amorlina

Relationship tools and quizzes

How do you fight?

Eight moments from real arguments, four honest reactions each. Pick what you actually do, not what the calm version of you would do. Most repeating fights are two styles colliding, and naming yours is half the fix.

The argument ends with a door closing and silence in the house. What do you do in the next ten minutes?

Mid-argument, your partner goes quiet and stops responding. What happens in you?

Something small keeps bothering you, the tone they use when they are tired, say. What do you do about it?

It is bedtime and the disagreement from dinner is still unresolved. What actually happens?

Your partner raises their voice for the first time in a while. Your instinct?

A disagreement starts brewing at a dinner with friends. What do you do?

Two days after a real fight, things are polite but not warm. What is your move?

Be honest: what do you most wish your partner understood about you in a fight?

Your result

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Start with the AI coach and it remembers this result: no retyping your story.

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The four conflict styles, in plain language

Your conflict style is what your nervous system does when a disagreement gets warm: some of us move toward the fight, some away from it, some around it, and some of us store it. None of the styles is bad. Every one of them is a reasonable strategy that worked somewhere in your history, and every one of them has a shadow side that shows up on repeat.

Pursuers need resolution now: the unfinished argument physically itches, so they follow, restart, and knock on the silence. Withdrawers need space to think: heat scrambles them, so they shut down or leave, planning to come back when words work again. Fixers need the tension gone: they reach for solutions and smoothing so fast that the feelings underneath never get their turn. Volcanoes need the peace kept: they swallow and swallow until one eruption spends a year of stored grievances in four minutes.

Why the same fight keeps happening

Most repeating arguments are not about the topic, they are two styles colliding. The classic loop is pursuer-withdrawer: one person needs contact to calm down, the other needs distance, so each person's medicine is the other's poison, and the fight about the dishes becomes the fight about the chasing and the leaving. Fixer-volcano is quieter but just as circular: the fixer smooths every surface, the volcano stores what was smoothed over, and both are stunned at the eruption.

Naming your style, and your partner's, converts "what is wrong with you" into "there is the loop again", and loops that get named get exits: the announced pause, the guaranteed return time, the feelings-first sentence, the weekly small-grievance habit.

Frequently asked questions

Can my conflict style change?
Yes, and faster than attachment styles tend to. Conflict style is mostly habit plus nervous system, and both respond to practice: a withdrawer who learns to announce the pause, or a volcano who starts spending small grievances weekly, is running a genuinely different pattern within months.
What if my partner and I have opposite styles?
Opposite styles are the normal case, not the broken one, and the pursuer-withdrawer pairing is the most common couple dynamic there is. The fix is never converting your partner to your style; it is agreeing on the exits, like a named pause with a guaranteed return time, which gives the withdrawer the space and the pursuer the certainty in one move.
Is one style the healthy one?
No. Each style is a strength at the right dose: pursuit is honesty, withdrawal is restraint, fixing is goodwill, and even the volcano's tolerance is real generosity. Health lives in flexibility, being able to borrow another style when yours is making the loop worse.

These tools are for reflection, not diagnosis. They are not a substitute for professional care.