Conflict is inevitable. Most people either avoid it entirely (letting things rot beneath the surface) or go in guns blazing (making things worse). Neither works.
The goal isn't to win. It's to resolve — to get back to a functional relationship where both people feel heard.
Why Conflicts Happen
Most fights trace back to a few roots:
- Unmet or uncommunicated expectations — one person assumed something that was never discussed
- Insecurity — someone feeling unseen, unvalued, or threatened
- Difference of opinion — sometimes just a disagreement, not a crisis
- Lies or broken trust — the underlying thing that actual fights are usually about
Understanding which one you're dealing with changes how you respond.
The Frame That Changes Everything
When you're in a conflict with someone, the natural feeling is "me vs. you." But the healthier frame is: it's both of us vs. the problem.
The moment you remember this, the entire tone shifts. You're not opponents trying to prove the other wrong — you're two people trying to solve something together.
Non-Violent Communication in Conflict
When things are heated, people stop hearing what's being said and start reacting to how it sounds. The language of feelings and needs cuts through this.
Instead of:
"You never listen to me."
Try:
"I feel unheard right now, and I need to know you understand what I'm saying."
The first invites a counterattack. The second invites engagement. It's not about being soft — it's about being effective.
Don't use questions to prove the other person wrong. Ask questions to understand them. The moment they feel cross-examined rather than understood, they shut down.
How to Apologize
A real apology has three parts:
- What you did — specific, not vague
- How it made them feel — shows you understand the impact
- Why you're apologizing — genuine, not tactical
Once you understand these three things, the apology writes itself and actually means something. A hollow "I'm sorry if you felt hurt" isn't an apology — it's a deflection.
Also: the other person doesn't owe you acceptance or immediate forgiveness. A sincere apology is about what you're doing, not what you're trying to get. Changed behaviour is the only apology that holds.
After a Fight
Always try to end on a good note. Not fake friendliness, but at least a small gesture — a short message, a joke, something that says the relationship matters more than the argument.
The argument is over. Return to being on the same team.