbal and Non-Verbal Communication • There is no such thing as not communicating. • The functions of non-verbal communication include conveying interpersonal attitudes, expressing emotions and handling the ongoing interactions. • A relationship exists between verbal and nonverbal messages. • Three of the most important forms of nonverbal communication are proximity, eye contact, and touch. • ~ Making eye contact with another person, if only for a second Is a signal of interest. • ~ Touch is the most basic of all senses: It is extremely important in human development, health and sexuality. Gender Differences in Communication • Premarital communication patterns are related to marital satisfaction. • 1. How well a couple communicates before marriage can be an important predictor of later marital satisfaction. • 2. Self-disclosure, the revelation of deeply personal information about one’s self, prior to marriage is related to relationship satisfaction. • 3. A couple’s negative or positive communication pattern has little effect on marital satisfaction the first year of marriage—this quality is known as the honeymoon effect. • Gender differences in partner communication are influenced by gender differences in general communication patterns. • 1. Wives send clearer messages to their husbands than vice-versa and tend to be more sensitive and responsive to their husband’s messages, both during conversation and conflict. • 2. Husbands tend to give more neutral messages or to withdraw. • 3. Although communication differences in arguments between husbands and wives are usually small, they nevertheless follow a typical pattern and wives tend to set the emotional tone of the argument. • Studies suggest that poor communication skills precede the outset of marital problems. Developing Communication Skills • We can learn to communicate but it is not always easy. • ~ Traditional sex roles encourage men to be strong and silent, to talk about things instead of feelings. • ~ Personal reasons such as inadequacy, vulnerability, or guilt may restrict communication. • ~ Fear of conflict due to expressing real feelings and desires may lead to their suppression. • Before we can communicate with others we must first know how we feel. • ~ Feelings serve as valuable guides for action. • Communication which reveals ourselves to others is self-disclosure, an important aspect to intimacy. • ~ In the process of revealing ourselves to others, we discover who we ourselves are and selfdisclosure is often reciprocal. • Trust is the belief in the reliability and integrity of a person. • Three conditions must be met for trust to develop. • ~ a relationship must exist and have the likelihood of continuing; • ~ we must be able to predict how the other person will likely behave; and • ~ the other person must have other acceptable options available to him or her. • Trust is important in close relationships because it is vital to self- disclosure, and it influences the way in which ambiguous or unexpected messages are interpreted. • Giving feedback, the ongoing process in which participants and their messages create a given result and are subsequently modified by the result, is a critical element in communication. • We can engage in dialogue and feedback by: • ~ focusing on behavior rather than the person, • ~ focusing feedback in terms of its value to the recipient, • ~ focusing feedback on the amount the recipient can process, and • ~ offering feedback at an appropriate time and place. • Mutual affirmation, along with self-awareness, self-disclosure, trust and feedback, are essential to communication in close relationships. • ~ Mutual affirmation is made up of three elements: mutual acceptance; liking each other; and expressing liking in both words and actions. Power, Conflict and Intimacy • The more intimate two people become, the more likely they may be to experience conflict: It is not conflict itself that is dangerous to intimate relationships; it is the manner in which the conflict is handled. • Conflict is natural in intimacy and does not necessarily represent a crisis in the relationship. • Power conflicts within families over who decides and does what are both complex and explosive. • Traditional roles supported the subordination of the wife to the husband, but these roles are changing with women working and egalitarian standards emerging. • There are six bases of marital power, according to French and Raven: coercive power, reward power, expert power, legitimate power, referent power, and informational power. • Power vs. Intimacy may reflect mutually exclusive traits: For genuine intimacy to exist, there must be equality in the power relationships. • Power is the ability to or potential ability to influence another person or group. Intimacy and Conflict • Conflicts may be basic or non-basic. • ~ Basic conflicts challenge the fundamental assumptions of rules of a relationship, and may offer no room for compromise. • ~ Non-basic conflicts are disagreements that do not strike at the " heart” of a relationship and resolution is possible. • Conflicts may occur because of a situation or because of the personalities of the partners. • ~ Situational conflicts or realistic conflicts occur because of a need to make changes in a relationship. • ~ Personality conflicts arise because of personality, such as the needs to vent aggression, dominate or overpower: They are not directed toward making changes, but simply toward releasing pent-up tensions. • Conflict in natural intimate relationships. Handling conflicts in a healthy way is the task. Experiencing and Managing Conflict • Dealing with anger takes skill and sensitivity and may require negotiation. • ~ Differences between people may lead to anger, which transforms differences into fights and creates tension, distrust, division and fear. • ~ Most people have learned to handle anger by either venting or suppressing it. • ~ Many couples experience a love/anger cycle involving anger at the point a couple become most intimate with each other. • ~ Suppressed anger ultimately leads to resentment and low-level hostility. • ~ Anger can be recognized as a symptom of something that needs to be changed, leading to negotiation. • The way in which a couple deals with conflict resolution both reflects and contributes to their marital happiness. • ~ Happily married couples display distinctive communication behaviors including: • - summarizing of what the other person says into his or her own words, • - paraphrasing to put what the other person ways into one’s own words, • - validating the other’s feelings and, • - clarifying the communication it there is uncertainty • ~ Unhappy couples display the following patterns: • - confrontation rather than trying to understand, • - confrontation and defensiveness as alternating patterns, • - complaining and defensiveness as alternating patterns. • Fighting about sex involves issues that are sexual as well as using sex as a scapegoat for underlying issues, which are unresolved. Couples disagree or fight over money for a number of reasons, one of the most important being power. • ~ Money issues tend to support male dominance. • ~ Financial priorities are a major source of disagreement. • ~ Talking about money is often taboo, although our society is obsessed with money. • ~ There are three major ways conflict can be resolved through negotiation: • - Agreement as a gift occurs when a person agrees without coercion, threats, or resentment: It is a gift of love. • ~ Bargaining involves making compromises, seeking the most equitable deal for each partner. • ~ Co-existence involves living with the differences without undermining the basic ties. • Communication is the basis for good relationships. • Communication and intimacy are reciprocal.