The RISE to Intimacy Podcast

How to Resolve Conflict With Your Partner Without Resentment

24 min · 23. kesä 2026
jakson How to Resolve Conflict With Your Partner Without Resentment kansikuva

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Ever tried to resolve conflict with your partner, only for the argument to end because one of you finally gave in? It might look like the conflict is resolved, maybe even like someone won, but the person who backed down is usually still hurting underneath it all. They’re tired of explaining themselves, tired of having the same fight on repeat, and tired of feeling like the only way to move forward is to check out. That kind of “resolution” doesn’t create real repair. It creates self-abandonment, and over time, that is exactly how resentment starts building in a relationship. Real conflict resolution has to make room for both people to feel heard, respected, and steady enough to reconnect, even when the issue itself does not have a clean solution. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I’m concluding this communication series by sharing how to resolve conflict with your partner without leaving one person feeling like they lost another fight. I walk through the difference between solvable problems and perpetual problems, how to work with each one, and why reconnection after hard conversations matters just as much as the resolution itself. 2:54 – Why not all conflicts in relationships can be resolved 4:09 – How to figure out whether you’re dealing with a solvable or unsolvable conflict 5:37 – Five steps to resolve solvable conflicts between you and your partner 11:09 – An example of how Dr. John and Julie Gottman learn to live with one perpetual difference between them  13:23 – How to move from gridlock to dialogue with your partner about the unresolvable issues 18:00 – One final step to tackle after you’ve reached a solution or a compromise 20:41 – Quick review of the communication framework covered in this series Mentioned In How to Resolve Conflict With Your Partner Without Resentment How to Validate Your Partner Without Losing Your Own Perspective [http://risetointimacy.com/post/how-to-validate-your-partner-without-losing-your-own-perspective] How to Pause During Conflict Before It Causes Damage [https://www.risetointimacy.com/post/how-to-pause-during-conflict] The Gottman Institute [https://www.gottman.com/] Relationship Reset Couples Program [https://www.risetointimacy.com/couples-therapy-program] Relationship Readiness Intensive [https://www.risetointimacy.com/individual-therapy-program] Rise to Intimacy Free 30-Minute Consult [https://www.risetointimacy.com/booking-calendar/consultation-with-valerie-15-mins] Leave a rating and review [http://ratethispodcast.com/rise]

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24 jaksot

jakson How to Resolve Conflict With Your Partner Without Resentment kansikuva

How to Resolve Conflict With Your Partner Without Resentment

Ever tried to resolve conflict with your partner, only for the argument to end because one of you finally gave in? It might look like the conflict is resolved, maybe even like someone won, but the person who backed down is usually still hurting underneath it all. They’re tired of explaining themselves, tired of having the same fight on repeat, and tired of feeling like the only way to move forward is to check out. That kind of “resolution” doesn’t create real repair. It creates self-abandonment, and over time, that is exactly how resentment starts building in a relationship. Real conflict resolution has to make room for both people to feel heard, respected, and steady enough to reconnect, even when the issue itself does not have a clean solution. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I’m concluding this communication series by sharing how to resolve conflict with your partner without leaving one person feeling like they lost another fight. I walk through the difference between solvable problems and perpetual problems, how to work with each one, and why reconnection after hard conversations matters just as much as the resolution itself. 2:54 – Why not all conflicts in relationships can be resolved 4:09 – How to figure out whether you’re dealing with a solvable or unsolvable conflict 5:37 – Five steps to resolve solvable conflicts between you and your partner 11:09 – An example of how Dr. John and Julie Gottman learn to live with one perpetual difference between them  13:23 – How to move from gridlock to dialogue with your partner about the unresolvable issues 18:00 – One final step to tackle after you’ve reached a solution or a compromise 20:41 – Quick review of the communication framework covered in this series Mentioned In How to Resolve Conflict With Your Partner Without Resentment How to Validate Your Partner Without Losing Your Own Perspective [http://risetointimacy.com/post/how-to-validate-your-partner-without-losing-your-own-perspective] How to Pause During Conflict Before It Causes Damage [https://www.risetointimacy.com/post/how-to-pause-during-conflict] The Gottman Institute [https://www.gottman.com/] Relationship Reset Couples Program [https://www.risetointimacy.com/couples-therapy-program] Relationship Readiness Intensive [https://www.risetointimacy.com/individual-therapy-program] Rise to Intimacy Free 30-Minute Consult [https://www.risetointimacy.com/booking-calendar/consultation-with-valerie-15-mins] Leave a rating and review [http://ratethispodcast.com/rise]

23. kesä 202624 min
jakson How to Pause During Conflict Before It Causes Damage kansikuva

How to Pause During Conflict Before It Causes Damage

You’re in the middle of a heated argument with your partner, and suddenly you can’t think clearly. Maybe you go quiet and wait for it to be over. Maybe you say something you already know you’ll regret. When this happens, learning how to pause during conflict can be the difference between a hard conversation that gets repaired and a fight that keeps causing damage. When your nervous system becomes flooded, your body moves into fight or flight. Your capacity to listen, feel empathy, think clearly, and problem-solve drops, which means trying to push through the conversation usually makes things worse. The goal is not to avoid the conflict, but to step away with enough structure that both of you can come back when your bodies are actually capable of connection. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I walk you through the Pause Protocol, a structured process I use with my clients when conflict becomes too overwhelming to continue. I explain what physiological flooding is, why productive communication becomes impossible in that state, and how to pause, regulate, reconnect, and return to the conversation before more damage is done. 2:21 – What’s happening in your body when a conversation between you and your partner goes sideways 5:16 – Why pausing in the middle of the argument isn’t the counterproductive move it seems like on the surface 7:22 – What the pause protocol is and how to use it effectively (so things don’t get worse) 10:18 – Where most people go wrong with the protocol, and how long the pause should last 12:43 – How to check back in with each other once the pause period ends 15:01 – Why walking away doesn’t have to mean you’re leaving the issue unresolved, and a pattern worth paying attention to if it develops 17:33 – Three things that happen when you don’t take a time out during an argument with your partner 20:05 – A review of what you need to agree on as a couple before you need the pause protocol Mentioned In How to Pause During Conflict Before It Causes Damage How to Validate Your Partner Without Losing Your Own Perspective [http://risetointimacy.com/post/how-to-validate-your-partner-without-losing-your-own-perspective] The Gottman Institute [https://www.gottman.com/] Relationship Reset Couples Program [https://www.risetointimacy.com/couples-therapy-program] Relationship Readiness Intensive [https://www.risetointimacy.com/individual-therapy-program] Rise to Intimacy Free 30-Minute Consult [https://www.risetointimacy.com/booking-calendar/consultation-with-valerie-15-mins] Leave a rating and review [http://ratethispodcast.com/rise]

16. kesä 202624 min
jakson How to Validate Your Partner Without Losing Your Own Perspective kansikuva

How to Validate Your Partner Without Losing Your Own Perspective

Your partner may have told you they don't feel heard, even though you were right there listening to every word and even responding. Hearing someone and making them feel heard are two different things, and most of us were never taught how to validate our partner in a way that actually lands. When that gap becomes a pattern, the same fight keeps happening, just with different words. When resentment starts building, most couples rush to explain themselves or fix the problem, skipping two steps that have to come first, acknowledgment and validation. The reason both feel so hard comes down to what's happening in your brain, because the moment your partner shares how they feel, your brain interprets it as an attack and shuts down the exact skills you need to respond well. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I'm starting a new series on communication with these two foundational steps. I explain why your brain interprets your partner's feelings as a personal attack, what acknowledgment and validation actually look like in practice, and how to use them even when you think your partner is completely wrong, including where they have limits and what to do when emotions get too high to keep talking. 4:33 – How the cycle of repetitive arguments usually begins 5:57 – Why jumping straight to defensiveness or problem-solving ends up backfiring 8:57 – Four common beliefs that keep couples from acknowledging or validating each other 13:55 – The difference between acknowledgment and validation, and why couples can often struggle with one and not the other 17:00 – What to do when you disagree with everything your partner says 19:05 – The difference between validation and invalidation (and a commonly used phrase that seems validating, but isn’t) 21:36 – What validation does NOT require you to do, and how to set a boundary while still validating your partner’s feelings Mentioned In How to Validate Your Partner Without Losing Your Own Perspective The Gottman Institute [https://www.gottman.com/] Relationship Reset Couples Program [https://www.risetointimacy.com/couples-therapy-program] Relationship Readiness Intensive [https://www.risetointimacy.com/individual-therapy-program] Rise to Intimacy Free 30-Minute Consult [https://www.risetointimacy.com/booking-calendar/consultation-with-valerie-15-mins] Leave a rating and review [http://ratethispodcast.com/rise]

9. kesä 202623 min
jakson Why TikTok Therapy Advice Is Hurting Your Relationship kansikuva

Why TikTok Therapy Advice Is Hurting Your Relationship

You're in the middle of a conflict with your partner, but instead of turning toward them, you turn toward your phone. Within minutes, you've watched three videos, found a comment section that agrees with everything you're feeling, and now you have a word for what your partner is doing to you…or do you? The flood of mental health content on platforms like TikTok feels like progress on the surface, but it's doing real damage underneath. Clinical language gets stripped of its context, handed to an algorithm, and packaged as a 60-second verdict on your relationship. And a lot of what's being passed around as insight is actually accelerating conflict, pathologizing normal disagreements, and teaching people to replace conversation with consumption. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I reveal the four biggest ways I see TikTok therapy content damaging real couples. I also share five concrete things you can start doing to change how you use it (without needing to delete it). 2:10 – Why the most viral mental health content is rarely the most accurate 5:23 – How therapy language gets weaponized in relationships 9:04 – How TikTok's algorithm feeds your worst relationship fears 10:51 – Why one-size-fits-all advice fails infinitely complex relationships 12:46 – What happens when consuming content about your relationship replaces being in it 14:04 – Five things you can do to change how you engage with relationship content online Mentioned In Why TikTok Therapy Advice Is Hurting Your Relationship Esther Perel [https://www.estherperel.com/] | Books [https://www.estherperel.com/books] |  Where Should We Begin? [https://www.estherperel.com/podcast] Rise to Intimacy Free 30-Minute Consult [https://www.risetointimacy.com/booking-calendar/consultation-with-valerie-15-mins] Leave a rating and review [http://ratethispodcast.com/rise]

2. kesä 202622 min
jakson The Fawn Response and Why Being "Easy" in Relationships Costs You Intimacy kansikuva

The Fawn Response and Why Being "Easy" in Relationships Costs You Intimacy

You’re the easygoing, low-maintenance one who keeps the peace. You’ve probably spent years being this way, but what if it’s costing you the connection you crave in your relationship? Most people know about fight, flight, and freeze. But the fawn response is the one that flies under the radar, because it doesn't look like a problem. It looks like being a good partner. You say yes when you mean no, you minimize your feelings before they even leave your mouth, and you prioritize your partner's comfort over your own needs. But fawning isn't your personality. It's a survival strategy your nervous system learned, and over time it quietly erodes the intimacy you're working so hard to protect. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I break down what fawning actually is, how it connects to self-silencing and attachment patterns, and why the fawn response shows up in your sex life in ways you might not expect. I also share practical ways to start shifting this pattern without overwhelming your nervous system. 1:07 – What the fawn response is and how it connects to self-silencing 3:50 – How fawning overlaps with anxious attachment and emotional suppression 6:01 – What sexual fawning looks like and why it leads to low desire and avoidance 6:59 – The relational dynamic fawning creates and why your partner may not see it 9:11 – Why you can't force yourself out of fawning and what to do instead 10:54 – Tracking emotions in your body and redefining what safety means in relationships Mentioned In The Fawn Response and Why Being "Easy" in Relationships Costs You Intimacy  Rise to Intimacy Free 30-Minute Consult [https://www.risetointimacy.com/booking-calendar/consultation-with-valerie-15-mins] Leave a rating and review [http://ratethispodcast.com/rise]

26. touko 202614 min