” It wasn’t my fault”
defensive response:
“It was your fault”
“You always get tense around my mom”
defensive response:
“I do not”. “If you’d stand up for me when she criticizes me, I wouldn’t get so tense.”
“You don’t listen to me”
defensive response:
“Well, you don’t listen to me”
Of course, the major problem with defensiveness is that it obstructs communication in relationships. Rather than understanding each other’s perspective you spend your discussions defending yourselves. Nothing gets resolved, so the conflict continues to escalate and more discussions characterized by attack and defensiveness occur. To see whether you or your spouse/ partner is overly defensive, take the following self-test, preferably soon after a disagreement.SELF-TEST: HOW DEFENSIVE ARE YOU?
- When my partner complains, I feel unfairly picked on.
- I feel misunderstood.
- I don’t feel that I get credit for all the positive things I do.
- What went wrong was actually not that much my responsibility
- To avoid blame, I have to explain why and how the problem arose.
- I feel unfairly attacked when my partner is being negative.
- When my partner complains, I realize that I also have a set of complaintsthat need to be heard.
- My partner’s negativity gets too intense, too out of proportion.
- My partner is too touchy, and gets his/ her feelings hurt too easily.
- There is some truth to my partner’s complaints, but it is not the whole truth.
- When my partner complains, I usually think, “I am innocent of these charges”.
- When my partner complains, I feel I have to “ward off” these attacks.
- I feel obligated to deny the complaints against me that are inaccurate.
- It seems that all my partner can do is find fault with me.
- during a hot argument, I keep thinking of ways to retaliate.