Showing posts with label healthy conflict resolution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label healthy conflict resolution. Show all posts

Saturday, October 06, 2007

How Your Fight with Your Partner (and how they fight with YOU) Effects Your Health (and Theirs)


When they say, "You're going to give me a heart attack," they could be right.
Read the full article here: Marital Spats, Taken to Heart - New York Times
RESEARCH CONFIRMING THAT EMOTIONS EFFECT YOUR WELLNESS ... In interesting ways

The way you fight with your spouse can affect your health (and theirs)

From the article:

--32 percent of the men and 23 percent of the women said they typically bottled up their feelings during a marital spat. In men, keeping quiet during a fight didn’t have any measurable effect on health. But women who didn’t speak their minds in those fights were four times as likely to die during the 10-year study period as women who always told their husbands how they felt (from Psychosomatic Medicine).

--Whether the woman reported being in a happy marriage or an unhappy marriage didn’t change her risk.

--According to Dana Crowley Jack, a professor of interdisciplinary studies at Western Washington University in Bellingham, Wash., the self-silencing trait is linked to numerous psychological and physical health risks, including depression, eating disorders and heart disease.

--The emotional tone that men and women take during arguments with a spouse
can also take a toll. The style of argument was a powerful predictor for a man or woman’s risk for underlying heart disease.

--The way the couple interacted was as important a heart risk factor as whether they smoked or had high cholesterol. (Timothy W. Smith, a psychology professor at the University of Utah)

--For women, whether a husband’s arguing style was warm or hostile had the biggest effect on her heart health. A warm style of arguing by either spouse lowered the wife’s risk of heart disease.

--Arguing style affected men and women differently. The level of warmth or hostility had no effect on a man’s heart health. For a man, heart risk increased if disagreements with his wife involved a battle for control. And it didn’t matter whether he or his wife was the one making the controlling comments. **

--Cardiovascular risk was only related to the quality of the couple’s bickering style.

**Example: Man arguing with his wife says: “You really should just listen to me on this."

LEARNING HOW TO MANAGE YOUR EMOTIONS CAN EFFECT YOUR WELLNESS -- AND THAT OF THOSE AROUND YOU. TAKE THE EQ COURSE TO LEARN MORE.

Add to My Yahoo!