A great write up about how men and women communicate
I came across this great write-up about male/female communications that had me going, “YES! This is exactly how it is.” An article written in plain English that looks like something a master in psychology might of explained to a ghost writer.
As good as the write up was… the site I found it on was some domain trying to get some good PR (page rank), and had a ton of flashing ads. And as much as I wanted you to read this, I wasn’t going to send you there. So with apologies to the author (feel free to point me to the original paper and I’ll excerpt and relink) here is a great, fun explination on why men and women seem to butt heads.
“Can’t We Talk?”
condensed from: You Just Don’t Understand
by Deborah Tannen
A married couple was in a car when the wife turned to her husband and asked, “Would you like to stop for a coffee?”
“No, thanks,” he answered truthfully. So they didn’t stop.
The result? The wife, who had indeed wanted to stop, became annoyed because she felt her preference had not been considered. The husband, seeing his wife was angry, became frustrated. Why didn’t she just say what she wanted?
Unfortunately, he failed to see that his wife was asking the question not to get an instant decision, but to begin a negotiation. And the woman didn’t realize that when her husband said no, he was just expressing his preference, not making a ruling. When a man and woman interpret the same interchange in such conflicting ways, it’s no wonder they can find themselves leveling angry charges of selfishness and obstinacy at each other.
As a specialist in linguistics, I have studied how the conversational styles of men and women differ. We cannot lump all men or all women into fixed categories. But the seemingly senseless misunderstandings that haunt our relationships can in part be explained by the different conversational rules by which men and women play.
Whenever I write or speak about this subject, people tell me they are relieved to learn that what has caused them trouble – and what they had previously ascribed to personal failings – is, in fact, very common.
Learning about the different though equally valid conversational frequencies men and women are tuned to can help banish the blame and help us truly talk to one another. Here are some of the most common areas of conflict:
Status vs. Support.
Men grow up in a world in which a conversation is often a contest, either to achieve the upper hand or to prevent other people from pushing them around. For women, however, talking is often a way to exchange confirmation and support.
I saw this when my husband and I had jobs in different cities. People frequently made comments like, “That must be rough,” and “How do you stand it?” I accepted their sympathy and sometimes even reinforced it, saying, “The worst part is having to pack and unpack al the time.”
But my husband often reacted with irritation. Our situation had advantages, he would explain. As academics, we had four-day weekends together, as well as long vacations throughout the year and four months in the summer.
Everything he said was true, but I didn’t understand why he chose to say it. He told me that some of the comments implied: “Yours is not a real marriage. I am superior to you because my wife and I have avoided your misfortune.” Until then it had not occurred to me there might be an element of one- upmanship.
I now see that my husband was simply approaching the world as many men do: as a place where people try to achieve and maintain status. I, on the other hand, was approaching the world as many women do: as a network of connections seeking support and consensus.
Independence vs. Intimacy.
Since women often think in terms of closeness and support, they struggle to preserve intimacy. Men, concerned with status, tend to focus more on independence. These traits can lead women and men to starkly different views of the same situation.
When Josh’s old high-school friend called him at work to say he’d be in town, Josh invited him to stay for the weekend. That evening he told Linda they were having a house guest.
Linda was upset. How could Josh make these plans without discussing them with her beforehand? She would never do that to him. “Why don’t you tell your friend you have to check with your wife?” she asked.
Josh replied, “I can’t tell my friend, ‘I have to ask my wife for permission’!”
To Josh, checking with his wife would mean he was not free to act on his own. It would make him feel like a child or an underling. But Linda actually enjoys telling someone, “I have to check with Josh.” It makes her feel good to show that her life is intertwined with her husband’s.
Advice vs. Understanding.
Eve had a benign lump removed from her breast. When she confided to her husband, Mark, that she was distressed because the stitches changed the contour of her breast, he answered, “You can always have plastic surgery.”
This comment bothered her. “I’m sorry you don’t like the way it looks,” she protested. “But I’m not having any more surgery!”
Mark was hurt and puzzled. “I don’t care about a scar,” he replied. “It doesn’t bother me at all.”
“Then why are you telling me to have plastic surgery?” she asked.
“Because you were upset about the way it looks.”
Eve felt like a heel. Mark had been wonderfully supportive throughout her surgery. How could she snap at him now?
The problem stemmed from a difference in approach. To many men a complaint is a challenge to come up with a solution. Mark thought he was reassuring Eve by telling her there was something she could do about her scar. But often women are looking for emotional support, not solutions.
When my mother tells my father she doesn’t feel well, he invariably offers to take her to the doctor. Invariably, she is disappointed with his reaction. Like many men, he is focused on what he can do, whereas she wants sympathy.
Information vs. Feelings.
A cartoon shows a husband opening a newspaper and asking his wife, “Is there anything you’d like to say to me before I start reading the paper?” We know there isn’t – but that as soon as the man begins reading, his wife will think of something.
The cartoon is funny because people recognize their own experience in it. What’s not funny is that many women are hurt when men don’t talk to them at home, and many men are frustrated when they disappoint their partners without knowing why.
Rebecca, who is happily married, told me this is a source of dissatisfaction with her husband, Stuart. When she tells him what she is thinking, he listens silently. When she asks him what is on his mind, he says, “Nothing.”
All Rebecca’s life she has had practice in verbalizing her feelings with friends and relatives. But Stuart has had practice in keeping his innermost thoughts to himself. To him, like most men, talk is information. He doesn’t feel that talk is required at home.
Yet many such men hold center stage in a social setting, telling jokes and stories. They use conversation to claim attention and to entertain. Women can wind up hurt that their husbands tell relative strangers things they have not told them.
To avoid this kind of misunderstanding, both men and women can make adjustments. A woman may observe a man’s desire to read the paper without seeing it is a rejection. And a man can understand a woman’s desire to talk without feeling it is a manipulative intrusion.
Orders vs. Proposals.
Diana often begins statements with “Let’s.” She might say “Let’s park over there” or “Let’s clean up now, before lunch.”
This makes Nathan angry. He has deciphered Diana’s “Let’s” as a command. Like most men, he resists being told what to do. But to Diana, she is making suggestions, not demands. Like most women, she formulates her requests as proposals rather than orders. Her style of talking is a way of getting others to do what she wants – but by winning agreement first.
With certain men, like Nathan, this tactic backfires. If they perceive someone is trying to get them to do something indirectly, they feel manipulated and respond more resentfully than they would to a straightforward request.
Conflict vs. Compromise.
In trying to prevent fights, some women refuse to oppose the will of others openly. But sometimes it’s far more effective for a woman to assert herself, even at the risk of conflict.
Dora was frustrated by a series of used cars she drove. It was she who commuted to work, but her husband, Hank, who chose the cars. Hank always went for cars that were “interesting” but in continual need of repair.
After Dora was nearly killed when her brakes failed, they were in the market for yet another used car. Dora wanted to buy a late-model sedan from a friend. Hank fixed his sights on a 15-year-old sports car. She tried to persuade Hank that it made more sense to buy the boring but dependable car, but he would not be swayed.
Previously she would have acceded to his wishes. This time Dora bought the boring but dependable car and steeled herself for Hanks’ anger. To her amazement, he spoke not a word of remonstrance. When she later told him what she had expected, he scoffed at her fears and said she should have done what she wanted from the start if she felt that strongly about it.
As Dora discovered, a little conflict won’t kill you. At the same time, men who habitually oppose others can adjust their style to opt for less confrontation.
When we don’t see style differences for what they are, we sometimes draw unfair conclusions: “You’re illogical,” “You’re self- centered,” “You don’t care about me.” But once we grasp the two characteristic approaches, we stand a better chance of preventing disagreements from spiraling out of control.
Learning the other’s ways of talking is a leap across the communication gap between men and women, and a giant step towards genuine understanding.
Tags: information, Interesting, Knowledge, Psychology, Society




I think that a lot of the problems come from the fact that women like to make things complicated. Simple is boring and women are interested in intrigue, adventure, and excitement. I hate to break it to you but men are really simple creatures. Women like to over-think things and try to guess what men are thinking. Women react emotionally to something that they THINK that a man is thinking. It’s not hard. I want to eat, go to work, come home, have sex, and hang out occasionally with my friends. There is no ulterior motives in what I want or what I’m thinking. They are basic “caveman” needs. Sometimes I think that modern life has made things worse. Men haven’t changed much since the old days.
LOL – at the bottom of this post it says:
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A related post, huh? I guess that’s how some people might want to respond to communication differences between men and women.
Alpha Males have learned to either just shun the emotion-laden illogical non-rational thinking dames or tune them out with the realization that most females possess an inferior mind more akin to a child’s mind than a mature sdult.
There were many excellent reasons the daffy dames were denied voting privileges for so long…
One of the precursors of the downfall of the USA, socially, economically, politically, etc. was when congress pandered to the whining wimmenfolk and allowed them girls to vote.
It’s been downhill since then.
I won’t say that Women are dull or simple minded. I’ve met too many very intelligent women to believe that. But that said, men seem to think of everything in simple terms while a woman will skirt around the issue, and seems to hate to come out and just state what the main issue/goal is.
As a guy I have to say – this article is just way too long to get me interested. That’s one reason women fail to get their messages across. Know when to stop.
Unfortunately, on our family trips my mum used to try to “begin a negotiation” just about the second we were at the turnoff. There’s something to be said for decisiveness in some situations
How this man reacts is to point out that the word is “versus”
You’re right. I was using verses like in lines of poetry. Thanks for correcting me.
According to this article, it’s not only women who read too much into simple statements:
“I saw this when my husband and I had jobs in different cities. People frequently made comments like, “That must be rough,” and “How do you stand it?” I accepted their sympathy and sometimes even reinforced it, saying, “The worst part is having to pack and unpack al the time.”
But my husband often reacted with irritation. Our situation had advantages, he would explain. As academics, we had four-day weekends together, as well as long vacations throughout the year and four months in the summer.
Everything he said was true, but I didn’t understand why he chose to say it. He told me that some of the comments implied: “Yours is not a real marriage. I am superior to you because my wife and I have avoided your misfortune.” Until then it had not occurred to me there might be an element of one- upmanship.”
Talk about reading WAY too much into a simple statement of sympathy.
Not to quote John Stossel but Give me a break!
Oh and to a certain “alpha male”, I hope your post is a joke but in case it’s not, if you’re going to go around calling a whole group of people stupid and illogical, make sure you don’t have any typos. Check your spelling. Be a mature “sdult.”
Kate, it looks like most of this conversation was over back in February. That being said, the husband in the story is not far off base. Lots of people try to undermine others’ confidence with their ‘sympathy’. It’s not even a big secret with them – I’ve heard people bragging about doing it to instill doubt in people over their spouses. A big clue is when ‘sympathy’ is offered without consolation or empathy.
It would be nice if it were the soft, fuzzy world you describe… but it’s not.
reading this I have to quote Jack Nicholson from the movie “As Good As it Gets”
When the receptionist says
“How do you write women so well?”
Jack’s response.
“I think of a man, then I take away accountability, and reason.”
It’s just a joke from a funny movie so simmer before biting my head off all you amazon warrior princesses out there.
This post was informative and interesting. I appreciate that it wasn’t downplaying on gender’s side or making it inferior. It simply states it in a way that is in more of a woman’s style of communication. Try not to be boars and realize this is an interesting article to read. While there might be generalizations about how either gender thinks, quite a lot of it is true. Also, women do not think irrationally or irresponsibly; they have simply been pressured by society to be less confrontational and more mild mannered. I know many women that although they are not afraid of confrontation, find it easier to settle a problem through compromise. Thank you.
Ha ha. I love all these people coming in and bashing women to make themselves feel more manly.
Anyway, thank you for writing this article. It’s really interesting to read stuff like this and start thinking about how the sexes work.
A good peice of social science you have here. Keep it up. :]
This article is adapted from Deborah Tannen’s book “You Just Don’t Understand.” I read it a couple years ago for a critical thinking class, and it was pretty fascinating to compare the author’s findings on how men and women communicate with my own experiences. Anyone who is interested in further information should check it out.
I think a lot of people commenting here should read it. It seems that there are a lot of people here who don’t want to understand the opposite sex and learn how to improve communication, but find it easier to simply judge.
There is so much to be gained by withholding judgment and actively seeking understanding.
Thanks for the info. I didn’t realize that which/what book it came from. Here is an Amazon link to buy the book for those interested. Like I mentioned I had run across the article on a spam site, and wanted to share without pop ups (and files wanting to be run).
You Just Don’t Understand: Women and Men in Conversation
This has reinforced my previous thought-that i think like a dude.
It’s amusing that some guys have come in and made comments like “Women just do things in a complicated, roundabout way”. Missing the whole point of the article!
I read Dizzley’s comment then thought, “wow, how shallow!”….as I made my mind up to bookmark the article for reading later.
Something I didn’t see in the article while skimming but figured out after my wife left: talking doesn’t automatically equate to communicating.
Very good article. Thanks.
Reminds me of “Talking 9 to 5″
Men and Women do communicate differently.
My wife and I are as described in some sections and the opposite in others, so this may not be so related to gender, although it’s very interesting and insightful.
Patrick, I’d take a look at the intro: “might of” -> “might have” and “explination” -> “explanation” (just edit this bit out when you’re done). I nearly stumbled away, but I’m glad I stayed (and liked).
This is not surprising. It is as if men and women are genetically engineered to react that way.