Sep
08

Relationship Communication – Is There Such a Thing as Bad Communication

By admin

 

Effective Communication is good, right? Personally, I believe it’s next to impossible to have a healthy, rewarding relationship without it. Sure, the level of required relationship communication depends on your level of intimacy with the person you are communicating with. But, can open communication ever be destructive, even when the communicator thinks they are providing a helpful message for the recipient? I would say it all boils down to knowing your audience. Think about what you are about to convey, and then try to predict how your recipient is going to react. Is the message sensitive or volatile enough to destroy the relationship you currently have? If so, it’s best to think twice. Sounds simple enough, right?

Take this story, for example. I know a woman that, for her whole life, carried resentment about how her father raised her. This story begins when she was 50 years old and her father was 72. She felt she had not been nurtured and supported as much as she needed when she was growing up. Her father was a “hard-liner”. We all know the type. A man made of mostly discipline and not enough encouragement, keeping his feelings to himself. Something compelled the woman to spill her guts and write her father a letter. In this letter she described how she felt about her relationship with her father. She pointed out many of the shortcomings in her life and how she felt he was the cause of them because she “didn’t get what she needed from him”. She pointed these things out in a very polite manner; obviously assuming her father would understand and feel compassion for her. What actually happened was quite the contrary. The father was very angry after reading her letter and felt he was being attacked. What was once an acceptable relationship was now broken beyond repair. At the time the daughter wrote the letter, she thought it would benefit her to get those things off her chest and didn’t take time to ponder how her father would deal with such things.

The case above could be considered “bad communication” as it damaged the relationship it was meant to improve. Here are some things you might want to consider before initiating a discussion with someone, especially when your message contains sensitive, blaming or potentially negative information.

1. What do you expect to accomplish with your message?

2. Try to predict how your audience will respond. Are you prepared for an unexpected outcome?

3. Is it so important for you to get your message across that it’s worth the risk of breaking the relationship? In some cases it may be, such as a case with a friend or spouse.

4. If you predict that your message may cause undesirable results, you may want to use a good friend or family member as a sounding board, so you can clear your head of your thoughts. Even more so, it can be very beneficial for you to write the person a letter but never deliver it. I believe this works better than spilling your guts to a third party.

5. You can ask advice from a trusted friend or family member (especially if they know the recipient of the message). However, always make the final decision on what to do. Your advisor probably has nothing to lose and may not give you proper advice in the matter.

Relationship communication is important in everyone’s life, whether with friends, family, business associates or complete strangers. For that reason, care should always be taken on how to communicate sensitive information. Can communication be a bad thing? I think it always depends on the circumstances. Sometimes you need to choose to hold back or potentially lose the relationship.

Carl Herkes
http://www.articlesbase.com/advice-articles/communication-in-relationships-is-there-such-a-thing-as-bad-communication-10767.html

 

6 Comments

1

Is there such thing as a commitment phobe , relationship phobe , intimacy phobe , communication phobe…etc?
Basically…all the things men tend to get scared of?
Why do men get so scared?…and by the way – don’t blame the woman!

2

Yes, but it’s not just the menfolk with this problem. You can find plenty of women too.

I think these individuals have been hurt pretty badly in their past and are afraid of taking a risk again. Once bitten, twice shy thing.
References :

3

If any man gets any of the above phobia, he is definitely not serious about the woman concerned. Only for fun.
References :

4

Yes, it’s called, "she is letting me have sex, I don’t want her to stop having sex, BUT if someone sexier comes along who will give me sex, I don’t want to be tied down" syndrome, and many girls fall prey to it by the "pretend married syndrome".It tells them "if you will give him a honeymoon audition , he will see what good wife material you are and when he sees how much you love him, he will get over all his fears and hurts and become a perfect angel a prince charming due to your seductive TLC ( you are sooo hot girl) and he will fall in love and beg you marry him".
References :

5

I guess you can develop a phobia about anything you decide to. But about your comment about men.
Men don’t get scared about commitment, relationships, intimacy, or communication as much as YOUNGER men who aren’t as ready to commit to a relationship, or become intimate, or even communicate about it as readily as women around the same age as they are.

Be patient, we catch up to youi eventually.
References :

6

Like you said not to blame the woman.So many times both male and female will put their hearts out there only to get hurt.So many times both of them play the games and lead someone on to the point that this person is ready to commit and then the player drops the person.This has some very bad effects on a person and it makes them more cautious when dating.Like you said people that has had this done to them have all these phobia’s.There may not actually be a phobia related to these symptoms but there sure are people that react to these problem relationship’s.
References :

Leave a Comment