
“It’s not about the dishwasher.” That’s almost always true. Behind concrete friction usually lie deeper needs: for appreciation, relief, closeness, room of one’s own. Left unspoken, they look for a detour through blame and withdrawal.
From blame to need
Blame is often a disguised need. “You’re never there” may mean: “I’d like more time together.” The art lies in recognising your own need first, in yourself. Then it can be spoken calmly.
Three steps
- Pause: What is really bothering me, and what do I need underneath it?
- Name it: name the need.
- Ask: turn it into one concrete, small request.
Needs are not a weakness
Having needs is human, voicing them is mature. Whoever waits for the other to guess them is often disappointed, for mind-reading works in no relationship.
How to begin
At your next irritation, ask yourself: “What do I actually need here?” The answer alone makes the conversation calmer.
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.
