Spurner Phone
My boyfriend of nine years often doesn't reply to my texts and emails. He says that we talk daily, and whatever's in my message could be discussed then. Well, it hurts my feelings to get zero response. Not even an emoji.
--Increasingly Angry
Communicating with a man should not compare unfavorably with yelling into a manhole. (Shout "Hello?" into the sewer and you'll at least get the courtesy of a faint "hellooo" or two back.)
An email to your boyfriend is not just an email. It's what marriage researchers John Gottman and Janice Driver call a "bid for connection" -- one of many small attempts people in relationships make to get their partner's attention, affection, or emotional support. In response, their partner could ignore the bid ("turn away"), express irritation ("turn against"), or reply lovingly ("turn toward") -- even just with a smile, a nod, or a hug.
In Gottman and Driver's research, newlywed couples who had "turned toward" each other 86% of the time, on average, were still married six years later. The couples who ended up divorced had a 33% turn-toward rate. On a bleak note, Gottman writes, "I think that you can sometimes actually see people crumple physically when their partner has turned away from their bid for connection."
Explain the "bid for connection" thing to your boyfriend. Tell him you're just looking for some tiny loving reply to your texts and emails -- even an emoji or two. He's human, so he might sometimes let a message slip by unanswered. But if he mostly responds, you'll mostly feel loved instead of "increasingly angry" that messaging him feels like grabbing a handful of words and hurling them into the void. (Of course, in space, no one can hear you scream, but here on Earth, the neighbors tend to call the cops 10 minutes into a blowout.)
For pages and pages of "science-help" from me, buy my latest book, "Unf*ckology: A Field Guide to Living with Guts and Confidence." It lays out the PROCESS of transforming to live w/confidence.








Food for thought: Slate Star Codex examined Gottman's work recently.
Chris Rhodes at March 4, 2020 6:36 AM
Has it come to this?
I hate cell phones. They doodle and beep alla damned time. It's like having a needy 4 year old in your pocket.
I don't carry my phone, and I don't check facebook but once a day for business-related matters. She knows that, yet she's hurt when I don't "like" whatevr she posts or upvotes. And I do. When I get around to it.
Otherwise, I'm more than responsive to her "bids for connection," as she is to mine. I see no need to make a connection where every kind of internet character can read along.
God, it's hard enough to use modern technology when thieves and lunatics are reading right beside you. You want to canoodle? Let's go to someplace quieter and not so crowded.
Michael Dutcher at March 4, 2020 10:30 AM
I'm with Michael.
Treadwell at March 7, 2020 1:43 PM
I have to say, this is one of the few times I disagree with Amy.
I would have to know more, first. Like how many times a day does she text him? Texting too often isn't cute, charming, or sweet. It's obnoxious.
And he has a point. It can wait till they get together again, since they see each other daily. As the saying goes, "Distance makes the heart grow fonder." It's a little hard to appreciate distance when she's in your pocket, vibrating emoticons every hour or so.
Patrick at March 10, 2020 9:19 AM
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