
“You never tidy up!” , and the argument is here. An I-message turns it around: you speak about yourself, about your experience and your need. It works because it corners no one.
Four building blocks
A good I-message needs no fillers, just a clear order:
Observation , feeling , need , request
- Observation: plainly, what happened, without “always”/“never”. (“When the table is full in the evening …”)
- Feeling: how it feels for you. (“… I feel stressed …”)
- Need: what it’s about for you. (“… because order gives me calm.”)
- Request: concrete and doable. (“Would you be willing to clear your part by 8 p.m.?”)
Why it works
Blame forces the other into defence, then it’s only about being right. An I-message makes your inner world visible and invites cooperation, without attacking.
How to begin
Before your next tricky conversation, draft one sentence in this pattern. A template is in the Exercises.
General self-help impulses, no substitute for couples or psychotherapy. For lasting conflict or distress, a counselling centre or psychotherapy practice helps. Helpline (Germany): 0800 111 0 111.
