Episode 184
184 - Why Do I Always Say The Wrong Thing When My Partner Is Upset?
For more information on how to control your anger, visit angersecrets.com.
In this episode, anger expert Alastair Duhs walks through four simple but powerful steps to help you say the right thing when your partner is upset - whether you tend to jump straight to fixing, go quiet or say something that somehow makes things worse.
These are practical, learnable skills that work even when emotions are running high.
Rather than offering generic advice, Alastair gets to the heart of why these moments go wrong so often: not because you don't care, but because your partner doesn't yet feel understood. And until they do, almost nothing you say will land well.
And the good news is, that's entirely within your power to change.
Key Takeaways:
- The problem usually isn't what you're saying. Until your partner feels understood, even the kindest or most logical words won't land. Feeling heard has to come before anything else.
- Minimal encouragers, a nod, a quiet "I see," steady eye contact, are small signals with a big impact. They tell your partner it's safe to keep going, and their absence is one of the most common reasons partners feel unheard.
- There's a real difference between questions that open a conversation up and questions that close it down. Open-ended questions and questions about feelings take the conversation somewhere real; beyond facts and logistics, into what your partner actually experienced.
- Reflecting back what your partner has said in your own words does two things: it lets them know they've genuinely been heard, and it gives them the chance to correct you if you've misunderstood. Both of those matter more than most people realise.
- Giving positive feedback doesn't mean piling on compliments. A simple "thank you for telling me that" signals that bringing things to you is safe, and partners who feel appreciated for communicating tend to communicate more.
- Practice these four steps consistently and the change you'll notice isn't just fewer arguments. It's a stronger, warmer connection day to day.
Resources & Next Steps:
If you'd like support saying the right thing in those difficult moments and building a calmer, more loving relationship:
- Visit: angersecrets.com
- Learn more about The Complete Anger Management System
- Access the free training on "Breaking The Anger Cycle"
Transcript
Your partner comes to you upset, you want to help you say something, and somehow, within seconds, it's made things worse.
Speaker A:Maybe you tried to fix it.
Speaker A:Maybe you said calm down.
Speaker A:Maybe you just said nothing and that was wrong too.
Speaker A:And now you're standing there thinking, how did that just happen?
Speaker A:Again?
Speaker A:Here's the thing.
Speaker A:It's not that you don't care.
Speaker A:It's not that you're bad at relationships.
Speaker A:It's that nobody ever showed you what to actually do in that moment.
Speaker A:Today I'm going to change that.
Speaker A:I'll walk you through four simple steps that will help you say the right thing, even when emotions are running high.
Speaker A:Hello and welcome to the Anger Secrets podcast.
Speaker A:I'm Alastair Dewes, and for over 30 years I've helped more than 15,000 men and women control their anger, master their emotions, and build calmer, happier and more loving relationships.
Speaker A:If you'd like my help to do the same, head over to angersecrets.com you can book a free 30 minute call with me or grab my free training on how to break the anger cycle.
Speaker A:But first, let's talk about what's really going on when your partner is upset and nothing you say seems to land right to begin with.
Speaker A:Here's something that surprises a lot of people when I first tell the problem in these situations usually isn't what you're saying.
Speaker A:It's that your partner doesn't yet feel understood.
Speaker A:And until they feel understood, almost nothing you say is going to land well, no matter how kind or logical it is.
Speaker A:Think about it from their perspective.
Speaker A:They're upset, they're carrying something.
Speaker A:And the moment they bring it to you.
Speaker A:What they need most, before advice, before solutions, before reassurance, is simply to feel like you're with them, that you're paying attention, that you get it.
Speaker A:This is where most people go wrong.
Speaker A:Not because they're selfish or dismissive, but because they move too fast.
Speaker A:They want to help, so they jump straight to fixing it.
Speaker A:And to a partner who just wants to feel understood, that can feel like being dismissed.
Speaker A:The intention is good, but the timing is off.
Speaker A:And in those moments, timing is everything.
Speaker A:So the first thing I want to give you is one of the simplest and most underrated listening skills there is, what I call minimal encouragers.
Speaker A:A minimal encourager is a small signal that says, I'm here, I'm listening.
Speaker A:Keep going.
Speaker A:It might be a nod, it might be eye contact, it might be a quiet I see.
Speaker A:Or huh.
Speaker A:Nothing dramatic, nothing that interrupts or redirects the conversation.
Speaker A:Just A steady, consistent signal that you're present.
Speaker A:This sounds almost too simple, but the absence of it is one of the most common things I see in couples who are struggling to connect.
Speaker A:A man I worked with recently, a good husband, genuinely caring, couldn't understand why his wife always felt unheard.
Speaker A:When we looked at what was actually happening in those conversations, the pattern was clear.
Speaker A:The moment she started talking, he'd go very still and very quiet.
Speaker A:To him, that meant he was concentrating.
Speaker A:To her, it felt like he'd already switched off.
Speaker A:But once he started using small voice, verbal and physical signals, nodding more, leaning in slightly, saying, go on, she told him within a week that their conversations felt completely different.
Speaker A:Same man, same intentions, just a few small signals that said, I'm with you.
Speaker A:That's the power of minimal encouragers.
Speaker A:They cost nothing, but they do something important.
Speaker A:They let your partner know it's safe to keep going.
Speaker A:Now, once your partner is talking, the next step is to ask the right kind of questions.
Speaker A:And there's a real difference between questions that open a conversation up and questions that accidentally close it down.
Speaker A:There are two types of questions that I want to focus on.
Speaker A:The first is open ended questions, questions that can't be answered with a yes or no and that invite your partner to say more.
Speaker A:Instead of saying, did you have a hard day?
Speaker A:Try asking what happened today?
Speaker A:Or instead of saying, are you okay?
Speaker A:Try asking, what's been going on for you?
Speaker A:That small shift changes everything about the conversation.
Speaker A:The second type of question is is questions about feelings.
Speaker A:These are questions that go beyond the facts of what happened and get into your partner's emotional experience.
Speaker A:Examples include questions, how did that make you feel?
Speaker A:Or what was that like for you?
Speaker A:These questions signal that you're not just interested in your partner's story, you're interested in them now.
Speaker A:This is something I see all the time in my work.
Speaker A:One partner talks, the other responds with facts, logistics, or practical suggestions.
Speaker A:And the person talking feels more alone after the conversation than before it.
Speaker A:Not because their partner didn't care, but because the conversation stayed on the surface.
Speaker A:Feelings questions take it somewhere real.
Speaker A:They're the difference between a partner who feels processed and a partner who feels truly understood.
Speaker A:So we've discussed minimal encouragers and asking the right questions.
Speaker A:The third step is one that can feel a little awkward at first, but once you get it, it becomes one of the most powerful tools you have.
Speaker A:I call it reflecting.
Speaker A:Reflecting is simply paraphrasing back what your partner has said in your own words to show you've understood.
Speaker A:For example, Your partner, I'm really stressed about this situation at work.
Speaker A:I just don't feel prepared.
Speaker A:A good reflection.
Speaker A:It sounds like you're feeling stressed and a bit out of your depth with that situation.
Speaker A:That's it.
Speaker A:The first time people try this, they.
Speaker A:They often feel like they're just repeating what the other person said.
Speaker A:And yes, it can feel that way at first, but here's what's actually happening beneath the surface.
Speaker A:Two things.
Speaker A:First, your partner feels heard.
Speaker A:When someone reflects your words back to you, something in you settles.
Speaker A:You think they were actually listening, they got it.
Speaker A:That feeling of being understood is one of the most calming things a person can experience when they're upset.
Speaker A:It brings the temperature of the whole conversation down.
Speaker A:Second, it gives your partner a chance to correct you if you've misunderstood.
Speaker A:Maybe you said it sounds like you're stressed and they say it's not really stress, it's more that I feel unsupported.
Speaker A:Now you actually know what they're feeling.
Speaker A:That's a far better conversation than one where you assumed you understood and moved on too quickly.
Speaker A:And I'm not saying you have to do this perfectly.
Speaker A:Reflecting doesn't need to be word perfect.
Speaker A:It just needs to be genuine.
Speaker A:Your partner isn't looking for a therapist.
Speaker A:They're looking for someone who cares enough to really try and understand.
Speaker A:Next, the fourth and final step is giving positive feedback.
Speaker A:And I want to be clear about what I mean here, because this isn't about being over enthusiastic or piling on compliments.
Speaker A:It's something much simpler than that.
Speaker A:It's about acknowledging what your partner has shared with you.
Speaker A:Giving positive feedback can be something as simple as saying, I appreciate you telling me that or thank you for opening up about this.
Speaker A:This does something powerful.
Speaker A:It signals to your partner that bringing things to you is safe, that they won't be judged or shut down or have their feelings minimized.
Speaker A:That what they've said matters to you.
Speaker A:Now think about the last time someone genuinely thanked you for sharing something.
Speaker A:How did it make you feel?
Speaker A:Most people say it made them feel valued, respected, more willing to open up again.
Speaker A:The same principle is at work in your relationship.
Speaker A:When your partner feels appreciated for communicating, they communicate more.
Speaker A:And the more openly they communicate, the less builds up below the surface.
Speaker A:The less resentment, the less distance, the fewer arguments that seem to come out of nowhere.
Speaker A:And when I help couples work on this, the feedback I hear most often isn't just we argue less, although that comes too.
Speaker A:It's I feel closer to them.
Speaker A:That's what these four steps build over time.
Speaker A:Not just better conversations in the difficult moments, but a stronger, warmer connection day to day.
Speaker A:So let me bring this together.
Speaker A:Four steps to say the right thing when your partner is upset 1 use minimal encouragers small, consistent signals that you're present and engaged 2.
Speaker A:Ask the right questions, open ended questions and questions about feelings.
Speaker A:Take the conversation somewhere real.
Speaker A:3.
Speaker A:Reflect what you hear.
Speaker A:Paraphrase it back so your partner knows they've been understood, not just heard and four Give positive feedback.
Speaker A:Acknowledge what they've shared and you create an environment where opening up feels safe and worth doing.
Speaker A:These four steps won't just help you in those difficult moments, practice them regularly and they'll gradually change the entire tone of your relationship.
Speaker A:And if you'd like my help putting this into practice, head over to angussecrets.com youm can book a free 30 minute call with me directly or start with my free training on how to break the anger cycle.
Speaker A:Everything is there waiting for you and if this episode was helpful, I'd love it if you left a rating or review on your favorite podcast app.
Speaker A:It only takes a minute and it helps other people who are struggling with anger to find the show.
Speaker A:Okay.
Speaker A:Finally, remember, you can't control other people, but you can control yourself.
Speaker A:Thanks for listening.
Speaker A:Take care.
Speaker B:The Anger Secrets podcast is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute the practice of counseling, psychotherapy, or any other professional health service.
Speaker B:No therapeutic relationship is implied or created by this podcast.
Speaker B:If you have mental health concerns of any type, please seek out the help of a local mental health professional.
