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Love and Well-Being. Cicilia Evi GradDiplSc ., M. Psi. What is Love?. Romantic love predominant factor in psychological and physical well-being Positive relationship one of the most significant predictors of happiness and life satisfaction Love has property that helps us adapt (bio)
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Love and Well-Being CiciliaEviGradDiplSc., M. Psi
What is Love? • Romantic love predominant factor in psychological and physical well-being • Positive relationship one of the most significant predictors of happiness and life satisfaction • Love has property that helps us adapt (bio) • Social animals need to be involved in groups form tight, close, supportive bonds • Protect those who close to us, especially our children
Marriage and Well-Being • Higher self-reported happiness and life satisfaction • Consistently happier and healthier than single people across all ages, income levels, education levels, racial and ethnic groups • Marriage is the only really significant bottom-up predictor of life satisfaction for both men and women
A significant predictor of subjective WB • Marriages that have more positive interactions, emotional expressiveness and greater role sharing seem to be associated with greater life satisfaction • One important variable: Self-Disclosure • Provide emotional intimacy, trust and openness • Negative side: most frequently reported triggers for depressions!
Interesting findings • Single men are less happy than single women • Married men are as happy or happier than married women • 59% of men rated their love life as ‘Perfect 10’ • Only 47% women rated their love that high
Marriage and Physical Fitness • Positive marital relationships may be associated with: • Longevity • Lower blood pressure, lower physiological reactivity to negative interactions • Greater in men fewer infectious diseases and live longer just by getting married • For women need a good quality of marriage
Sternberg’s Triangular Theory of Love Intimacy Passion Commitment
All the 3 components often progress differently across lifespan • Passion is very high at the beginning • Intimacy increase steadily over time • Commitment may start out very low, but increases over time and reaching the highest point to remain steady • Bias? Ageism?
Finding Romance, Intimacy and Love • Have to be attracted to each other important variables: • Proximity feel comfortable and attracted when they spend time near each other • Physical attractiveness only at initial attraction • Attitude similarity (homogamy) basic values, philosophy of life • Mutual exchange of positive evaluations create interpersonal cycle of risking self-disclosure, being validated by partner, trusted and risking more …
Relationship Satisfaction • What makes relationships good? • Intrapersonal factors something about one or both of the partners • Interpersonal factors something about the relationship between the two people • Environmental influences external factors that impact the relationships in +/- way
Personality Traits • Most wanted: healthy personality confidence, integrity, warmth, kindness, intelligence, dependability, emotional stability, a good sense of humor, loyalty and being affectionate • Predictor of poor relationship: Neuroticism • When people are persistently anxious, worried, fearful and suffer from very low self-esteem • Inhibit capacity to love and to be loved • In individual level determined by smaller unique behaviors
Attributions • Judgment we make about the causes of behaviors • Fundamental attributions error • Other people’s behavior their personality trait (‘too self centered’) • Our behavior temporary aspects (‘under current stress’) • Using different attributions for different positive and negative behaviors
Positive Romantic Illusions • Love is blind! • Positive illusions characteristics in successful relationships • Positive bias toward oneself sense of happiness • Idealized partner’s attributes, exaggerated belief about control in relationships happier couple! • Increase self-esteem • Validation and being supportive negotiating areas of self-evaluation • Not based on avoidance of important information, denial or attempts to escape conflicts
Interpersonal Factors • NBC Polling more time together (31%), better communication (30%), less worries about money (21%), more romance (6%), and more sex (3%) • Dissatisfied couples express more disagreement, less humor and laughter, negative emotions, fewer positive comments, and more criticism • Bids for attention small gestures that help each person stay connected to each other
Environmental/Social Factors • Parental paradox when marital satisfaction drops due to arrival of the children – BUT parental satisfaction rises up until the phase of ‘empty nest’ • Esp after first child mother is anxious about being a good mother, of taking care of the child • But, when husband is showing fondness and each person keeps on paying attention to each other no decline in marital satisfaction
Seven Qualities of A Successful Marriage • My spouse is my best friend • I like my spouse as a person • I believe that marriage is a long-term commitment • We agree on aims and goals • My spouse has grown more interesting over the years • I want the relationship to succeed • Marriage is a sacred institution
What Hurts Relationships? • Conflict #1 cause of marital dissolution • Hostile relationships anger, recriminations, accusations, hostility • Demand-withdraw pattern (Gottman & Gottman, 1999)four steps: • Criticism and complaining from one partner, which results in; • A sense of contempt from the other, that; • Leads to defensiveness, and • End with withdrawal
If the withdrawal is so extreme one leaves the room or withdraws attention in a passive-aggressive and hostile attempt to punish one’s partner stonewalling • Divorce is determined by: level of marital satisfaction, presence of negative affects during conflicts, lack of positive affect in day-to-day interactions, the number of thoughts about divorce, number of bad memories, and the demand-withdrawn communication pattern • One negative act WILL ERASE 5-20 kindness acts!
Social and Cultural Factors • Social expectations cause unseen stress • Shifting and changeable emotional quality of relationships • Cultural polygamy, polyandry, arranged marriage