To Compromise or Not To Compromise: Building Sustainable Relationships

573

argumentMany popular psychologists, such as Dr. Phil, preach that compromise is the key to resolving relationship conflict and essential to building sustainable relationships. They view compromise as a “win-win” solution where both people get some of what they want. However, counselors who hold this perspective tend to act more like arbiters than counselors, pressing people to compromise regardless of the psychological issues that fuel people’s conflicts in the first place.

When this approach is unsuccessful, when people who are unwilling to compromise or don’t carry out the agreement reached, counselors are apt to treat the parties in conflict as resistant or unreasonable instead of treating their approach as inadequate.

For example, let’s say you and I are planning to meet for a cup of coffee around noon. You say you’d rather meet at 11:30 a.m.; I respond, saying that 11:30 is a bit early for me given my schedule and I’d prefer noon. If you and I have no strong feelings or reasons not to compromise, we may decide on 11:45 a.m. Win-Win; no problem.

On the other hand, when conflicts involve longer-term issues, tensions or unsatisfying patterns of behavior, people are more resistant to making compromises or carrying out the compromised agreement.

For example, if we are trying to find a time to meet for our cup of coffee, but in the past I have either canceled several times or shown up late regularly, you will be more hesitant to make any agreement with me. We have a history of tension and unresolved conflict, making you now appear resistant and unreasonable until the longer-term pattern gets addressed. If this longer-term issue does not get addressed and we are pressured into compromise anyway, we should expect me to continue the same pattern or you to express your frustration by not carrying out the plan. The compromise model will be ineffective in this case.

We can also readily witness the ineffectiveness of the compromise model for resolving conflict when it comes to addressing the conflict between Israel and Palestine. Those who follow the compromise model might say, “Can’t we get both sides to make a geographical solution, draw acceptable boundaries, and create a basic compromise?” When the parties resist, they will apply pressure to get the parties to compromise. Then, when their solution is resisted or fails to be carried out as agreed, mediators will lay blame on either the Israelis or Palestinians, but not on the inadequacy of their solution! In this case, both parties have deeper reasons for not compromising — and what mediators think is a “win-win” solution feels more like a “lose-lose” solution to the parties.

I regularly witnessed another example of this problem in my years practicing divorce law and working to resolve the issue of custody and parenting time with parents whose longer term conflicts were never resolved (that’s why they were separating/divorcing). If the court twisted one parent’s arm saying, “You will deliver that child two days a week. I don’t care whether you like it or not.” I came to expect that parent to get into “traffic delays” or have another “good reason” to not carry through with the “agreement” to deliver the child to the other parent on time.

Simply put, the compromise model of conflict resolution rarely succeeds or sustains when conflict involves a long-term relationship with longer-term patterns of behavior, issues of values, or when deeper background tensions have been established. However, these are exactly the kinds of conflicts that are most important to resolve.

Understanding conflict
In my experience as a therapist and attorney, individuals who are resistant to compromise do not need more pressure to compromise, but instead more support for their resistance.

For example, let’s return to the conflict we have about choosing a time to meet for coffee. If you have always been willing to make reasonable compromises, but I have regularly failed to carry out our agreed times to meet, then you have a good reason to not go along with the resolution. In addition, if I am regularly not following through on our agreements, I, too, may have good reasons to not go along with the compromised agreements. If a counselor were to support your resistance by saying, “I bet you have good reasons to not agree to a compromise; please say more about this,” you might describe our prior history.

In addition, if the counselor said to me, “It appears you are regularly unable to show up at the appointed time; I bet you have good reasons for that to be true,” then I might say, “I have been orienting my schedule every day for the last ten years around other people and what they want. I’m tired of it!”

Going further to resolve this conflict would mean helping me not agree so readily to meet at times that don’t really work for me and helping you be less agreeable to meeting times when you are not convinced I will show up on time. In short, a psychological solution is the exact opposite of the compromise solution — we need support for our resistance to compromise and encouragement to be less agreeable!

Going deeper
Focusing on getting people to compromise runs into further difficulties where long-standing social biases have existed. For example, many counselors suggest that couples need to practice listening more to each other. If one or both of these parties to the conflict are women, they may have a history of being expected to, or pressured into, listening to others. In this case, the resistance a woman exhibits may not only be to her partner, but to a history of sacrificing her voice, intelligence, and needs for others. In that case, furthering the woman’s psychological development may require supporting her to speak up more, not listen more.

This point was brought home to me by a woman who was resistant to listening more to her husband when, upon supporting her resistance she said, “I’m tired of listening and sitting there making everyone feel good. Now it’s time for me to speak.” Supporting her to speak up more will not only be good for the longer term sustainability of her relationship, but the culture at large that has marginalized women’s intelligence, viewpoint and voice. Again, we see that pressing a person to be more compromising is not an effective or sustainable solution; instead, a psychological viewpoint is needed.

To be sustainable, resolutions to relationship conflicts need to support people’s resistance so that the individuals and their relationships can grow and both people can learn more about each other. In this way, relationship conflicts are not merely problems to resolve; like arrows, they point to the next step on the paths of relationships.

The Edge Partner Directory is your resource for festivals, classes, products and services
Previous articleLife’s twists of fate offer an opportunity to grow, thrive
Next articleRelease
David Bedrick
DAVID BEDRICK JD, Dipl. PW, spent eight years on the faculty of the University of Phoenix and taught courses for the US Navy, 3M, the American Society of Training and Development, the Process Work Institute, and psychological associations. An expert in counseling individuals and couples, Bedrick blogs for Psychology Today and has received numerous awards for teaching, employee development and legal services to the community. He is the author of Talking Back to Dr. Phil: Alternatives to Mainstream Psychology.

1 COMMENT

  1. Finaly, someone who has said what really needs to said about the compromise model. I have never felt comfortable with it but couldn’t quite find the words to explain why.Hiding in the resistence are often ‘deal breaker’ behaviors that may have seemed easy enough to ignor for a while, but when they add up over time you see the manipulation and lack of respect. Thank you, David.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.