Your therapist and coach trained in systemic therapy with a masters in psychology - Registered Counsellor: Independent Practice / Private Practice

Why conflicts with loved ones are so explosive – and how we can change that

Your experience and adventures as well as your goals are my top priority

Why conflicts with loved ones are so explosive – and how we can change that

Have you ever wondered why fights or conflicts with the people closest to your heart feel the heaviest—and often the most explosive? Nonviolent Communication (NVC) is a powerful tool for transforming conflict into understanding and connection. By focusing on feelings, needs, and the issue at hand, it helps break reactive patterns and fosters healthier relationships.

Have you ever wondered why fights or conflicts with the people closest to your heart feel the heaviest—and often the most explosive? Why, despite your best intentions, attempts to communicate hit a wall—whether in the form of criticism, sarcasm, avoidance, or defensive reactions? What can we do to change this? This blog explores why communication often fails in stressful moments and how Nonviolent Communication (NVC) can help us connect, resolve conflicts, and build understanding with those we care about most.

Why Communication Often Fails: Insights from Virginia Satir

Virginia Satir (1916–1988) was a pioneering family therapist who studied how communication patterns shape relationships. She observed that every conflict involves three key elements: you, me, and the issue. Healthy communication requires attention to all three simultaneously.

Through decades of clinical work, Satir noticed that when people feel threatened, hurt, or stressed, they often cannot engage with all three elements. Instead, they fall into one of four common patterns, each of which focuses on only one element—or avoids them entirely:

  1. Blaming – focusing on the other person (“you”) and what they did wrong.
  2. Placating – focusing on oneself (“me”), trying to appease or avoid conflict.
  3. Superreasonable/Intellectualizing – focusing solely on the issue, detaching emotionally.
  4. Irrelevant/Distracting – avoiding all three elements, diverting attention from the conflict entirely.

Satir later called these survival stances, because they are patterns we resort to in stressful conflicts with the people who matter most. This explains why arguments with loved ones can feel so intense or explosive: once someone goes into a stress response, it becomes nearly impossible to reach them or resolve the conflict. None of these responses is “better” than the others—they are all learned coping strategies that protect us from emotional threat but prevent understanding and connection.

The Three Elements of Healthy Communication

For communication or conflict resolution to be constructive, it must address all three elements simultaneously:

  • Me and my needs – expressing honestly what I feel and what I need.
  • You and your needs – listening deeply to understand the other person’s feelings and needs.
  • The issue at hand – focusing on the real problem, without letting past grievances or defensive reactions interfere.

Only when all three come together can conversations resolve issues, build understanding, and strengthen connection.

How Nonviolent Communication Helps

Nonviolent Communication (NVC), developed by Marshall Rosenberg, provides a structured approach to achieve this balance. NVC teaches us to:

  1. Observe without judgment – describe the situation factually, without adding blame.
  2. Identify and express feelings – recognize the emotions the situation triggers.
  3. Connect to underlying needs – articulate the human needs behind the feelings.
  4. Make requests without demanding – ask clearly for actions that could meet the needs, without coercion.

NVC addresses the three elements of healthy communication, helping break reactive patterns like those Satir described. By focusing on feelings, needs, and requests, both parties can engage constructively instead of falling into blame, placation, intellectualization, or distraction.

Summary and Practical Use

Nonviolent Communication is not about being “nice” or avoiding conflict—it’s about being clear, honest, and empathetic. Practically, this means:

  • Pausing to notice your own feelings and needs.
  • Observing situations objectively, without judgment.
  • Expressing feelings and needs honestly.
  • Listening empathetically to the other person’s needs.
  • Making actionable requests instead of demands.

Over time, combining NVC with an awareness of Satir’s stress responses can transform interactions from reactive and defensive to constructive and connected, fostering deeper understanding and healthier relationships.

References

  • Rosenberg, M. B. (2015). Nonviolent communication: A language of life (3rd ed.). PuddleDancer Press.
  • Satir, V., Banmen, J., Gerber, J., & Gomori, M. (1991). The Satir model: Family therapy and beyond. Science and Behavior Books.
  • Rosenberg, M. B. (2012). Speak peace in a world of conflict: What you say next will change your world. PuddleDancer Press.
  • Gibb, G. S., & Carroll, S. A. (2017). Virginia Satir and the evolution of family therapy. Journal of Family Therapy, 39(3), 297–314. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-6427.12145

Subject area

Kopie von PHOTO-2024-08-08-13-16-34 (3)
IMG-20240818-WA0107
20240629_072142

Therapist

Kontakt

Contact

Arrange an introductory appointment now

address

Reflect with Juliane – M. Sc. Psychology and Systemic Counsellor

Opening hours

Virtual meetings & face-to-face meetings in Johannesburg (Sandton) or Pretoria (Menlyn Maine) on appointment.
 
Book appointments easily using Calendly

Take a look at our retreat schedule here.

Contact