If You’re Going To Give An Ultimatum, Do It Right. Experts Share How.

Therapists say an ultimatum isn’t as bad of an idea as you might think, but you have to tread lightly.

Early on in The Ultimatum,” Netflix’s latest dumpster fire of a dating show, host Nick Lachey warns contestants about the central conceit of the show.

“Psychologists agree that an ultimatum is not a good way to get somebody else to do what you want,” he tells the couples, all of whom are there because one partner wants to get married or the other is not so sure.

But since this is ultimately a TV show about ultimatums, Lachey follows up with a caveat: Ultimatums, he tells the couples, are “the best way to get you the answers you need on a timetable you can live with.”

With all due respect to the iconic ’00s boy-bander, psychologists and mental health practitioners we spoke to weren’t as anti-ultimatum as he claims.

“While I agree that using the word ‘ultimatum’ is a bad idea, I don’t agree that setting limits or boundaries in a relationship is bad. In fact, it’s crucial ― and I believe nearly all psychologists agree with that,” Kurt Smith, a therapist in Roseville, California, told HuffPost

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