Your partner’s got a bad temper.

1. As usual. If someone’s got a temper around you, maybe one of your usual reactions is persuasion. Make each other feel better. Or less wine. If there are people with bad tempers, don’t talk to them. 2. This persuasion was in fact a refusal and disregard. Rejecting his temper is bad, ignoring his temper, and, of course, ignoring him. The reason for refusing and ignoring his bad temper was the reason he suffered so much. It is also a reason and a dilemma for the unsatisfied to avoid, ignore, and suppress himself. He’ll be more helpless and more painful. Especially when he is your partner, or your child, or your family. This refusal has further frustrated him. It’s probably more boring. I can’t talk about it. 3. However, very often. If one of the parties to the marriage has a bad temper, the other party often lacks the energy to accommodate it. It’s not like it’s bad for a partner to submit. It’s to accept, and then face it. Accepting, accompanying and facing each other can support each other. In the event that the partner is in a bad mood and there is no patience or skill to support and accompany him, he may be advised to face up to his own inner self, for example, by seeking professional assistance, which offers an opportunity to help him in many ways. Plus. If the partner has a bad temper. It’s probably not that close in this marriage. Especially if your partner has a bad temper, your reaction is either exhortation, or repulsion, or straight-to-face. If so, the marriage in this family is less connected and supportive and lacks the energy to support each other. This is what this family needs to face. Author of Master’s degree in psychology, psychologist, researcher in family marriage, researcher in family education, researcher in personal development, psychological problems of the family, emotional problems of marriage, confusion in love, counselling in marriage or marital relations, counselling in family relations