There are some cases in which an effective approach to marital argument
is: use humor! Vital, however, when using humor are:
* keen judgement,
* knowledge of your partner as a person, and
* understanding the dynamics in each individual situation. Never use
humor if it will insult, provoke or aggravate your partner. Only use a humor
approach when you can be reasonably sure that it will break tension - never
add to it. The last thing you want is tactless escalation of a fight.
If your spouse says an angry word, you might smile widely and say, "You
said an 'A word' and anger's a 'no-no.'" If you were supposed to do something
by seven o'clock and it's five to seven, pull the plug (or battery) on the
wall clock and say with a smile, "It's not seven yet!" If tension is
building, smile widely and say with a laugh, "I know! Let's have a fight
about it." Drop your smile, shake your head cutely left and right and
continue gently, "No. The article says fighting ain't an option." Bring back
the smile and conclude enthusiastically, "Well, that's the end of that idea!"
Your wife wants to re-paint the house. You are entirely against it but
you don't want the almost inevitable confrontation that will follow your
angry eruption. Be humorous, not sarcastic. Remember to keep your face and
tone of voice funny so that the entire performance is uniformly cute.
"Why, I was just thinking it was time for a change. We could personally
move all the furniture away from the walls. Good exercise, get the blood
flowing nicely. Do you own a sweatshirt, dear? Empty out the closets and put
everything on the sidewalk for five days. Great exercise in bitachon (trust
in G-d)! Hire absolute strangers to come in and take over our house and pay
them thousands of dollars to do it. Good character training to let go of our
sense of ownership! Good citizenship. We'll contribute to the economy. Have
the house smell. Good exercise in separation from material pleasures. Real
mess for anyone who touches the walls till they dry. Great discipline for the
kids. With so many advantages, why didn't we think of this years ago?"
Another approach that can break tension is to say something positive when
your partner expects a criticism, insult or attack. Be sincere. After an
unkind word from your partner, you'll surprise him/her with, "I appreciate
the fact that you're trying to control your temper. I see that your response
is better than it used to be. Thank you for working on it." When a young
woman (who speaks to me about her marriage) gently used such a response,
after an outburst from her husband, he felt so guilty that he became a
contrite little lamb, and they made right up. On a subsequent occasion, she
found herself repeatedly verbally attacking her husband. When talking about
this developing trend, she told me that her husband and she were originally
attracted to eachother on the basis of admiring eachother's talents. I
changed their orientation to meedos and heart-to-heart bonding. They took
this very seriously and went to work on giving, softness, empathy,
communication, self-control and emotional supportiveness. She sincerely and
diligently went to work on connecting with her heart and working on relating
to his heart. He is much less sensitive than she, and he was moving at a much
slower pace. She became critical and impatient, attacking him often. I told
her to "touch his heart with your heart rather than attacking his heart." All
the while that she was "not seeing the forest for the trees," she was
violating - not developing - a heart-to-heart relationship. This woman worked
steadily and patiently. She kept at it like a hero and turned their
relationship around! Their marriage has been peaceful, warm, gentle and more
communicative ever since.