Make (and accept) repair attempts

A repair attempt is any bid to de-escalate — a joke, a softened tone, a hand reached out — and accepting one matters as much as making it.

Why it works

A repair attempt interrupts the escalation spiral by signaling "I still want us, even mid-conflict." Its content barely matters — a clumsy joke works — because the signal is about the bond, not the issue. Whether a couple catches these signals is, in Gottman’s observational research, one of the strongest distinguishers of stable from distressed relationships.

How to do it

  1. Offer a small de-escalation even mid-argument: humor, a softer voice, "can we slow down?"
  2. Learn to recognize the other person’s repair attempts — they’re often awkward and easy to miss.
  3. Accept the attempt even if the issue isn’t resolved; receiving the bid is itself the repair.

Evidence

Gottman’s observational research on couples identifies repair attempts — and especially whether they are received — as a key predictor of relationship stability. This is well-known observational work (lab-coded interactions, longitudinal follow-up). (observational)

Gottman’s "prediction" accuracy has been critiqued (often computed retrospectively); the directional value of repair attempts is the robust takeaway.

Sources

  • Gottman, observational couples research on repair attempts and relationship stability

Common mistake

Rejecting a partner’s clumsy repair attempt because it didn’t solve the problem — which teaches them to stop reaching out mid-conflict.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach helps you build a repertoire of repair attempts that fit your relationship and rehearses receiving your partner’s bids instead of swatting them away for being imperfect.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).