What Are Ways To Stop Yourself from having the last words in conversations?

I'm just wondering what are ways to know that it is consider having the last words in a conversation?

I don't care for having the last words at all.  But when there are still a  little story behind it or facts to it. I would say it. 

When is that still consider having the last words? Just don't say it, even it is the fact(s) or the story behind it. It not the conversation still going on?

What are ways to just not say it, so the other person/people don't say you got to have the last words? So that both sides be happier. So no one quite and not really saying much or not happy when saying other stuff?

What to look for in any conversation and not say it, even when they are true? Just leave it out, let it go?

Anonymous2021-01-23T15:10:37Z

Hola! Como estas? Orthodoxy is the only true faith. How to know if a church is truly Orthodox or not (that is, it's following the antichrist but claims to follow Jesus)? Orthodox has one Jesus cup with one Jesus spoon; priest finishes what's left in the cup after all the sick people ate from it (he never gets sick obviously). Some "churches" recently said that they will not allow one cup one spoon during the Coronavirus pandemic ("COVID-19") [obviously, these are not truly churches and don't have Jesus there (they have antichrist's blood there with hexagram on bread instead of normal IC XC NIKA cross/8sided star of the Mother of Jesus)]. For some, the language in this paragraph will be unclear... sorry then. After China attacks Russia, resurrected saint Seraphim of Sarov will show new Ruski Orthodox Tsar who will slay traitors; currently 300 bishops in Russia; 3 bishops will remain and 297 will be killed as they are traitors. Antichrist will claim that Ruski Orthodox Tsar is too strict (ala saint Tsar Ivan "the Terrible" who didn't kill his son and who did 1200 earthly bow downs each day and now is singing "HOLY, HOLY, HOLY" with the Cherubim/Seraphim). Thanks for reading; if you don't understand the wording; sorry, forgive me. Adios, Amigos!