Y11W26VC The four horsemen
In the 1970s, psychologist John Gottman set up a lab where he videotaped couples having ordinary conversations — about chores, money, children. From fifteen minutes of tape, he claimed he could predict with striking accuracy which couples would still be together a decade later. His key finding concerned four specific patterns in conversation that, when present, reliably predicted separation. This week's article examines these four, and what has survived the decades of scrutiny.
Core Vocabulary
contempt
/kənˈtempt/|con·tempt
noun
The feeling that someone or something is worthless or beneath consideration; scorn or disgust directed at another.
Word Breakdown: Latin: contemptus = a slighting, from contemnere = to despise; con- + temnere (to slight)
Word family: contemptuous (adj), contemptuously (adv)
Synonyms: scorn, disdain, disregard, derision
Collocations: express contempt, show contempt, deep contempt, contempt for someone
Example: When one partner rolls their eyes or uses a dismissive tone, they are communicating contempt — one of the most destructive forces in a relationship.
defensiveness
/dɪˈfensɪvnəs/|de·fen·sive·ness
noun
The tendency to react to criticism or challenge by deflecting blame rather than engaging honestly; protective behaviour that avoids accountability.
Word Breakdown: defend + -ive + -ness; Latin: defendere = to ward off
Word family: defensive (adj), defensively (adv), defend (vb)
Synonyms: deflection, self-protection, blame-shifting
Collocations: pattern of defensiveness, defensiveness in conversation, respond with defensiveness, trigger defensiveness
Example: When she raised a concern, his immediate defensiveness — countering every point rather than listening — made the conversation impossible.
stonewalling
/ˈstəʊnwɔːlɪŋ/|stone·wall·ing
noun
The act of emotionally shutting down and refusing to engage during a conflict; withdrawal from communication as a form of self-protection.
Word Breakdown: stone + wall = a wall made of stone (impenetrable); used figuratively for creating an impenetrable barrier to communication
Word family: stonewall (vb), stonewaller (n)
Synonyms: emotional shutdown, withdrawal, disengagement, shutting down
Collocations: resort to stonewalling, pattern of stonewalling, stonewalling in conflict, respond by stonewalling
Example: Stonewalling is often a sign of emotional flooding — the person has become so overwhelmed they can no longer process the conversation.
contested
/kənˈtestɪd/|con·test·ed
adjective
Disputed; subject to disagreement or debate; having competing claims.
Word Breakdown: con- (together) + testis (witness, Latin) = "to call witnesses against" → to dispute
Word family: contest (vb/n), contestation (n)
Synonyms: disputed, debated, challenged, disputed
Collocations: contested claim, contested finding, highly contested, contested space
Example: Whether the four horsemen framework applies equally to all cultures remains a contested question in relationship research.
predictive
/prɪˈdɪktɪv/|pre·dic·tive
adjective
Having the ability to forecast or anticipate future outcomes; serving as a reliable indicator of what will happen.
Word Breakdown: Latin: praedicere = to say in advance; prae- (before) + dicere (to say)
Word family: predict (vb), prediction (n), predictively (adv)
Synonyms: forecasting, prognostic, indicating future outcomes
Collocations: predictive value, predictive model, highly predictive, predictive of outcomes
Example: The four horsemen are highly predictive of long-term relationship breakdown — their presence alone forecasts divorce better than reported satisfaction.
corrosive
/kəˈrəʊsɪv/|cor·ro·sive
adjective
Gradually destructive; wearing away or undermining something over time through persistent action.
Word Breakdown: Latin: corrodere = to gnaw away; cor- (intensive) + rodere (to gnaw)
Word family: corrode (vb), corrosion (n), corrosively (adv)
Synonyms: destructive, erosive, damaging, undermining
Collocations: corrosive effect, corrosive pattern, deeply corrosive, corrosive to trust
Example: Contempt is the most corrosive of the four horsemen — it does not just wound in the moment but gradually destroys the foundation of the relationship.
observable
/əbˈzɜːvəbl/|ob·serv·a·ble
adjective
Able to be seen or measured directly; detectable through observation.
Word Breakdown: Latin: observare = to watch over; ob- (before) + servare (to keep/watch)
Word family: observe (vb), observation (n), observer (n), observably (adv)
Synonyms: visible, detectable, measurable, evident
Collocations: observable behaviour, directly observable, observable patterns, observable in data
Example: Gottman's method was built on the principle that emotional states leave observable traces — in tone, gesture, and expression.
cumulative
/ˈkjuːmjʊlətɪv/|cu·mu·la·tive
adjective
Increasing or building up by successive additions; growing in effect over time.
Word Breakdown: Latin: cumulare = to heap up; cumulus = heap
Word family: accumulate (vb), accumulation (n), cumulatively (adv)
Synonyms: accumulating, building, compounding, progressive
Collocations: cumulative effect, cumulative damage, cumulative build-up, cumulative impact
Example: The damage from repeated contemptuous exchanges is cumulative — each incident adds weight to the pattern, making recovery harder.
Technical Terms
the four horsemen
/ðə fɔː ˈhɔːsmən/|the four horse·men
noun phrase
Gottman's term for criticism, contempt, defensiveness and stonewalling as predictors of relationship breakdown
Synonyms: Gottman's four predictors, the four destructive patterns, the four relationship killers
Collocations: Gottman's four horsemen, exhibit the four horsemen, identify the four horsemen
Example: Gottman's research found that the four horsemen — criticism, contempt, defensiveness, and stonewalling — were so reliably predictive of divorce that their presence alone allowed him to forecast relationship dissolution with unusual accuracy.
criticism
/ˈkrɪtɪsɪz(ə)m/|crit·i·cism
noun
in Gottman's framework, attacking character rather than specific behaviour
Synonyms: character attack, global blame, personal indictment
Collocations: launch criticism, criticism of character, destructive criticism
Example: In Gottman's framework, criticism attacks the person rather than the behaviour — 'you are thoughtless' rather than 'that was a thoughtless thing to do' — and this distinction is what makes it so damaging to relational trust.
contempt
/kənˈtɛmpt/|con·tempt
noun
in Gottman's framework, scorn or disgust, the strongest predictor of breakdown
Synonyms: disdain, scorn, moral superiority
Collocations: express contempt, contempt in relationships, contempt versus criticism
Example: Contempt is Gottman's most powerful predictor of relationship breakdown — it communicates not merely displeasure but moral superiority, treating the other person as beneath consideration rather than as a partner deserving respect.
flooding
/ˈflʌdɪŋ/|flood·ing
noun
overwhelming emotional arousal that prevents productive engagement
Synonyms: emotional overwhelm, physiological overload, emotional flooding
Collocations: experience flooding, flooding shuts down, flooding in conflict
Example: Flooding occurs when the physiological arousal during conflict becomes so intense that rational processing shuts down — heart rate exceeding the threshold at which the body treats the conversation as a genuine physical threat rather than a solvable disagreement.
coding system
/ˈkəʊdɪŋ ˈsɪstəm/|cod·ing sys·tem
noun phrase
a method of classifying observed behaviours systematically
Synonyms: behavioural classification scheme, observational framework, interaction coding method
Collocations: develop a coding system, coding system categorises, use a coding system to analyse
Example: Gottman's coding system allowed researchers to assign a numerical category to each second of observed interaction — transforming qualitative behaviour into quantifiable data that could be analysed for patterns predicting long-term outcomes.
Figurative Phrases
the four horsemen of the apocalypse
the four destructive patterns
Etymology/Type: biblical allusion, figurative
Synonyms: the four destructive forces, the four signs of doom, the apocalyptic four
Example: Gottman borrowed the phrase the four horsemen of the apocalypse deliberately — framing criticism, contempt, defensiveness, and stonewalling as forces that signal not a difficult patch but the beginning of a relationship's end.
take it personally
treat a comment as an attack
Etymology/Type: idiom; not literal taking
Synonyms: interpret as a personal attack, feel wounded as an individual, treat as directed at oneself
Example: The distinction Gottman draws between complaint and criticism is whether the other person will take it personally — a complaint targets a specific behaviour, while criticism targets the person, making a defensive response almost inevitable.
dig your heels in
refuse to move from a position
Etymology/Type: idiom; no literal digging
Synonyms: refuse to change position, become more stubborn, resist more firmly
Example: When one partner digs their heels in during conflict, the other typically escalates — the mutual rigidity producing the gridlock that Gottman identifies as a feature of perpetual rather than solvable problems.
shut down
emotionally withdraw
Etymology/Type: idiom; not literal closing
Synonyms: become unresponsive, withdraw from engagement, cease communication
Example: Stonewalling — shutting down entirely rather than engaging — often develops not as hostility but as a form of self-protection when flooding has made rational engagement impossible.
walk on eggshells
be careful not to provoke
Etymology/Type: idiom; no literal eggshells
Synonyms: be extremely careful to avoid upsetting someone, tread carefully around a sensitive person, avoid triggering a reaction
Example: A relationship in which one partner is always walking on eggshells has typically lost the psychological safety that allows repair attempts to land — the other person so guarded that any bid to reconnect is filtered for threat before it is felt as comfort.
the silent treatment
deliberate refusal to communicate
Etymology/Type: idiom; treatment isn't medical
Synonyms: deliberate non-communication, cold withdrawal, communicative stonewalling
Example: The silent treatment differs from a pause taken for physiological recovery — it is weaponised rather than regulatory, designed to punish through absence rather than to create the calm needed for productive re-engagement.
Confusing Words
contempt vs content
These paronyms are visually and phonetically similar, but they describe entirely opposite emotional states — one is hostile and superior, the other is satisfied and at ease.
- contempt — a feeling of disdain or moral superiority toward another person; the sense that someone is beneath consideration or respect. In Gottman's framework, contempt is the most destructive relationship dynamic because it communicates not merely displeasure but the other person's fundamental unworthiness.
- content — satisfied with one's current situation; at peace with what one has. A content person is not dissatisfied, striving, or resentful. The word is positive in valence and concerns one's own state rather than one's attitude toward another person.
If describing a feeling of superiority or disdain toward another person, use contempt. If describing personal satisfaction or ease with one's own circumstances, use content.
contested vs contentious
Both words describe something that is disputed, but they describe different aspects of that dispute — one focuses on the fact of disagreement, the other on the tendency to cause it.
- contested — disputed; subject to challenge or competing claims. A contested result is one that has been formally challenged. A contested concept is one where scholars disagree about its definition or validity. The word describes the status of something as the object of dispute.
- contentious — causing or likely to cause disagreement; tending to produce conflict. A contentious claim is one that provokes argument because it is provocative or divisive. A contentious person is argumentative. The word describes a quality that produces dispute rather than the disputed state itself.
If describing something that is the object of active disagreement, use contested. If describing something that has the quality of provoking or causing conflict, use contentious.
cumulative vs culminating
Both words describe processes that build over time, but they differ in whether that building is ongoing and additive or reaches a final peak.
- cumulative — increasing by successive additions; building up over time through the accumulation of separate contributions. Cumulative damage is damage that adds up with each instance. The Gottman criticism data is cumulative — each criticism adds to a total that affects the relationship's trajectory.
- culminating — reaching a final high point or conclusion after a period of development. Something that is culminating is approaching its peak or resolution — the process has been building toward this moment. The word implies a destination rather than ongoing accumulation.
If describing a process of ongoing addition that builds over time, use cumulative. If describing a process that has been building toward a specific final point or climax, use culminating.
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