The Art of Repair: How Small Apologies Build Unbreakable Relationships
On a rainy Thursday night, in a crowded noodle place with fogged-up windows, two arguments were happening at once.
At the table near the door, a couple in their thirties had gone quiet. Ten minutes earlier, you could feel the temperature rising between them—something about money, a snide remark about “your stupid crypto thing,” a sharp reply about “your impulse buys.” Now she was staring at her phone, face locked. He was poking at his ramen as if it had personally offended him.
Their words had stopped, but the fight hadn’t. It had just gone underground.
At the table by the kitchen, another couple was also in a fight, also about something small that was not actually small. He’d shown up late again. Her jaw was clenched, and she was running a fingertip over a water ring on the table, harder than she realized. The air around them buzzed.
Then something different happened.
He exhaled, leaned in, and said, “Okay. I’m being an idiot. I keep saying ‘traffic’ like I was kidnapped by the freeway. I just left late. Again. And you were sitting here alone. Again.” He winced at his own words. “If I were you, I’d be pissed at me.”
Her eyes softened, almost in spite of herself.
He glanced up, searching her face. “I don’t want ‘us’ to feel like… this,” he added, gesturing at the space between them. “Can we rewind a bit and try that again?”
She didn’t smile. But she didn’t look away either. She nodded. Some invisible thread between them, frayed a minute ago, thickened.
One restaurant. Two fights. Very different futures.
Most of us would say the second couple is “good at relationships.” But what they’re really good at is something narrower and stranger:
They are good at repair.
Not avoiding conflict. Not never screwing up. Repairing—catching the moment when something tears, and stitching it back together before the rip spreads.
The longer you watch real relationships up close—marriages, friendships, cofounder partnerships, parent–child bonds—the more a quiet truth appears:
The strength of a relationship is not measured by how rarely things go wrong,
but by how quickly and honestly you fix them when they do.
We’re all amateurs at the thing that matters most: the art of repair.
We think love is made of big moments. The honeymoon period. The perfect vacation. The grand romantic gesture. What the research keeps saying, annoyingly and persistently, is that love is mostly made of small, often awkward, attempts to reconnect after we’ve hurt, disappointed, or simply missed each other.
John Gottman, the psychologist who famously studied couples in his “Love Lab,” found that what separates what he called the “masters” of relationships from the “disasters” isn’t the absence of fights. It’s what happens right after the sparks start flying. He could predict which couples would divorce with over 90% accuracy, often from just a few minutes of watching them argue. What mattered wasn’t the topic—money, sex, in-laws—but whether, inside the conflict, they could make and receive tiny bids for reconnection.(gottman.com)
It turns out that stable couples aren’t the ones who never raise their voices. They’re the ones who, in the middle of an argument about the dishes, can crack a small joke, or say, “I’m sorry, I’m being harsh,” or reach for the other’s hand—and have those gestures land.
Gottman calls those little gestures “repair attempts,” and his research suggests their success or failure is one of the primary factors in whether a relationship flourishes or flounders.(gottman.com)
And they’re usually not grand. Sometimes the “repair” is as unsophisticated as an eye-roll and a half-smile that says, “We’re idiots, aren’t we?” Sometimes it’s a hand on a knee. Sometimes it’s a sincere, “Start over? I want to hear you, but I’m defensive right now.”
We imagine that great relationships are like pristine glass: smooth, untouched, never cracked.
They’re not. They’re more like those Japanese bowls mended with gold.
There’s a name for that: kintsugi. When a piece of pottery breaks, instead of hiding the break, artisans repair it with a lacquer mixed with powdered gold. The seams are visible, even exaggerated. The bowl is not “as good as new.” It’s better, because it has a visible history of being broken and repaired.
Real closeness feels like that. Not flawless, but full of golden seams.
There is something almost subversive in the idea that breaks can make something stronger.
You see it in psychotherapy. For years, researchers assumed that the best therapy was the one where the “therapeutic alliance” between client and therapist was smooth and stable. No fights, no misunderstandings, no tension.
Then people actually studied what happens over time.
They started tracking sessions week by week, charting when the alliance dipped (a “rupture”) and when it rebounded (a “repair”). In large samples of real-world therapies, they found something surprising: treatments that had ruptures followed by repair often had better outcomes than treatments with no ruptures at all.(pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
In other words: the point isn’t to avoid tension. It’s to notice and work through it.
One paper on child psychotherapy even phrases it almost like a credo: ruptures are normal, inevitable events in a relationship, and the therapist’s ability to recognize and resolve them is a key factor associated with good outcomes.(pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
The same dynamic plays out everywhere outside the therapist’s office:
- In friendships that survive a harsh truth.
- In teams that become tighter after a brutal post-mortem.
- In families that manage to say, “I was wrong,” and mean it.
Rupture and repair isn’t a bug in relationships. It’s the operating system.
If repair is so powerful, why are we so bad at it?
Part of the answer lives in a quiet, persistent miscalibration between how bad an offense feels to the person committing it versus the one receiving it.
Psychologist Roy Baumeister and colleagues have written about what they call a “magnitude gap” between perpetrators and victims. When you’re the person who did the hurtful thing, you tend to see the event as an episode, a bad moment, a slip. When you’re on the receiving end, it feels bigger: not just the event itself, but what it implies about your worth, your safety, your place in the relationship.(pscyhologyofevil.wordpress.com)
Think back to the last time you snapped at someone you love.
In your own internal movie, you were probably rushing, stressed, under-slept. You didn’t mean to sound so harsh. If they could just see the context, they’d get it.
From their side, they probably registered: I tried to ask a simple question. You bit my head off. Again. I feel small and stupid.
Same event. Different magnitude.
Layered on top of that is a more general bias social psychologists call naïve realism—the human tendency to believe that we see the world objectively and that anyone who disagrees is mistaken, irrational, or biased.(en.wikipedia.org) If the disagreement is about whether you hurt someone, naïve realism quietly whispers: “I’m just telling it like it is. If you feel hurt, you’re overreacting.”
So when they say, “That hurt,” you don’t experience it as useful information about their inner world. You experience it as an accusation about your character—and a wrong one. The instinctive move is to defend reality as you see it.
“No, that’s not what happened.”
“You’re being too sensitive.”
“I was just joking. Relax.”
Notice what falls out of the sentence.
Any chance of repair.
Beneath all this cognitive scaffolding, there’s something even humaner, and more embarrassing: shame.
To apologize well, you have to look, unflinchingly, at the gap between who you want to be and what you actually did. Even a small apology—“I was late again; you were waiting”—forces a tiny identity crisis.
We are not taught how to stand in that gap.
We’re taught how to tell a compelling story where we’re still the hero. We’re taught how to explain.
There’s one more bias that quietly sabotages repair: the illusion of transparency.
Thomas Gilovich and colleagues used this phrase for our tendency to overestimate how obvious our internal states are to others. People in their studies thought their lies, their disgust, their anxiety were far more apparent to observers than they actually were.(scholars.northwestern.edu)
Translated to relationships, the illusion of transparency sounds like this:
“She must know I didn’t mean it.”
“I feel so guilty; obviously he can tell.”
“I’ve been extra nice all day; they can see I’m sorry.”
From your side, the remorse is deafening. From theirs, it’s often invisible. Unless you say something, they mostly see… normal behavior plus distance.
So we have a terrible set of ingredients:
- We underestimate how bad our actions feel to others.
- We overestimate how obvious our remorse is.
- We experience their pain as a threat to our identity.
- And we’re sure we’re seeing the situation clearly.
Against that backdrop, a good repair isn’t natural. It’s a learned, almost counterintuitive move.
You can watch the art of repair at work in the smallest, most mundane moments.
Gottman uses the language of “bids for connection” to talk about those micro-moments where one partner reaches out emotionally: “Look at that bird,” “Listen to this meme,” a sigh that means “ask me what’s wrong.” In his lab, couples who were still married six years later had turned toward these bids 86% of the time; couples who had divorced turned toward only about 33%.(gottman.com)
Every time you notice a bid and respond—even with a grunt or a glance—you’re making what he calls a deposit in the “Emotional Bank Account.”(gottman.com) Over time, that account determines how much strain your relationship can absorb when things go wrong.
Repair attempts are like emergency transfers into that same account in the middle of a storm.
They sound like:
“I’m sorry. That came out harsher than I meant.”
“Can we pause? I really want to understand you, and I’m getting flooded.”
“I know we’re fighting, but I love you. We’re on the same team, even if we’re messing this up.”
They look like:
- A half-joke that takes the temperature down.
- A self-deprecating comment that deflates your own righteousness.
- A hand reaching across the table.
Gottman’s research finds that the most effective repair attempts are often made in the first few minutes of conflict—little, often emotional gestures aimed at re-establishing connection (“We’re okay,” “I get it,” “I’m partly responsible”) rather than cool, logical problem-solving.(rsc.byu.edu)
Wait too long, and the nervous system is flooded, phones have been slammed down, doors closed. At that point, even a beautifully worded apology might bounce off.
The good news is that when partners have a strong foundation of friendship—those repeated deposits through everyday bids—repairs don’t have to be poetic. One Gottman therapist notes that for some couples, even a goofy facial expression can be enough to de-escalate, as long as it’s riding on a base of respect and fondness.(gottman.com)
If you don’t have that base, the world’s most artful apology can land with a dull thud.
Repair is not just what you say when things break. It’s the accumulation of how you’ve shown up when things were fine.
So what does a “good” repair actually consist of?
Luckily (or unluckily), there’s been more lab work on apologies than on most things people argue about at dinner.
One line of research looks at the components of an apology. It turns out that just saying “I’m sorry” is rarely enough. Apologies that include clear expressions of regret, explicit acceptance of responsibility, and some concrete offer to make amends are perceived as more sincere and are more likely to be accepted.(ro.ecu.edu.au)
Think about the difference between:
“I’m sorry you feel that way.”
and
“I’m sorry I interrupted you in the meeting and dismissed your point. I can see how that made you feel small. Next time I’ll make a point of asking for your opinion instead of talking over you.”
The first is technically an apology. It focuses on the other person’s feelings as the problem.
The second locates the problem in your behavior, names the specific action, acknowledges impact, and makes a commitment about the future.
Unsurprisingly, in experiments, apologies that are responsibility-oriented—“I did X, it caused Y, here’s how I’ll address it”—tend to lead to higher levels of forgiveness than those that just express sympathy.(sciencedirect.com)
Interestingly, even the effort you put into the language of an apology matters. A recent study published in the British Journal of Psychology found that longer, more elaborately worded apologies were perceived as more sincere. An apology that used unusually long, effortful words—“I did not mean to respond in a confrontational manner”—was rated more apologetic than a simpler version with the same meaning. The interpretation was that people intuitively use more verbal effort when they feel genuine remorse, and recipients read that effort as sincerity.(theguardian.com)
“Wordier” isn’t always better in real life; nobody wants a three-page corporate non-apology manifesto. But the principle is useful: when your apology clearly costs you time, attention, and ego, it lands differently than a perfunctory “my bad.”
Apologies also don’t operate in a vacuum. Forgiveness researchers like Michael McCullough have found that empathy plays a powerful role: when people are guided to imagine the offender’s perspective, they tend to feel more forgiving, which in turn predicts less avoidance and revenge and more willingness to reconcile.(michael-mccullough.com)
And apology and forgiveness don’t just affect the relationship. They affect the body.
In one lab study, participants were put through an interpersonal stressor—they were harassed by an experimenter while doing a frustrating math task. Later, some of them received an apology from the harassing experimenter, some didn’t. People who scored higher in trait forgiveness recovered faster physiologically; their blood pressure returned to baseline more quickly. And those who received an apology showed greater heart rate variability recovery than those who never heard “I’m sorry.”(pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Your cardiovascular system, it seems, likes repair.
Good repair, then, begins to look like a cluster of moves rather than a single line:
- You recognize that something has ruptured. You don’t minimize it into oblivion.
- You take responsibility for your part without litigating the entire case.
- You show that you understand, or are at least trying to understand, the impact on the other person.
- You offer some small, concrete step to prevent the same harm next time.
- And you express, in words or gestures, that the relationship matters more to you than being right.
You almost always have to do this before you’re fully comfortable, and before your ego has finished cleaning up your own internal story.
That’s what makes repair a discipline rather than a reflex.
All of this focuses on the person who did the hurting. But there’s another half to the art of repair that gets much less attention:
Being repairable.
That is: becoming the sort of person who can recognize and accept the other’s imperfect repair attempts instead of swatting them away.
This sounds straightforward until you notice how good it feels, in a twisted way, to stay righteously wounded.
If you’ve been on the receiving end of real and repeated harm, the idea of being “forgiving” can even feel like a further injustice. There’s research suggesting that, in some marriages, people who forgive too readily in the face of ongoing bad behavior may actually end up experiencing more psychological and physical aggression over time.(cambridge.org)
So being repairable is not about accepting anything. It’s about drawing a fierce line between two situations:
- The chronic pattern of violation with no real effort to change.
- The ordinary hurt between basically well-intentioned people who are trying, clumsily, to make things better.
In the second case, the ability to accept repair turns out to be powerful.
In a remarkable longitudinal study, researchers followed individuals from infancy into their adult romantic relationships. They found that what best predicted people’s relationship satisfaction was not their own ability to recover from conflict, but their partner’s. Having a partner who could de-escalate and move on from fights—a partner who could repair—predicted more positive emotions and greater relationship satisfaction and even buffered people who had insecure attachment histories.(pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
But notice the implication: for that partner’s repair attempts to matter, the other person had to be willing to meet them. To trust them enough to let the nervous system unclench.
Here, too, therapy research offers a metaphor. Alliance ruptures are common; what predicts good outcome isn’t the absence of tension but whether the therapist can recognize it, take responsibility for their part, and work it through with the client. When that happens, not only does distress drop; the bond becomes more resilient than before.(pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
In a close relationship, we co-create that dynamic. The other person can offer to repair; only we can decide to step into that offer.
When a friend texts, “Hey, I’m sorry I bailed last minute. That was crappy of me,” you have power. You can reply:
“Yeah, it was. I’m over this.”
Or:
“Yeah, it stung. Thanks for saying that. Can we talk about it?”
The first reply protects your pride. The second protects the relationship.
If you want to see the art of repair in its pure form, watch a good parent after they mess up.
Not the Instagram-perfect parenting moments. The ones in kitchens at 8:45 p.m. when everyone is tired and someone has just yelled at a six-year-old for spilling milk.
In those moments, something like this sometimes happens:
Twenty minutes later, after the chaos has ebbed, the parent sits on the edge of the kid’s bed.
“Hey, buddy,” they say quietly. “Remember when I yelled about the milk?”
The kid nods, wary.
“That scared you, huh?”
A tentative nod.
The parent takes a breath. “You didn’t do anything wrong by spilling. I was already stressed, and I took it out on you. That wasn’t fair. I’m sorry.”
The kid’s shoulders loosen almost imperceptibly. The story that was congealing in their mind—I make Daddy mad; when I make mistakes, I get yelled at—is quietly rewritten: Sometimes Daddy messes up too, and he says so.
Gottman has extended his idea of bids for connection into parenting as well. A child saying, “Will you play with me?” or simply raising their arms to be picked up is making an emotional bid. When parents turn toward those bids—responding with attention instead of dismissal—they build what he calls the child’s Emotional Bank Account, a sense of felt security that they matter and are seen.(gottman.com)
Repair after a rupture is like a massive deposit into that account.
It teaches a lesson that few of us receive explicitly: people can be angry and still love you; mistakes can be acknowledged without exile; relationships can be restored after they go off the rails.
In many ways, the art of repair is the art of not letting isolated bad moments harden into global, lifelong narratives.
“This is who I am.”
“This is who you are.”
“This is what we are.”
Instead, we get to say, “That was a bad moment. Let’s work on it.”
We often imagine the alternative to repair as neutrality: we don’t address the hurt, but life goes on.
That’s not what happens.
When a bid for repair is missed or rejected, something subtle shifts. Gottman’s early lab work watching couples in apartments found that husbands who later divorced had ignored their wives’ bids for connection about 82% of the time; in marriages that stayed intact, that number dropped to 19%.(washington.edu)
Those weren’t spectacular betrayals; they were tiny turning-away moments. A question brushed off. A sigh unheard. A “look at that” met with a blank stare at a phone.
Every unacknowledged bid, every repair attempt that bounces off, adds a grain of sand to a growing dune of “You don’t care.” Eventually, people stop bidding. Once they stop, the relationship often looks eerily calm from the outside. No fights. No repair. Just… nothing.
So a lot is riding on what you do in the ten seconds after you feel that pinch—when you notice that you just pulled away, or snapped, or said the thing you promised yourself you wouldn’t say next time.
In that narrow window, you get to decide whether this will be a tiny tear that gets stitched, or the beginning of a slow rip.
Imagine two long-term friendships, both spanning twenty years.
In the first, the friends are careful, almost exquisitely so, never to say anything that might trigger a conflict. They avoid controversial topics. They don’t give much feedback. When they feel hurt, they swallow it. When one cancels three times in a row, the other smiles, “No problem!” and then quietly stops initiating plans.
In the second, the friends fuck up constantly. They forget birthdays. They give each other advice that lands wrong. They occasionally step on each other’s raw spots. But they also have a habit of circling back.
“Hey, I’ve been thinking about our conversation last week. I realized I was kind of dismissive when you were telling me about your job stuff. I’m sorry. I want to understand what you’re going through. Can we revisit it?”
Or:
“I know I keep flaking on you. It is a big deal. I don’t want to be that kind of friend. I’ve blocked off next Thursday and I’m buying dinner.”
On paper, the first friendship looks more harmonious. Fewer overt conflicts.
In reality, the second one is often deeper.
Why? Because every repair is a proof-of-concept: We can survive this.
Every time you walk through the cycle—rupture, discomfort, admission, repair—you’re teaching each other:
- It’s safe to tell the truth here.
- This relationship can handle strain.
- You don’t have to be perfect to be loved.
Over years, that’s what intimacy is: shared evidence that we can hurt each other, and also heal.
If the art of repair is that powerful, how do you actually get better at it?
Not as a list of “five steps,” but as a lived pattern.
It starts earlier than we think. Long before you’ve stormed out of the room, there’s usually a faint micro-moment where you realize you’re off.
You feel your shoulders tighten. Your replies get a little shorter. Your partner says, “You seem checked out,” and you insist you’re fine while typing a bit too hard.
Those are rupture seeds. They are easier to work with before they become full-grown fights.
In Gottman’s research, many of the most effective repairs were preemptive: moments in the first three minutes of a conflict where someone said or did something that established emotional connection—humor, affection, a moment of self-disclosure, an “I get it,” a partial taking of responsibility.(rsc.byu.edu)
These are the moves that sound small and feel enormous:
“Okay, I can hear I already sound like a jerk. Let me try that again.”
“I’m getting defensive because this touches my insecurity about money. I still want to talk about it.”
“I love you. This topic freaks me out. Can we go slower?”
There is no script, only intent: signal that the relationship matters more than the position you’re arguing.
Then, when you’ve inevitably blown past the warning lights and said something that actually hurts, the next move is unbelievably simple and unbelievably hard:
Name exactly what you did, without the word “but.”
“I snapped at you when you asked that question.”
“I made a joke at your expense in front of your friends.”
“I dismissed your idea in that meeting.”
The temptation at this point to quote the context—to explain your stress level, your history, your reasons—is overwhelming. That’s because you are trying to repair not the relationship, but your self-image.
The person in front of you doesn’t need your self-exoneration. They need to know you see what happened.
From there, you can take one step further and articulate the impact as best you understand it:
“That probably made you feel stupid in front of them.”
“I can imagine you felt small and unimportant.”
“You looked hurt, like you’d been ambushed.”
You will sometimes get that impact wrong. That’s okay. You can always ask: “Is that what it felt like?” and listen without arguing when they answer.
Only then does the classic “I’m sorry” really mean anything.
And at some point, often shorter than your guilt would like, you will be at a crossroads: do we stay in endless dissection of who did what, or do we look forward?
The artful repair usually includes some concrete, verifiable future commitment that is small enough you might actually keep.
“Next time, I’ll tell you I’m feeling overwhelmed before I lose it, even if I can’t fix it in the moment.”
“At the next team meeting, I’ll explicitly credit you for the idea I talked over.”
“Tomorrow night, I’m putting my phone in the other room from 7 to 9 so I’m actually present.”
These sound like “small things.” But in Gottman’s world, “small things often” is the whole strategy.(gottman.com)
A relationship with frequent, sincere micro-repairs is like a body with a good immune system. You still get cuts. They just don’t get infected as often.
There is one more uncomfortable part of the art of repair: noticing the ways we quietly block repair, both in ourselves and others.
Sometimes we refuse to apologize because we’re secretly afraid that if we admit this one wrong, the other person will pull a thread and unravel everything good about us.
Sometimes we refuse to accept apologies because we’re afraid that if we let go of our anger, we’ll also let go of our leverage, and the other person will hurt us again.
Sometimes we escalate even after a repair attempt because, somewhere in us, the taste for righteous pain is stronger than the taste for closeness.
The psychology literature has a term—“the tendency for interpersonal victimhood”—for a chronic stance of seeing oneself as a victim in many situations, with associated biases in interpretation and memory. People high in this tendency tend to perceive offenders’ acts as more severe and more illegitimate, and to discount their attempts at repair, compared to others.(researchgate.net)
That doesn’t mean hurt is never real. It just means that our minds are not neutral observers. We are capable of holding onto wounds in a way that feels like self-protection but functions as self-poisoning.
The art of repair asks a very unromantic question:
What do you want more in this moment—to be right about how badly you were treated, or to be closer?
There are times when the answer should absolutely be “to be right.” If someone has crossed a boundary repeatedly, if there is abuse, manipulation, or bad faith, your job is not to help them feel less guilty. It’s to protect yourself.
But if we’re honest, many daily conflicts with people we love aren’t like that. They’re two basically decent, flawed humans stepping on each other’s toes.
In those moments, choosing closeness over eternal correctness is an act not of surrender, but of courage.
It means letting the other person’s apology count for something. It means letting the relationship be stronger than your story of the fight.
We live in a culture obsessed with the front end of relationships: finding the right person, designing the perfect onboarding for employees, nailing first impressions with customers, curating our dating profiles, our feeds, our brands.
We pour immense energy into how things start.
We spend far less time on the boring, tender, technical craft of what to do when things, inevitably, break.
There’s a business analogy here that’s almost too on-the-nose: airplanes are not safe because their parts never fail. They are safe because every failure is investigated, learned from, and used to redesign the system so that the same failure is less likely next time.
Healthy relationships work like that too.
They’re not made of people who never say the wrong thing. They’re made of people who are willing to examine what happened, admit uncomfortable truths, and then change tiny behaviors in the future.
We could teach this in schools far more concretely than we do. Instead of generic exhortations about “communication,” we could model and practice actual lines:
“I want to repair something from this morning.”
“When you said X, I made it mean Y. Is that what you intended?”
“I’m feeling defensive and I want to stay in the conversation; can you give me a minute?”
These are not natural phrases. They feel stilted until they don’t. Like any craft, you fake it before you make it.
You will overdo it. You will underdo it. You will apologize too much in some seasons and too little in others. You will give long-winded apologies when a simple “I was wrong” would have done, and you will toss off a flippant “my bad” where your partner needed to see you sweat.
But over years, if you keep tending to the golden seams, something changes.
The people in your life begin to relax around you. Not because you never hurt them, but because they trust that when you do, you’ll care enough to come back and mend it. You, too, will begin to relax, because you’ll trust that your own mistakes are survivable.
If you have children, they may grow up with a quiet, radical expectation: that grown-ups say “I’m sorry” and mean it, and that relationships don’t shatter at the first crack.
If you have a partner, they may, one day, in some fight neither of you remember clearly, look across the table at you in a noisy noodle place and, in the middle of their anger, think, We’ll figure this out. We always do.
That faith is not magic. It’s the product of hundreds of small, unglamorous acts of repair.
In the end, the art of repair is not about learning perfect words. It’s about rearranging your loyalties so that being good to each other becomes more important than looking good to yourself.
It’s about believing that, if breaking is possible—as it always is—then fixing is possible too.
Curated Resources
- “The Magic Relationship Ratio, According to Science” by The Gottman Institute:
- “How to Apologize (and Why It Matters)” by The School of Life:
- “How to Fight Fair in Relationships” by Kati Morton:
- “Bids for Connection: The Secret to Lasting Relationships” by The Gottman Institute:
- “The Psychology of Forgiveness” by SciShow Psych:
- “The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work” by John M. Gottman & Nan Silver (2015):
- “The Relationship Cure: A 5 Step Guide to Strengthening Your Marriage, Family, and Friendships” by John M. Gottman & Joan DeClaire (2001):
- “Interpersonal Forgiving in Close Relationships” by Michael E. McCullough, Everett L. Worthington Jr., & Kelly C. Rachal (1997):
- “Recovering From Conflict in Romantic Relationships: A Developmental Perspective” by Salvatore et al. (2011):
- “The Illusion of Transparency: Biased Assessments of Others' Ability to Read One's Emotional States” by Thomas Gilovich, Kenneth Savitsky, & Victoria H. Medvec (1998):
- “Beyond ‘I am sorry’: Investigating the impacts of apology type and language style on customer forgiveness in service recovery” by Wang et al. (2025):
- “The Effect of Apology on Forgiveness: Belief in a Just World as a Moderator” by Gabriel Nudelman & Arie Nadler (2017):
- “If You Believe That Breaking Is Possible, Believe Also That Fixing Is Possible: A Framework for Ruptures and Repairs in Child Psychotherapy” by Avi Sadeh et al. (2020):
- “The Tendency for Interpersonal Victimhood: Conceptualization, Cognitive and Behavioral Consequences, and Antecedents” by G. Shnabel et al. (2023):
- “Small Actions Make Big Impacts” by The Gottman Institute (2022):