A few days ago, my wife did something that absolutely
infuriated me. I was totally
incensed. I couldn’t believe she had had
the poor judgment to do what she did. When
the actual incident occurred, she wasn’t there – she had set things in motion
from elsewhere – so right after it happened I started thinking of all the
angry, nasty things I wanted to say and/or do.
And I didn’t move. I allowed
myself to spend some time fuming and stewing, but I firmly told myself I would
not actually say anything until the next day.
Many ideas came into my mind. Sharp, angry rants, clever
passive-aggressive maneuvers, or plain old blowing my top. But I didn’t move. I didn’t open my mouth. I
told myself I could better deal with it the next day.
I waited all day the next day without whispering a word
about it. Eventually, that evening, we
had a calm moment in the car where we could speak. In a very calm voice, I told
her what had happened that upset me and that I was very angry with her for causing
it. I expressed shock at her lack of judgment.
She acknowledged her mistake. She accepted my anger. She apologized. And then we were done. I no longer needed to get back at her, or yell,
or blow off steam. It was okay. She got it.
And you can learn to do it too. Step one: don’t talk about something
that made you mad right after it happens!
Postscript: I wonder if many readers are thinking, “Well,
that’s all well and good, but the problem is that my spouse would never just
apologize. S/he always has to argue/be defensive/get mad/etc.” In the next post I hope to write a little bit
about how to make your relationship a place where that doesn’t have to happen, and
where both parties can feel safe both expressing anger and offering an apology.
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