Conflict with your partner can have long-lasting effects on your health. Here’s how to have better disagreements
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Whether you're arguing about something as trivial as dirty dishes or as serious as infidelity, fighting with someone you love stings. In the moment, you may feel angry, alienated, and hopeless, but according to research, the effects of fighting can be long-lasting and detrimental to your mental and physical health.

"There is an abundance of growing research that sheds light on marital conflict and the toll it can take on an individual's health in a relationship," says Christina Eller, LMHC, a psychotherapist specializing in partnership, marriage, and intimacy. "Marital conflicts that lead couples into a negative state of mind tend to suffer increased stress, anxiety, and depression." But the effects aren't just mentally challenging; they can also cause harm to your physical health.

In 2018, researchers at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center found that couples who engaged in particularly nasty fights had higher levels of bacteria in their blood (which can make their way into the intestines and cause poor gut health). Still more studies indicate that heated moments may harm your cardiovascular health and make wounds heal more slowly.

However, according to Eller, every tense moment doesn't need to leave you feeling hollow and distant from your partner. There are better ways to navigate conflict and protect your well-being in the process. Below, Eller and Elisabeth Gulotta, LMHC of NYC Therapeutic Wellness, offer their best tips for conflict resolution before, during, and after an argument.

Before the conflict

Understand how and why you fight

For a long time, a common message was that couples fight about topics like money or sex. But according to Eller, most arguments have much deeper roots that are worth exploring with your partner before you start exchanging words. "With couples, there is a fallacy that partners argue over prevalent themes such as finances, inequities in the household, co-parenting, or even infidelity. Research has demonstrated that couples rarely argue over a clear-cut topic," she explained. "Occasionally they do, but it's more likely that couples inadvertently construct emotional injuries during conflicts due to a lack of understanding their partner, ergo miscommunication."

Gulotta says that our emotional responses to disagreements can stem from childhood wounds, unmet needs, or simply feeling unsafe. "We all come into relationships with our own wounds and things that are not healed, and they can be pain points and trigger points," she says. "There's a vulnerability to going deeper, so a couple can stay stuck arguing about the surface level things if they don't take the time or have the awareness to search out the root."