One study revealed that couples who used the words «think,» «reason,» «because,» «understand,» «why» and other analytical
words during an argument lowered the body's stress.
In her opinion, the happy couples she sees «avoid using
that word during arguments, as it can make it seem that divorce is a possibility.»
Dr. Paul DePompo, board certified cognitive behavioral therapist and author suggests, «A spouse should never use the D -
word during an argument unless this is a serious consideration and is not being said in anger.
Not exact matches
In a new court filing regarding the Michael Cohen raids, Justice Department prosecutors in New York are citing President Donald Trump's own
words during his angry Fox & Friends interview Thursday morning — and they're doing it to undercut Cohen and Trump's
arguments.
Agreed Jon, we all get caught up in rhetoric, especially
during the heat of the moment or perhaps in anger
during an
argument and yes I've used the hate
word, as I do regards spurs, but that is just rhetoric.
Each partner has to explain, in their own
words, what happened
during the
argument, what they felt, what their perspective was
during the incident, and acknowledge that each partner's point of view is valid.
During arguments, passions flare up and
words tend to spill out no matter who is listening.