When two people disagree, sitting face to face and arguing often keeps minds stuck. Research shows that standing up and walking side by side makes it easier to calm down, think with more flexibility, and find a fair next step together.
Psychologists describe a basic drive called locomotion, the inner push to move from one state to another. People who lean into locomotion are more ready to reconcile after a clash, while a focus on assessment, careful judging and comparing, can trap partners in overthinking. In studies, a stronger locomotion mindset made people more willing to resolve conflicts. Walking supports this shift.
Walking together also works on the relationship itself. Moving in the same rhythm can build rapport and reduce “rumination,” which means repetitive negative thinking. A change of setting, especially outdoors, loosens rigid talk patterns and helps new ideas appear. These effects have been observed in people, and similar patterns of quicker reconciliation after movement have been reported in primates.
Practical use is simple. If a dispute starts to loop, suggest a short walk together, side by side, and talk while moving. If walking is not possible, try a joint physical task like light gardening or building something. The key is to engage the body to help the mind move forward.
American Psychologist – Stepping forward together, Could walking facilitate interpersonal conflict resolution? – 2017
A peer reviewed paper argues that walking together can aid conflict resolution through two paths. First, it shifts the individual mind toward flexible, forward moving thinking, which supports reconciliation. Second, it improves the social process by creating shared rhythm, empathy, and cooperative body positions that make joint problem solving easier.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology – Moving on or digging deeper, Regulatory mode and interpersonal conflict resolution – 2017
Across multiple studies, a stronger locomotion motive, the drive to move from state to state, increased people’s motivation and readiness to reconcile. A stronger assessment motive, careful judging and comparing, without locomotion, made reconciliation less likely. This work links basic self regulation styles to real conflict outcomes.
Greater Good Science Center – To resolve conflicts, get up and move – 2022
Peter T. Coleman reviews evidence that physical movement helps break mental and social gridlock in conflicts. He cites studies on locomotion in people, reports related observations in primates, and offers simple tactics such as walking meetings, outdoor movement, and synchronized activities to unstick hard talks.
The Ezra Klein Show podcast with Annie Murphy Paul – Best Of, This conversation will change how you think – 2022
A discussion of “the extended mind”, the view that body, space, and social context shape thinking. It supports the general idea that movement and environment can improve problem solving and stress regulation.
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