Search a title or topic

Over 20 million podcasts, powered by 

Player FM logo
Artwork

Content provided by Andrew Dewar and Catherine Collins, Andrew Dewar, and Catherine Collins. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Andrew Dewar and Catherine Collins, Andrew Dewar, and Catherine Collins or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Player FM - Podcast App
Go offline with the Player FM app!

How to Settle Arguments Fairly

27:59
 
Share
 

Manage episode 508196650 series 3550505
Content provided by Andrew Dewar and Catherine Collins, Andrew Dewar, and Catherine Collins. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Andrew Dewar and Catherine Collins, Andrew Dewar, and Catherine Collins or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Arguments don’t need winners; they need resolution. Andrew and Cat share calm, practical ways to defuse conflict at home, with friends, and at work—so everyone feels seen, heard, and respected.

Big ideas

  • Stay calm first. Regulated nervous systems make regulated conversations.
  • Listen to understand, not to win. Most “arguments” are unmet needs in disguise.
  • Name the real issue. Clarify what the conflict is actually about before debating solutions.
  • Feelings + needs > accusations. Use “When you ___, I feel ___; I need ___; could you ___?”
  • Define the desired outcome. Agree on “what good looks like” before you continue.
  • Two truths can coexist. Your perspectives can both be valid.
  • Take breaks at impasses. Timeouts prevent escalation; return when cooler.
  • Bring a neutral third party when needed. Therapist, mediator, or trusted friend.

The Fair-Argument Playbook

  1. Pause & breathe. Lower the temperature (box breathing: 4–4–4–4).
  2. State intent: “My goal is for us to understand each other and find a solution we both can live with.”
  3. Clarify the issue: “What do you think this is really about?”
  4. Reflective listening: “What I’m hearing is… Did I get that right?”
  5. Share with NVC: “When X happened, I felt Y. What I need is Z. Would you be willing to ___?”
  6. Outcome check: “By the end of this, I’d love for us to ___.”
  7. Perspective-swap: Briefly argue the other person’s side to show you get it.
  8. Agree on next step: One concrete action each.
  9. If stuck: “Let’s pause for 20–60 minutes and revisit at ___. We’re on the same team.”

Handy scripts

  • Red-flag day: “Quick heads-up: I’m low-sleep/overloaded today. If I seem short, it’s not about you.”
  • Boundary without blame: “I want to keep talking, and I need a 15-minute reset to stay respectful.”
  • Repair after rupture: “I’m sorry for my tone earlier. Your point matters; can we try again?”

For parents & teams

  • Ask kids/teammates to share how they’re feeling + what they need (not who’s “right”).
  • Normalize check-ins: “What outcome are you hoping for?”
  • Celebrate process wins (no interrupting, calm tone, staying on topic), not just “winning.”

When to get help

  • Repeating stalemates on big life choices (money, parenting, moving, family size).
  • Patterns of contempt, stonewalling, or scorekeeping.
  • Bring in a counselor/mediator to create safety and structure.

Resources mentioned

  • Nonviolent Communication — Marshall B. Rosenberg (feelings/needs framework)

Glimmers

  • Andrew: Watching his son thrive at a first MMA practice—and the respectful community vibe.
  • Cat: A surprise flower delivery (courtesy of Andrew and his mom) brightened a tough week.

Keep in touch

Questions, coaching, or topic requests: [email protected]

More episodes & freebies: fiveyearyou.com

IG: @fiveyearyou

Affiliate note: As Amazon Associates, we earn from qualifying purchases (Store ID: amp09-20 | Tracking ID: 5yy-20).

  continue reading

91 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 508196650 series 3550505
Content provided by Andrew Dewar and Catherine Collins, Andrew Dewar, and Catherine Collins. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Andrew Dewar and Catherine Collins, Andrew Dewar, and Catherine Collins or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Arguments don’t need winners; they need resolution. Andrew and Cat share calm, practical ways to defuse conflict at home, with friends, and at work—so everyone feels seen, heard, and respected.

Big ideas

  • Stay calm first. Regulated nervous systems make regulated conversations.
  • Listen to understand, not to win. Most “arguments” are unmet needs in disguise.
  • Name the real issue. Clarify what the conflict is actually about before debating solutions.
  • Feelings + needs > accusations. Use “When you ___, I feel ___; I need ___; could you ___?”
  • Define the desired outcome. Agree on “what good looks like” before you continue.
  • Two truths can coexist. Your perspectives can both be valid.
  • Take breaks at impasses. Timeouts prevent escalation; return when cooler.
  • Bring a neutral third party when needed. Therapist, mediator, or trusted friend.

The Fair-Argument Playbook

  1. Pause & breathe. Lower the temperature (box breathing: 4–4–4–4).
  2. State intent: “My goal is for us to understand each other and find a solution we both can live with.”
  3. Clarify the issue: “What do you think this is really about?”
  4. Reflective listening: “What I’m hearing is… Did I get that right?”
  5. Share with NVC: “When X happened, I felt Y. What I need is Z. Would you be willing to ___?”
  6. Outcome check: “By the end of this, I’d love for us to ___.”
  7. Perspective-swap: Briefly argue the other person’s side to show you get it.
  8. Agree on next step: One concrete action each.
  9. If stuck: “Let’s pause for 20–60 minutes and revisit at ___. We’re on the same team.”

Handy scripts

  • Red-flag day: “Quick heads-up: I’m low-sleep/overloaded today. If I seem short, it’s not about you.”
  • Boundary without blame: “I want to keep talking, and I need a 15-minute reset to stay respectful.”
  • Repair after rupture: “I’m sorry for my tone earlier. Your point matters; can we try again?”

For parents & teams

  • Ask kids/teammates to share how they’re feeling + what they need (not who’s “right”).
  • Normalize check-ins: “What outcome are you hoping for?”
  • Celebrate process wins (no interrupting, calm tone, staying on topic), not just “winning.”

When to get help

  • Repeating stalemates on big life choices (money, parenting, moving, family size).
  • Patterns of contempt, stonewalling, or scorekeeping.
  • Bring in a counselor/mediator to create safety and structure.

Resources mentioned

  • Nonviolent Communication — Marshall B. Rosenberg (feelings/needs framework)

Glimmers

  • Andrew: Watching his son thrive at a first MMA practice—and the respectful community vibe.
  • Cat: A surprise flower delivery (courtesy of Andrew and his mom) brightened a tough week.

Keep in touch

Questions, coaching, or topic requests: [email protected]

More episodes & freebies: fiveyearyou.com

IG: @fiveyearyou

Affiliate note: As Amazon Associates, we earn from qualifying purchases (Store ID: amp09-20 | Tracking ID: 5yy-20).

  continue reading

91 episodes

All episodes

×
 
Loading …

Welcome to Player FM!

Player FM is scanning the web for high-quality podcasts for you to enjoy right now. It's the best podcast app and works on Android, iPhone, and the web. Signup to sync subscriptions across devices.

 

Copyright 2025 | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | | Copyright
Listen to this show while you explore
Play