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'Thank you' may pacify warring couples

Walter Knoll III looks over a collection of red roses in a cooler as hundreds of arrangements are being made for Valentines Day, in St. Louis on February 13, 2012. Knoll said 3000 orders are ready to go out the door for the holiday on February 14, 2012. UPI/Bill Greenblatt
Walter Knoll III looks over a collection of red roses in a cooler as hundreds of arrangements are being made for Valentines Day, in St. Louis on February 13, 2012. Knoll said 3000 orders are ready to go out the door for the holiday on February 14, 2012. UPI/Bill Greenblatt | License Photo

NEW YORK, Feb. 13 (UPI) -- Couples should use Valentine's Day to spend more time focusing on the positive aspects of their relationship and not complaints, two U.S. psychiatrists said.

"Valentine's Day is not a day for arguing with your spouse or significant other. In fact, no day is good for that," Dr. Philip Lee and his wife, Dr. Diane Rudolph, both of the NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, and co-heads of the Marital and Family Therapy program, said in a statement. "Although most couples believe it is healthy to clear the air and not keep anger 'bottled up,' constant arguing usually leaves both partners feeling bad about the relationship."

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Instead of screaming and throwing a tantrum about things that make you upset, praise your partner for doing the things that are helpful to you, the psychiatrists said.

"Remember the good old days. Almost everyone remembers the 'early days' of the relationship as more fun than the present," Lee said in a statement. "Say 'thank you.' Show your appreciation for all of the things that your partner does no matter how small or how you may really feel. Something as simple as a 'thank you' can make a dramatic difference in your relationship in a matter of weeks."

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Most of the time a spouse just wants a partner to listen and calmly empathize without saying anything more. Even if it seems pointless, that's often all a person needs, the psychiatrists said.

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