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Preventing
Divorce Starts At
The Beginning of Marriage
Excerpt
By Alan Mozes
NEW
YORK (Reuters Health) - Diamond anniversary or divorce court?
Researchers suggest that the long-term health of a marriage is
rooted in a couple's level of love and commitment as they say
their ``I do's.''
``A successful
marriage is one that has maintained a high level of affection
right from the start, where both partners behave as lovers and
stay that way,'' said study lead author Dr. Ted L. Huston of the
University of Texas at Austin.
Huston and
his colleagues followed the long-term relationships of 168 married
couples, interviewing partners when they first married, throughout
the first 2 years of married life, and finally 13 years after
they had taken their vows. Participants were asked about their
feelings toward their spouse and the marriage in general.
Writing in
the August issue of Current Directions in Psychological Science,
Huston's team reports that couples who were happily together 13
years into their marriage had been deeply in love and in tune
with each other from the very beginning.
In contrast,
those who were unhappily married reported having a more negative
and/or ambivalent relationship toward each other when interviewed
as newlyweds.
The investigators
also point out that, whether good or bad, the general tone of
relationships did not change over time--with the exception that
those who ultimately had a happy marriage ``began to see their
partner as having a less contrary nature than they did when first
were first married, whereas spouses in the other categories did
not change their views of their partner's contrariness.''
Among couples
headed for divorce, some stayed married longer because they appeared
to have unrealistically romantic levels of affection and love
as newlyweds. Men and women in these types of relationships seemed
initially resistant to recognizing and focusing on their spouse's
less appealing qualities, or on their own growing disenchantment
with the marriage.
In contrast,
couples who experienced friction at the very outset of a marriage
headed for the exits at a much quicker pace. The authors theorize
that these couples entered into marriage hoping that the simple
act of ``tying the knot'' would turn discord into bliss--only
to leave the relationship when this proved futile.
The researchers
conclude that partners who maintain long, happy marriages carry
between them a deep love, affection and attachment--feelings that
first began during courtship.
``Most people
think that it's unresolved differences that undermine marriages,
but...it's not that at all,'' Huston told Reuters Health. ``It's
the loss of the bliss and the loss of the romance that's important,
rather than increasing problems or increasing conflicts.''
He added the
couples headed for the rockiest road are those who had either
an extremely long or extremely short courtship prior to marriage.
``Either they
don't know each other very well--they fell in love too quickly
and they have an unrealistic belief that the romance will continue
in the same way over time,'' he said. ``Or it's a long road to
marriage, not because they are learning so much about each other,
but because they have real problems in the relationship that they're
trying to put aside in order to marry. When they discover that
marriage doesn't have any magical properties they often quickly
exit the relationship.''
SOURCE:
Current Directions in Psychological Science 2001;10.
Reference
Source 89
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