THE Relationship Blog




Are your kids argumentative? Do your children say black when you say white? Do your kids like to suck the life out of every happy experience because they are contrary or adolescent or just can’t admit when they are wrong? Yep, ours too! Even though this is incredibly uncomfortable and frustrating, you cannot give in to temptation to crush your opponent (sorry, maybe that’s just us). There is a purpose to most of this oppositional behavior from your kids. And here they are:

1. They are asserting their independence:

Somewhere along the line, our kids figure out that we run their lives. They also notice that we seem to have all the answers. I remember my Dad would tell me this Spanish adage which meant absolutely nothing to me: ‘El Diablo sabe mas por Viejo que por sabio’ (translation: the Devil knows more from being old than being wise). Our kids won’t understand that until they are old like us. Until then, they assert their independence by arguing with our wisdom.

2. The game of Alpha does not end on the Serengeti.

We are animals with style and technology. Just because we moved out of caves into condos does not make us any better than our furry cousins. It is in our biology to mark territory, like a fence or car alarm, and we always seek out the hierarchy of any community. Establishing dominance is a game played with all animals and we are no different, however, we call it things like pissing matches or one-upmanship. When our kids question our authority we react like any tiger watching his cubs come at him, ‘Are you shitting me?’ Followed by the prompt swat to the back of the head.

Knowledge is great but ultimately, what do we do? First, it is unsafe for your child to be alpha in your family. Your job is to keep them safe and they are not equipped with that ability yet. Sure, they can probably make a sandwich or turn on a heater when it’s cold but they can’t walk into a school and verbally wipe up the floor with a teacher who is harassing them or ban them from certain friends who are a little faster track than your kid. They can’t do that because they lack the experience to know better and the blind need to protect that their parents possess.

Secondly, allowing a child to argue ad nauseum with you is giving them permission to question everything you say including such things to keep them safe (SEE PARAGRAPH ABOVE!). When a child controls the family, that child is in big trouble. I understand that you want Cinnamon Rainbow to have good self esteem, clear chakras and balanced chi but letting her/him decide what a family does, eats and generally thinks is not helping. Boundaries are vital at an early age. This is why we papoose babies when they are born! We like knowing how far we can go. We like knowing what our parameters are. We like knowing the rules. Without that, we cry uncontrollably or, if we are older than our baby counterparts, we will look for the edges with everything in our lives. This will look like a child acting out physically, emotionally and verbally. And who wants that?

So, you tell River Otter Melon that it is what it is because you say so. You tell Cloud Nirvana that you are the boss and you will not tolerate being disrespected. It is quite alright to play the Alpha and beat your chest and roar. However, don’t take it too far and banish them or something stupid like that. It is done from love and the need to protect your children not power. Unless you wield your power benevolently and only for the occasional fetching of stuff when you are watching TV. Then that’s OK.

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THE Relationship Blog




If you go by the modern wisdom provided by the media (ie. TV, Film, Book), one would assume that conflict is normal. A person watching a sitcom would assume that couples arguing over benign, banal and boring stuff is part of being in relationship. A passerby seeing or overhearing a couple fighting over money or sex or the kids would think nothing other than, ‘They must be married!’ Which brings us to the point of, WOW, are you guys wrong!

Conflict is not a necessary part of relationship and in fact most conflict is indicative of a poor foundation and non-existent communication skills. Most conflict can be avoided if you stop doing the following:

1. STOP TRYING TO WIN! Sorry for the caps but winning a fight in a relationship is like winning first prize in an ugly contest. It is not a win at all. Ultimately, the winning and fighting corrode the couple to the point of making their commitment brittle. Winning is not everything and in a relationship it is deadly.

2. Your opinion does not matter.

We know, we have been taught that our opinions are valuable and we have the right to express ourselves. However, our opinions are just subjective ideas that we cleave to as if they were passed to us as if from God Himself. Our opinions are not truths. Therefore, when you are having a knock down drag out fight with your partner because your Mom taught you that the toilet paper should be put in to roll down and not up and your heathen husband was taught differently by his feral family, remember this. It does not matter.

3. Fighting does not make your relationship exciting.

There is this horrible rumor that couples that argue have passionate relationships. That would be untrue. Couples who have frequent conflicts are actually demonstrating a strained relationship. Make up sex seems to be the only thing keeping them together. And, as you all know, CoupleDumb is completely against make up sex. Make up sex is a very dangerous practice that mixes anger and sex. Ultimately, the couple will create more of a distance because the only thing that they share is post coital endorphins.

4. You have to agree on everything.

You can disagree without the need to argue. A marriage or long term relationship is not made or broken by disagreeing over something like politics. When you believe that your opinion matters, you need to win and fighting makes your relationship spicy, then you will argue. To disagree is to respect one another. Disagreeing on something gives you the opportunity to grow and open your mind.

CoupleDumb wishes nothing but love and happiness for people and truly wish that we could take a wand and wave it over the television and movies that portray such unhealthy behavior. Now, we are not willing to protest media to get it sanitized for our viewing pleasure. We just respectfully disagree with how relationships are portrayed. See how grown up that sounds?

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Actual photo of us fighting.

          Some people believe that having a rip-roaring fight is the best thing that you can do in a relationship. Maybe add in some histrionics and some makeup sex and this is what they call a good relationship. We try to avoid these people. But this is Thursday of Losing Your Mind week and we would be remiss if we didn’t say something about those times when we are fighting, usually not remembering why we started arguing because the bloodlust has taken over and we have lost our minds. So, welcome to CoupleDumb. We hope you make it out intact.


          Paul says: About six months into our marriage, Lee and I had a fight. Please understand that we have had maybe a handful of arguments in our marriage and most were in the first 2 years. I think that we have written about this before but it is worth talking about again from an insight versus Hulk-like rage point of view. This fight is what we call our ‘what the fuck’ fight.


          Allow me to set the stage. I was working full time and going to school. I would be up and out of the house by 5:30-ish every morning and get home at 11 at night. Lee would get up with me and portray her version of a good wife, making me a breakfast that I did not want because coffee was the only thing that I craved at that ungodly hour. Lee and I are both major night people and, if it were not for the sickness of society that placed work roughly in the 9 to 5 region, we would not see daylight at all. Also, Lee worked down the street and could have easily woken at 8:30 am and made it to work on time. But she made me my eggs, toast, juice, and coffee while sitting with me in bleary eyed agony every day. Then she would go to work, come home, make dinner and wait to eat until I returned in the late evening.


          So I would come home each night and play the world’s most exhausted Prince Charming to Lee’s tired and hungry Snow White. This would be Snow White without the benefit of an apple and a good long nap in a glass box. I simply did not have the energy to whisk her away for a two hour long bout of romantic lovemaking and, apparently, Lee wanted to eat dinner and watch some TV. 


          So, we fought.


          Studies show that fights in a relationship are good. But not all fights. For an argument to be useful, it needs to be a passionate sharing of ideas that comes to some form of mutual understanding. In other words, you are defining boundaries, establishing roles, and generally letting your partner know what is truly important to you. The reason that this fight is so important to us is that that is what we did.


          I am sure that you have read about fair fighting. If not, then look it up. There’s like a bazillion sites on it. In our ‘what the fuck’ fight, I know that I broke all of the rules of fair fighting. For me, somewhere in this ventfest, I asked myself, ‘What am I doing? What do I want from this fight?’  The answer was that I wanted dinner and to watch some TV.


          And we lived happily ever after.


          Lee says: I remember this fight well. And Paul was WRONG, WRONG, WRONG (please see Tuesday)! It was an opportunity to establish new roles and boundaries but the ‘fight’ was really a free-for-all of nonsensical accusations and I’m pretty sure one of us invoked an Orb of Annihilation (I want you to guess who would have done that. I just played D and D to be nice, not as a lifestyle choice).


          Regardless of the craziness, it served us as a cautionary tale. We don’t ever allow ourselves to sink into the bowels of insanity to make our point or to be right. We try to maintain respect and love as our primary feelings for one another but are well aware the anger and try not to minimize it for fear of hurting the relationship. For me, I love the guy so I choose not to hurt him. Sure I can caste a Glyph of Destruction and win the fight but I choose to love him.

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