ISBN-13: 9783565212439 / Angielski / Miękka / 176 str.
This book explores the often-unexamined pressure to repair and reconnect quickly after conflict-the cultural assumption that healthy relationships require immediate resolution, apology, and return to closeness. It examines why repair advice can sometimes feel coercive or premature: the discomfort with ongoing tension, the guilt of needing space, the fear that distance means damage. The text reframes disconnection after arguments not as relational failure but as potentially necessary-a pause that allows genuine processing rather than performed reconciliation.Rather than offering techniques to reconnect faster or repair more effectively, the book explores what happens when we give ourselves and others permission to remain disconnected until authentic readiness emerges. It examines the patterns that drive premature repair: fear of abandonment disguised as care, conflict-avoidance masked as relationship maintenance, the internalized belief that good partners resolve quickly. What does it mean when rushing to reconnect actually prevents real repair? When staying apart longer creates more authentic closeness than forced proximity?Through compassionate psychological insight, the text explores the difference between repair that serves the relationship versus repair that serves anxiety about the relationship. It examines what actually allows genuine reconnection versus what creates surface-level peace while leaving underlying ruptures unaddressed. This isn't about mastering conflict resolution or learning better repair scripts-it's about understanding that sometimes the most respectful thing you can do after an argument is honor the need for continued distance without shame or urgency.
Real repair doesn't come from rushing back to closeness-it comes from honoring when distance is still needed, even when that feels uncomfortable or scary.