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4 contributions to The Resolution Society
WEEKLY MOTIVATION 002 🔥
Week 2: Repair Over Winning A Mental Note to Carry: “Resolution isn’t about being right. It’s about staying connected without losing yourself.” Reflection Prompt When conflict shows up, do you tend to protect the relationship, protect yourself, or protect being right? What does that cost you in the long run? 5 Ways to Support Repair This Week 1. Acknowledge impact, even if harm wasn’t your intent. 2. Use “I noticed…” instead of “You always…”. 3. Offer curiosity before defense. 4. Let silence do some of the work. 5. Remember: repair is a process, not a single conversation.
0 likes • 1d
@Alexis Felton It makes a lot of sense what you’re saying about the dilemma between being right and maintaining the relationship. However, if we take a step back, you’ve set yourself up for a trap in the way you’ve framed it. You can protect the relationship and stand up for what matters to you, but you can’t do it by trying to win (being right). Instead, you can achieve both by shifting from winning to collaborating. Of course, this is much harder in practice, just like losing weight (“it’s simple” eat healthier, move more).
The Micro-Joy Break 🌱
Time for a midweek reset. What’s one small thing that helped you reset this week? Coffee. A walk. Music. Silence. A laugh. Name it so someone else can borrow the idea💡
1 like • 2d
Power of good laughter!! Watch funny videos or memes. Internet is full of hilarious and silly content, and after just 10 minutes of laughing, I felt like I was on the floor and crying. It’s even better if you watch with a friend or kids because you can laugh at them too. https://youtu.be/1veWbLpGa78?si=oKjp7ocbguB-cg93
Why Communication Habits Matter
Most of us don’t struggle in relationships because we lack good intentions. We struggle because, in tense moments, our habits speak faster than our values. Communication habits shape how quickly conversations escalate, how safe people feel telling us the truth, and how much misunderstanding we carry from one interaction to the next. Over time, small repeated patterns like interrupting, withdrawing, assuming, softening, pausing, clarifying, etc...quietly build the culture of our relationships. Working on communication habits isn’t about becoming perfect communicators. It’s about becoming a little more intentional in the moments that matter most—one pause, one clearer sentence, one better question at a time. The fact that you chose to be here already says something important: you’re committed to growing, even when growth is uncomfortable. Keep showing up. Small, consistent shifts practiced together have a powerful way of becoming lasting change. As we continue growing together in this space, the small shifts we practice here won’t stay here. They’ll ripple into our homes, our teams, and our communities, shaping conversations in ways we may not always see...but will certainly feel.
1 like • 3d
In my experience, most people are good at communicating; we just struggle with timing. Just because you can move your body doesn’t mean you good dancer. I love this quote: “The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place.”
Introductions 👋
If you’d like, answer any one (or all) of these to introduce yourself: 1️⃣ What is the first word that comes to mind when you think about conflict? 2️⃣ What’s something new you’re currently learning (big or small)? 3️⃣ What’s your favorite place in the world and why? (It can be a room, a city, a country, or anywhere that feels like home.) Share as much or as little as you'd like.
Introductions 👋
1 like • 3d
Hello. 1. Entertainment 2. How to influence people 3. Planet Earth. I love travelling and learning about different people, culture and food.
1 like • 3d
@Nashay Lowe I somehow came to enjoy conflict. I see them as puzzles and like to do puzzles.
1-4 of 4
Freddy Chavez
1
1point to level up
@freddy-chavez-6931
Consultant | Chess Player ♟️ | Negotiation enthusiast 🤝 | Turning complex problems into simple solutions

Active 1d ago
Joined Feb 17, 2026