What separates relationships that thrive from those that struggle? After decades of research studying thousands of couples, Drs. John and Julie Gottman identified specific behaviors and patterns that predict relationship success or failure. Their findings form the basis of the Gottman Method, one of the most widely respected approaches to couples therapy.
Understanding the basics of this method can help you strengthen your relationship, whether you’re seeking therapy or simply wanting to build better connection with your partner.
The Research Foundation
What makes the Gottman Method unique is its foundation in scientific research.
The Love Lab
Dr. John Gottman’s research at the University of Washington’s “Love Lab” involved observing thousands of couples in remarkable detail. Researchers measured heart rates, facial expressions, words used, and body language during conversations about various topics.
Predictive Accuracy
This research allowed Gottman to predict with over 90% accuracy which couples would divorce and which would stay together, often within minutes of observing them interact. More importantly, it revealed what makes relationships work.
Key Findings
Research showed that successful couples:
- Have more positive than negative interactions
- Handle conflict in specific constructive ways
- Build and maintain friendship
- Create shared meaning in their lives
- Repair after inevitable ruptures
The Sound Relationship House
The Gottmans developed the Sound Relationship House as a model for healthy relationships. Each level builds on those below.
Building Love Maps
The foundation is knowing your partner’s inner world:
- Knowing their dreams, hopes, and fears
- Understanding their history and experiences
- Being curious about their thoughts and feelings
- Remembering important details about their life
How to build love maps:
– Ask open-ended questions
– Show interest in their daily experiences
– Update your knowledge as they change
– Remember what they share
Sharing Fondness and Admiration
Expressing appreciation and respect:
- Noticing what you appreciate about your partner
- Expressing affection and respect
- Focusing on positive qualities
- Creating a culture of appreciation
How to practice:
– Share what you appreciate daily
– Express gratitude specifically
– Remember why you chose this person
– Voice your admiration
Turning Toward
Responding to your partner’s bids for connection:
- A bid is any attempt to connect (a comment, question, gesture)
- Turning toward means acknowledging and responding
- Turning away means ignoring or missing the bid
- Turning against means responding negatively
Examples of bids:
– “Look at that bird outside”
– A sigh after a hard day
– “How was your meeting?”
– Reaching for your hand
Turning toward:
Acknowledge and engage with the bid, even briefly.
The Positive Perspective
When the first three levels are strong, partners give each other the benefit of the doubt. Neutral or even negative actions are interpreted positively.
When these levels are weak, even positive actions may be interpreted negatively.
Managing Conflict
The Gottmans found that 69% of relationship conflicts are perpetual, meaning they never get fully resolved because they’re rooted in fundamental differences between partners. Successful couples learn to manage these conflicts through dialogue rather than gridlock.
Making Life Dreams Come True
Supporting each other’s aspirations:
- Understanding each other’s dreams and goals
- Supporting pursuit of those dreams
- Being willing to compromise for your partner’s aspirations
- Creating space for individual growth
Creating Shared Meaning
The top of the house involves building a life together that feels meaningful:
- Shared rituals of connection
- Common goals and values
- Narratives about your relationship
- Roles that feel satisfying
- Shared symbols and culture
The Four Horsemen
Gottman identified four negative communication patterns that predict relationship failure:
Criticism
Attacking your partner’s character rather than addressing a specific behavior.
Example of criticism:
“You never think about anyone but yourself. You’re so selfish.”
The antidote (gentle startup):
“I felt hurt when you made plans without checking with me. I need us to coordinate our schedules.”
Contempt
Expressing disgust, disrespect, or superiority. This is the most damaging pattern and a strong predictor of divorce.
Signs of contempt:
– Eye-rolling
– Mockery or sarcasm
– Name-calling
– Sneering
– Hostile humor
The antidote:
Build a culture of appreciation. Express fondness and admiration regularly. Describe your own feelings and needs.
Defensiveness
Protecting yourself by making excuses or counter-attacking when your partner raises a concern.
Example of defensiveness:
“It’s not my fault we were late. You’re the one who took forever to get ready. As usual.”
The antidote (taking responsibility):
“You’re right, I should have started getting ready earlier. I’m sorry we were late.”
Stonewalling
Withdrawing from interaction, shutting down, and becoming unresponsive.
Signs of stonewalling:
– Looking away
– Giving one-word answers
– Leaving the room
– Silent treatment
– Refusing to engage
The antidote (physiological self-soothing):
Take a break when overwhelmed (at least 20 minutes), calm your body, then return to the conversation.
Repair Attempts
Even the best relationships experience conflict. What matters is the ability to repair.
What Are Repair Attempts?
Any effort to de-escalate tension during conflict:
- Using humor appropriately
- Offering an apology
- Expressing affection
- Finding common ground
- Asking for a break
- Showing empathy
Why They Matter
Successful couples make repair attempts and accept them from their partner. Struggling couples either don’t make repairs or reject them when offered.
Making Repairs Work
- Be attuned to when your partner is attempting to repair
- Accept repair attempts even if imperfect
- Have some standard phrases or gestures for repair
- Don’t let pride prevent accepting an olive branch
Processing Conflict
The Gottmans developed specific approaches for working through disagreements.
The Aftermath of a Fight
After conflict, process it together:
- Take turns sharing your perspective without interruption
- Validate your partner’s experience (you don’t have to agree)
- Accept responsibility for your part
- Identify triggers that escalated the conflict
- Make one constructive suggestion for next time
Dreams Within Conflict
Often underlying perpetual conflicts are dreams or needs that matter deeply:
- What does this issue represent for you?
- What past experiences make this important?
- What dream or need underlies your position?
Understanding the dream beneath the disagreement allows for compassion even without resolution.
Practical Applications
Daily Practices
Build connection through small daily habits:
- Greet each other warmly when reuniting
- Share about your day with real attention
- Express appreciation daily
- Show affection physically and verbally
- Check in about each other’s inner world
Weekly Practices
Regular deeper connection:
- Have a state of the union meeting to discuss the relationship
- Plan quality time together
- Discuss upcoming stresses and how to support each other
When Problems Arise
During difficult times:
- Use gentle startup for complaints
- Avoid the four horsemen
- Make and accept repair attempts
- Take breaks when flooding occurs
- Return to discuss with calmer minds
Finding a Gottman Therapist
If you want professional support:
What to Look For
Gottman-trained therapists have completed specific training. Look for:
- Certified Gottman Therapists (highest level)
- Level 3 trained clinicians
- Level 2 or Level 1 trained therapists (progressing levels)
What to Expect
Gottman Method therapy typically involves:
- Assessment of your relationship using research-based measures
- Feedback session sharing the assessment results
- Therapeutic phase working on specific areas
- Structured interventions based on your needs
Moving Forward
The Gottman Method offers research-based guidance for relationships. Whether you pursue formal therapy or simply apply these principles on your own, understanding what makes relationships work gives you tools for building stronger connection.
Relationships take effort, but that effort can be strategic. By building friendship, managing conflict constructively, and creating shared meaning, you can develop a relationship that not only survives but thrives.
This article is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional mental health treatment. If you’re struggling, please reach out to a qualified mental health provider. Arise Counseling Services offers compassionate, professional support for individuals and families throughout Pennsylvania.
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