Vindicarre wrote:
NephyrS wrote:
She also had a huge problem with me saying 'no' when she asks me to do something- to me it's not a big deal. Her asking and me saying no is how negotiation or discussion starts- to her it's a conversation ender.
Lol, I've always assumed, in my personal life, that when someone says no, they mean it, not that they're enticing me into a discussion or negotiation - that's something to consider. I must say though, that sounds much like my 4 year old's reception of the word "No" - the beginning of a negotiation.
In some situations, sure. In others, I don't mind a follow up.
Ie:
Wife: Hey, do you want to go to the bookstore tonight?
Me: Nah, I think I'd rather just kick around here and read.
To her, that is often the end of the conversation. To me, I'd be fine with it if she followed up with:
Wife: Well, I know you've had a long day, but I'd really like to get out- do you mind just going for a couple of hours?
At which point I know it's something that she'd really like to do, and will often acquiesce.
As RD says, however, she has often taken this time and thought that I don't see before she even asks the first question- weighing how tired I am with how much she wants to go out, etc. But the way things always worked in my family was a much more open "Ask first, then discuss qualifiers" type relationship.
If I say yes, I want to go out- neither of us has to agonize over thinking about it. We both want to go out, we go out. If I don't and she does, we talk about it until we reach a workable compromise, anything from- "Lets do it tomorrow instead" to "Sure, I'd be glad to take you tonight".