The Two Things That Keep Families Together Despite Everything

My family disagrees on almost everything. I vote differently from my wife. Different than my kids. Sometimes I'm the only one in the whole household who landed where I did on something. I confess I think they're wrong a lot of the time. But here's what the research actually shows: families that stay together despite deep disagreement aren't conflict-free. They've figured out how to get past it. And the literature is remarkably consistent on what makes the difference. Two things. The same two things, across study after study. A high tolerance for disagreement — not joy in it, just tolerance — and a genuine practice of forgiveness. That second one is hardest with the people closest to you, because the wiring is different. When you're that close to someone, the slights land differently. The stakes feel personal in a way they just don't with a neighbour. There's something else worth saying here. The evolutionary biology on kin groups predicts that we'd extend more tolerance to family, not less. And yet, in our current moment, a lot of people are moving in the other direction. Someone is profiting from that. And it isn't you. The people who don't love you are the ones encouraging you to pull away from the people who do. Where to find Arthur Brooks: • Newsletter: https://www.arthurbrooks.com/newsletter • Website: https://arthurbrooks.com/ • In-person Retreats: https://retreats.arthurbrooks.com/ • X: https://x.com/arthurbrooks • Instagram:   / arthurcbrooks   • Facebook:   / arthurbrooks   • LinkedIn:   / arthur-c-brooks   • Email: [email protected]