Relationship Gridlock: When the Same Conversation Keeps Happening

Understanding the Patterns That Keep Couples Stuck

Do you and your partner seem to have the same argument over and over again? Perhaps it's about money, parenting, intimacy, household responsibilities or time together. You make up, things settle for a while, and then the disagreement returns.

If this sounds familiar, you're not alone.

One of the most significant findings from relationship research is that many relationship conflicts are not problems to be solved, but differences to be understood and managed together. This recurring pattern is what Dr John Gottman calls Gridlock.


What is Gridlock?

According to Dr John Gottman, approximately 69% of relationship conflict is perpetual. These ongoing disagreements usually arise from differences in personality, values, life experiences or deeply held beliefs.

Gridlock occurs when one of these perpetual issues becomes emotionally stuck. Rather than having productive conversations, couples become trapped in a predictable cycle where:

  • The same argument keeps resurfacing.
  • Both partners feel unheard or misunderstood.
  • Conversations escalate quickly.
  • Defensiveness replaces curiosity.
  • Resentment builds over time.

The topic itself may appear simple, but underneath lies something much more meaningful.


The Dream Beneath the Conflict

One of the most powerful concepts within the Gottman Method is that gridlocked conflict usually represents a "dream within conflict."

Every person brings their own experiences, values and hopes into a relationship. Often what appears to be an argument about practical issues is actually protecting something deeply important.

For example:

  • Arguments about money may reflect a need for security, freedom or stability.
  • Disagreements about parenting may reflect values learned in each person's family growing up.
  • Conflict around holidays may represent a desire for connection, tradition or independence.
  • Arguments about household responsibilities may actually be about feeling respected, appreciated or emotionally supported.

When couples slow the conversation down and become curious about each other's inner world, empathy often begins to replace defensiveness.


Sue Johnson's Perspective: The Negative Cycle

Dr Sue Johnson, developer of Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT), approached recurring conflict through the lens of attachment science.

Johnson observed that couples often become trapped in predictable emotional cycles rather than simply disagreeing about a topic. One common pattern she described is known as the "Protest Polka."

Typically, one partner pursues connection through criticism, frustration or repeated attempts to engage, while the other withdraws, becomes defensive or emotionally shuts down.

Although their behaviours look very different, both partners are often asking the same underlying questions:

"Can I rely on you?"

"Do I matter to you?"

"Will you be there for me when I need you?"

From an attachment perspective, these recurring arguments are often protests against emotional disconnection rather than attempts to hurt one another.


Different Approaches, Shared Wisdom

Although the Gottman Method and Emotionally Focused Therapy developed independently, both approaches arrive at similar conclusions.

  • Conflict is a normal part of every healthy relationship.
  • Successful couples are not conflict-free.
  • Emotional safety allows difficult conversations to become productive.
  • Curiosity is more helpful than criticism.
  • Understanding your partner is often more valuable than convincing them you're right.

Healthy relationships move away from asking:

"Who's right?"

and instead begin asking:

"Help me understand why this matters so much to you."


Moving from Gridlock to Dialogue

The goal isn't to eliminate every disagreement. Instead, it's to learn how to have conversations where both partners feel emotionally safe enough to share what's happening beneath the surface.

Helpful questions might include:

  • What does this issue represent for you?
  • What life experiences influence the way you see this?
  • What are you afraid might happen?
  • What need are you trying to protect?
  • What would feeling understood look like?

These conversations often reveal needs, fears and hopes that have never previously been spoken aloud.


When Gridlock Becomes Growth

Recurring conflict doesn't mean your relationship is failing.

In fact, many couples discover that understanding the deeper meaning behind their arguments becomes a turning point in their relationship.

When partners feel genuinely heard and emotionally understood, even long-standing disagreements often lose much of their intensity.

The objective isn't perfect agreement.

The goal is building a relationship where difficult conversations can happen with respect, compassion and emotional connection.


How Relationship Counselling Can Help

Relationship counselling provides a safe, structured environment where couples can understand the patterns keeping them stuck.

Using evidence-based approaches including the Gottman Method, Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT), attachment theory and practical communication strategies, couples can learn to:

  • recognise negative relationship cycles
  • understand each other's emotional needs
  • manage perpetual conflict more effectively
  • increase friendship and trust
  • strengthen emotional intimacy
  • develop healthier communication patterns.

Every relationship experiences conflict.

The couples who thrive aren't those who never disagree—they're the ones who learn how to navigate those disagreements together.


References

Gottman, J. M., & Gottman, J. S. (2015). 10 Principles for Doing Effective Couples Therapy. W. W. Norton & Company.

Gottman, J. M., & Silver, N. (2015). The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work (Revised Edition). Harmony Books.

Gottman, J. M. (1999). The Relationship Cure. Crown Publishers.

Johnson, S. M. (2019). Attachment Theory in Practice: Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) with Individuals, Couples, and Families. Guilford Press.

Johnson, S. M. (2008). Hold Me Tight: Seven Conversations for a Lifetime of Love. Little, Brown Spark.

Tatkin, S. (2022). In Each Other's Care: A Guide to the Most Common Relationship Conflicts and How to Work Through Them. Sounds True.

Hendrix, H., & Hunt, H. L. (2019). Getting the Love You Want (20th Anniversary Edition). St. Martin's Essentials.

Emotional Regulation: The Skill That Can Transform Your Relationships

When Emotions Take Over: Learning the Skill of Emotional Regulation

Two people care deeply about each other.

A disagreement begins over something relatively small. Within minutes, voices are raised, old grievances are brought up, and both people feel hurt, misunderstood, and defensive.

Later, when emotions have settled, they often look back and wonder:

"How did that escalate so quickly?"

Most people assume the problem was the topic they were arguing about.

Often, it wasn't.

The real issue was emotional regulation.

Whether it's between partners, siblings, parents and children, friends, or colleagues, many relationship difficulties occur not because people don't care about one another, but because emotions become so intense that communication breaks down.

The good news is that emotional regulation is not something you're simply born with or without. It is a skill. And like any skill, it can be learned, strengthened, and improved with practice.

What Is Emotional Regulation?

Emotional regulation is the ability to recognise, understand, and manage our emotional experiences in a healthy and constructive way.

It does not mean suppressing emotions. It does not mean pretending everything is fine when it isn't. And it certainly doesn't mean becoming emotionally detached.

Instead, emotional regulation means being able to experience emotions without allowing those emotions to completely take over our thoughts, words, and behaviours.

When we are emotionally regulated, we can still feel angry, hurt, disappointed, anxious, or frustrated. The difference is that we can choose how we respond to those feelings rather than reacting automatically.

Why Do We Need Emotional Regulation?

Emotions provide valuable information about our needs, values, boundaries, and experiences. However, when emotions become overwhelming, they can impair our ability to think clearly and communicate effectively.

  • Said something they later regretted.
  • Interrupted or talked over someone.
  • Become defensive before fully listening.
  • Shut down emotionally.
  • Walked away from a conversation in anger.
  • Sent a text message they wished they could take back.

These behaviours are often not the result of bad intentions. They are frequently the result of emotional dysregulation.

What Emotional Dysregulation Can Look Like

  • Raising your voice.
  • Speaking impulsively.
  • Becoming defensive.
  • Feeling overwhelmed.
  • Difficulty concentrating.
  • Racing thoughts.
  • Increased heart rate.
  • Feeling emotionally flooded.
  • Difficulty listening.
  • Struggling to see another person's point of view.

What's Happening in the Brain During Emotional Dysregulation?

When we perceive a situation as threatening—whether it's physical danger or emotional pain—the brain's alarm system becomes activated.

A small structure called the amygdala plays an important role in detecting potential threats and triggering the body's stress response. When this happens, stress hormones such as adrenaline and cortisol are released, preparing us to fight, flee, or protect ourselves.

This response can be incredibly useful when facing genuine danger. However, in relationships, the brain can sometimes react to emotional threats—such as criticism, rejection, conflict, or feeling misunderstood—in much the same way.

When emotions become highly activated, the thinking part of the brain, particularly the prefrontal cortex, becomes less effective. This area is responsible for reasoning, problem-solving, impulse control, empathy, and decision-making.

As a result, we may find it harder to:

  • Listen carefully.
  • Consider another person's perspective.
  • Choose our words thoughtfully.
  • Solve problems effectively.
  • Stay calm during disagreement.

This is why people often say or do things during emotionally intense moments that they later regret.

The encouraging news is that emotional regulation skills help calm the nervous system and bring the thinking part of the brain back online. Once this happens, productive communication becomes much easier.

Why Emotional Regulation Improves Relationships

Healthy relationships are not relationships without conflict. Every relationship experiences disagreements. The difference is that healthy relationships develop skills that allow people to navigate conflict without damaging the relationship itself.

Emotional regulation is one of those foundational skills.

Six Practical Ways to Strengthen Emotional Regulation

1. Learn Your Early Warning Signs

Pay attention to tight shoulders, a clenched jaw, increased heart rate, shallow breathing, feeling hot, or racing thoughts.

2. Pause Before Responding

A brief pause creates space for thoughtful responding rather than emotional reacting.

3. Name What You Are Feeling

Ask yourself whether you are feeling hurt, disappointed, anxious, embarrassed, or frustrated.

4. Slow Your Breathing

Even a minute of slow, controlled breathing can reduce emotional intensity and improve clarity of thinking.

5. Focus on Understanding Before Being Understood

People are often more willing to listen once they feel heard.

6. Take a Break When Needed

A break is not avoidance when it is used to calm emotions and improve communication.

Progress, Not Perfection

The goal is not to eliminate emotions. The goal is to develop the ability to experience emotions without becoming controlled by them.

Emotional regulation is not about perfection. It is about increasing awareness, making better choices, and recovering more effectively when things do not go as planned.

A Skill That Can Change Your Life

Small changes can create significant results:

  • Taking one deep breath.
  • Pausing before responding.
  • Listening a little longer.
  • Becoming curious instead of defensive.
  • Choosing to respond rather than react.

Could Counselling Help?

If you find yourself frequently becoming overwhelmed during conflict, reacting in ways you later regret, struggling to communicate effectively, or feeling stuck in recurring relationship patterns, counselling can help.

Learning emotional regulation skills can improve relationships, increase self-awareness, reduce stress, and help you feel more confident navigating difficult situations.

Kareen Fellows
Counsellor
Phone: 0408 792 747

Somatic Experiencing & the Butterfly Hug: A Simple Guide to Calming Your Nervous System

Somatic Experiencing, developed by Peter Levine, is a body-oriented approach to healing stress, anxiety and trauma that focuses on restoring the nervous system’s natural capacity for regulation.

Rather than revisiting stressful or traumatic memories in detail, it gently guides individuals to tune into physical sensations—like tension, warmth, or movement—helping the body safely release stored survival energy.

By working in small, manageable steps, this method supports a sense of safety and resilience, allowing people to reconnect with their bodies and move out of chronic stress responses into a state of greater balance and ease.

The Butterfly Tapping Technique is a self-soothing method that uses rhythmic, alternating tapping on the chest to calm the nervous system.

It helps manage anxiety, stress, and trauma by facilitating bilateral stimulation (see below), which fosters relaxation and grounding.

How to Perform the Butterfly Tapping Technique:

Position: Sit comfortably and cross your arms over your chest.

Clasp your thumbs together to form a butterfly shape with your hands resting on your chest just under your collarbone.

Tap Alternately: Gently tap your chest with your hands, alternating left and right in a slow, rhythmic movement (like butterfly wings).

If that position is not comfortable, then tap your shoulders alternately.

Breathe: Take slow, deep breaths, and observe your thoughts and sensations without judgment.

Duration: Continue for a few minutes until you feel a sense of calm.

Key Benefits and Uses:

Reduces Acute Stress: It is an effective technique to reduce anxiety and panic attacks. Grounding: It helps with grounding when feeling overwhelmed.

Bilateral Stimulation: The technique engages both sides of the brain, aiding in emotional processing and reducing fear responses.

Self-Soothing: It is a valuable self-care tool to relax the body, often used for trauma recovery.

If you'd like to you can give yourself an affirmation as you do it.

What is Bilateral Stimulation?

Bilateral stimulation is a therapeutic technique used to help the brain process and reduce emotional intensity. This simple, self-soothing motion can help regulate the nervous system, making overwhelming feelings feel more manageable and supporting the brain’s natural ability to process distressing experiences.

Book today for a session.

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