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    Home»Getting Married»Being Afraid To Bring Things Up Because It Always Turns Into A Fight
    Getting Married

    Being Afraid To Bring Things Up Because It Always Turns Into A Fight

    Olivia BennettBy Olivia BennettApril 7, 20264 Mins Read
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    I usually stay in the car for fifteen minutes after the engine is cut. It’s a ritual: a small window of absolute silence before I walk through the front door and start the mental rehearsal.

    I’m editing my day in real-time, stripping away the frustrations and the small wins, trying to find a version of my life that won’t spark a fire.

    I’m looking for the safe parts of me, the parts that won’t accidentally bruise my spouse’s ego or trigger a three-hour post-mortem of every mistake we’ve made since the wedding.

    In the early years, I thought honesty was the foundation. Now, I realize that in this house, honesty carries a tax I can no longer afford to pay.

    A house full of unspoken things

    We live in a house that looks perfect from the street. Inside, the air feels heavy with everything we aren’t saying. I’ve become an expert at the strategic retreat.

    I see a conflict brewing in the way they set a glass down or the specific tone of a fine, and I immediately pivot, swallow the observation, even bury the hurt.

    I tell myself I’m keeping the peace, that’s actually a lie. I’m just managing a hostage situation.

    When every attempt at communication feels like a gamble, withdrawal becomes the only survival mechanism. I’ve learned to live in a version of our marriage where only the palatable version of me is allowed to exist.

    Image source: Pexels

    We sit on the same sofa, scrolling through our separate worlds, while a wall of unspoken things grows between us. It’s a kind of loneliness to be so close to someone and yet feel miles apart, separated by the fear of a fight.

    The exhaustion of emotional labor

    There’s a fatigue that comes from constantly managing another person’s mood, it turns a partnership into a performance.

    I find myself walking on eggshells in my own home, measuring my words as if I am testifying in court. Every joke is vetted for potential offense; every request is framed as a suggestion so it doesn’t sound like a demand.

    This constant vigilance is a slow way of losing the shape of myself. I’ve become so focused on not upsetting the balance that I’ve forgotten what my own balance looks like.

    We talk about the big fights with the shouting, the slamming doors as the things that end marriages. But for me, it’s the fights we don’t have that feel the most terminal.

    Image source: Pexels

    It’s the silence that follows a suppressed thought, the way I look at them across the dinner table and realize there’s a whole map of my internal world that they’ll never see because it’s too dangerous to show them.

    Finding room to breathe again

    Lately, I’ve started to wonder what a future would look like if I stopped performing. I think about mapping out a life where I don’t have to rehearse my sentences before I speak.

    Mapping a future that is for me starts with acknowledging this exhaustion, it starts with the realization that a marriage sustained by my silence is a sacrifice.

    I’m beginning to see that the peace I’ve been protecting is actually a vacuum, it’s hollow. I’m also learning to sit in the stillness of our cleared-out rooms and ask myself what I actually need.

    It’s a softer way forward, one where I’m finally prioritizing the stability of my own internal peace over the performative stability of our union.

    Key Takeaways for Reclaiming Your Voice

    • The silence is a signal: If you’re keeping the peace at the expense of your own honesty, you’re delaying the inevitable breakdown of your own identity.
    • Conflict is information: The fear of the fight is usually more damaging than the argument itself because it prevents any real growth or resolution from happening.
    • Check the cost of compliance: Ask yourself what it costs you to stay silent. If the price is your spontaneity, your confidence, or your sense of self, the relationship is too expensive.
    • The difference between peace and quiet: Peace is a collaborative state where both people feel safe. Quiet is just the absence of noise, often achieved through one person’s total suppression.

    Next Steps

    The exhaustion of walking on eggshells is often the first sign that you need a new plan for your life.

    If you’re ready to stop performing and start building a life that actually fits who you’re, it’s time to change the way you look at the horizon.

    Read the Full Guide: Discover 5 Simple Ways to Share Your Truth Without Starting a Fight in Your Marriage

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    Olivia Bennett

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