I’ll never forget the first time I witnessed my friend and her husband argue. We were all at dinner, and he made a comment about her being late. She snapped back. He got defensive. Their voices got louder.
And I sat there, frozen, absolutely convinced their marriage was ending right in front of me.
Because in my house growing up, people didn’t argue. Ever. My parents disagreed, I’m sure, but I never saw it. If there was tension, they handled it behind closed doors. If they were upset with each other, they waited until we were asleep.
I thought that was the healthy, normal thing. I thought conflict was something you hid from children to protect them.
But then my friend and her husband finished their argument. Apologized to each other. And went right back to laughing and sharing their meal like nothing had happened.
I was too stunned to speak. I had no idea that was possible. That people could fight and still be okay. That conflict didn’t mean the relationship was over.
My parents thought they were protecting me by shielding me from their disagreements. And maybe they were. But they were also accidentally teaching me that conflict is dangerous. That anger means something’s broken. That healthy relationships don’t have visible friction.
Since stumbling on this realization, I’ve learned that other people who grew up in similar homes to mine are now adults struggling with the same things.
Here are the behaviors parents accidentally instilled by never fighting in front of their kids.
1. They Apologize For Things That Aren’t Their Fault

Someone’s upset. It has nothing to do with them. But they’re apologizing anyway.
“I’m sorry.” “I didn’t mean to.” “It’s my fault.”
Even when it’s not.
They learned that apologies make tension go away. That taking blame, even when it’s not yours, is how you restore peace.
Research on conflict resolution in families found that children who never saw their parents negotiate disagreements often develop over-apologizing patterns as adults. They use apologies as a way to end discomfort rather than address actual wrongdoing.
They’re not actually sorry. They’re just trying to make the bad feeling stop.
2. They Take On More Emotional Labor Than They Should
They’re constantly managing everyone’s feelings. Checking the temperature of the room. Making sure no one’s upset.
They anticipate problems before they happen. They smooth things over preemptively. They do all the emotional work to ensure everything stays calm.
Preventing conflict is their job. That’s what they learned. That if tension arises, they should have seen it coming and stopped it.
They’re exhausting themselves trying to keep everyone happy, so no one ever has to disagree.
3. They Need A Lot Of Reassurance After A Disagreement
They had a small argument. It’s resolved. But they keep asking: “Are we okay?” “You’re not mad?” “We’re good, right?”
Over and over.
Because they never learned what “okay” looks like after a fight. They don’t trust that resolution actually sticks.
So they need constant confirmation that the relationship survived. That the other person still loves them. That everything’s actually fine.
They can’t relax until they’ve been reassured multiple times that the conflict didn’t break anything.
4. They Panic At The First Sign Of Conflict

Their partner gets annoyed about something small. The tone shifts. There’s clear irritation.
And their nervous system goes into overdrive. Heart racing. Catastrophizing. Immediately in crisis mode, trying to fix it, smooth it over, make it go away.
Because when they never saw their parents argue and stay together, they never learned that conflict is survivable.
Studies on conflict anxiety found that adults who didn’t witness parental disagreement in childhood show heightened stress responses to relationship conflict.
They didn’t learn that people can be mad at each other and still love each other. So every argument feels like the beginning of the end.
5. They Suppress Things Until They Explode
Something bothers them. But they don’t say anything. Because saying something means conflict, and conflict feels dangerous.
They swallow it. And the next thing. And the thing after that.
Until they can’t anymore. And then they explode over something tiny.
Because it’s not really about the dishes in the sink or the comment that was made. It’s about the 47 things they didn’t say before this moment.
Research on conflict avoidance patterns shows that people raised in low-conflict homes often swing between complete suppression and disproportionate outbursts. They never learned to address issues when they’re still small and manageable.
They’re either silent or they’re melting down. There’s no middle ground where they calmly address something that’s bothering them before it becomes a shouting match.
Related Stories from Bolde
- People who grew up in the 60s and 70s know there was a particular freedom in a summer with no schedule — no camps, no enrichment, just a long empty stretch you were expected to fill yourself, and somehow always did
- Psychology says the most accurate signs of high intelligence are almost always misread — because real intelligence rarely looks like confidence or quick answers; it looks like pausing, second-guessing, and sitting with a question, which most people read as slowness or doubt
- Ask enough former gifted kids how it turned out, and it’s almost never the burnout people expect — it’s never learning how to try at something, because for years they never had to
6. They Shut Down When Someone Gets Angry
Someone raises their voice. Gets visibly frustrated. Shows anger in any form.
And they completely shut down.
They go silent. They freeze. They disconnect. They can’t think clearly or respond. Their brain just stops working.
They never learned that anger is a normal emotion that passes. In their house, anger was something that happened behind closed doors. When someone expresses it openly, their system treats it like a threat.
I still do this. My partner gets frustrated about something—not even at me, just in general—and I physically cannot engage. I just shut down until the anger is gone.
7. They Think Silence Means Everything’s Fine

Their partner is quiet. Their friend seems distant. There’s tension they can feel, but nobody’s naming.
And they assume it’s fine. Because if it wasn’t fine, someone would say something, right?
In their house, if no one was fighting, everything was good. Silence meant calm.
They miss all the signs that something’s wrong until it’s too far gone. They don’t check in. They don’t ask. They just wait for the problem to present itself.
But most relationship problems don’t come to the surface until they’ve been bubbling underneath for months.
8. They Have No Idea How To Go From Conflict To Repair
Even if they manage to have a disagreement, they don’t know what comes next.
They never saw their parents fight and then make up. They never witnessed the repair process. The apology. The reconnection. The return to normal.
After a fight, they don’t know how to rebuild. They’re just waiting for the other person to act like it never happened. Or they’re stuck in the tension, unsure how to move forward.
Studies tracking conflict resolution found that witnessing parental repair after disagreements is one of the strongest predictors of healthy adult conflict management. Kids need to see the full cycle—not just the fight, but the reconciliation.
But they only saw the before and after. The tension disappeared behind closed doors, and when their parents emerged, everything was fine again.
Related Stories from Bolde
- People who grew up in the 60s and 70s know there was a particular freedom in a summer with no schedule — no camps, no enrichment, just a long empty stretch you were expected to fill yourself, and somehow always did
- Psychology says the most accurate signs of high intelligence are almost always misread — because real intelligence rarely looks like confidence or quick answers; it looks like pausing, second-guessing, and sitting with a question, which most people read as slowness or doubt
- Ask enough former gifted kids how it turned out, and it’s almost never the burnout people expect — it’s never learning how to try at something, because for years they never had to