ATTRACTION, LOVE, INTIMACY, MARRIAGE - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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ATTRACTION, LOVE, INTIMACY, MARRIAGE

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Key ingredient of all long-term relationships: intimacy ... propinquity (geographical closeness) complementarity (opposites attract) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ATTRACTION, LOVE, INTIMACY, MARRIAGE


1
ATTRACTION, LOVE, INTIMACY, MARRIAGE DIVORCE
  • Love
  • Lust
  • Attraction
  • Chemistry
  • Intimacy
  • Friendship
  • Romance
  • Passion

2
  • INTIMATE RELATIONSHIPS
  • Filial
  • Siblings
  • Friends
  • Couple
  • Parent
  • Grandparent/great-grandparent

3
  • Long-term couple
  • Most people end up in a marriage (90)
  • 40 end in divorce
  • Key ingredient of all long-term relationships
    intimacy
  • emotional intimacy attachment, trust, openness,
    vulnerability (exclusivity)
  • physical intimacy sensual or sexual?

4
  • Roots of emotional intimacy primary
    relationship(s) with caretaker(s).
  • Erik Erikson trust vs. mistrust
  • Mary Ainsworth attachment style (secure or
    insecure)

5
  • ATTRACTION
  • What makes us feel attracted to another person?
  • familiarity
  • propinquity (geographical closeness)
  • complementarity (opposites attract)
  • similarity (birds of a feather)
  • looks (especially for women)
  • income, profession, status, power (especially for
    men)
  • common values long term
  • personality short and long term

6
  • Sociobiology
  • The purpose of attraction is to propagate the
    species, transmission of genetic material.
  • Attractive characteristics are those that
    maximize survival of the species.
  • Women young and healthy, physical attractiveness
    highly correlated.
  • Males good providers, tall and strong and with
    obvious material means.

7
  • Marriage?
  • Until about 150 years ago, marriage was not about
    two people in love.
  • The purpose of marriage meet the needs of the
    group by forming alliances with other groups.
  • Through the ages, marriage was an economic and
    political alliance dowry, land, mutual defence
    and enough people to produce wealth, work the
    land, exchange goods.
  • Husband and wife depended on each other to run
    the family enterprise, neither could do it alone.

8
  • Marriage?
  • Was not a religious ceremony but rather a
    symbolic formality (different symbols in
    different societies eating together, exchanging
    gifts, etc.) or even a private agreement.
  • Often marriage used to forge peace or
    non-aggression agreements.
  • From Middle Ages onward, slow changes toward more
    emotional bonds. Women first considered mans
    property, then helpmeet and support.

9
  • Marriage?
  • Most important source of social security, medical
    care and economic support and survival.
  • Being so important for so many people, marriages
    were not decided by the man and woman alone based
    on attraction.
  • Love and lust were abundant, but unrelated to
    marriage.

10
  • Industrial Revolution gradual increase in value
    of the individual, their needs and goals, as
    opposed to needs and goals of family and
    community only.
  • Women traded housekeeping, child-bearing and
    rearing, and sexual satisfaction of their
    husbands for financial security.
  • Good wife good cook and housekeeper, defers to
    husband, loyal, good mother.
  • Good husband NOT drunkard, gambler, womanizer,
    violent. (But rule of thumb).

11
  • Factors that helped usher the love marriage
  • industrialization individual has more value
  • affluence less dependence on family
  • literacy romantic novels
  • later, movies
  • increased longevity
  • secularization
  • women financially independent
  • lower birth rate

12
  • 19th century W. Europe and N. America accept new
    view husbands as providers and wives as
    nurturing homemakers. But only by the 1950s could
    a family survive on only one salary.
  • Love based marriage means that if love fizzles,
    the couple need not stay together rise of
    divorce.

13
  • Expectations are high
  • love
  • passion
  • friendship
  • mutual liking and appreciation
  • sharing many interests
  • companionship
  • intimacy
  • commitment
  • equal participation
  • economic partnership
  • Disappointments also tend to be high.

14
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15
  • Bartholomew and Horowitz (1991)
  • Attachment styles
  • secure
  • preoccupied
  • dismissing
  • fearful
  • Secure
  • see self as lovable, expect others to be
    accepting and responsive
  • Preoccupied
  • see self as unlovable but see others positively,
    seek acceptance by them

16
  • Bartholomew and Horowitz (1991) (Contd)
  • Dismissing
  • see self as lovable but see other negatively, may
    put up barriers for self-protection
  • Fearful see self and others negatively, avoid
    relationships
  • Importance of childhood, family history. Can lead
    to dysfunctional relationships.

17
  • Ability to have long-term, satisfying
    relationships is related to identity development.
  • Four identity types
  • identity achieving
  • moratorium
  • diffuse
  • foreclosed

18
  • Individuals in identity achieving
  • self knowledge
  • ability to focus on each other (not
    self-absorbed)
  • sensitive to partners feelings and needs
  • good communication
  • equal power
  • good conflict management
  • stable relationship

19
  • Partners with foreclosed identity
  • settled early, no search for alternatives
  • accept everything from older generation
  • rigid
  • stable relationships if no change
  • many couples who married in the 50s with
    foreclosed identities are divorcing now

20
  • Partners in moratorium identity
  • identity in crisis
  • self-preoccupied, not sensitive enough to
    partners emotional needs
  • alternate between avoidance and engagement
  • unstable relationship

21
  • Partners with diffuse identity
  • mutual dependency
  • not trying to achieve separate identities
  • rely on each other for self-definition
  • make excessive demands on partner
  • threatened if one attempts independence
  • communication vague
  • repression of conflict and hostility
  • very susceptible to external pressures
  • adult responsibilities, finances,
    parents/in-laws, arrival of children

22
  • TYPES OF INTIMACY
  • Mutual intimacy
  • commit part of self to union but retain
    individuality
  • strong degree of commitment
  • equal sharing of power
  • high levels of communication
  • same basic values
  • accurate perception of partners needs
  • good conflict resolution

23
  • Pseudointimacy
  • interaction at superficial level
  • low level of true communication
  • conflict avoidance rather than resolution
  • can last if mutually convenient
  • can have similar values
  • Merger
  • one dominant partner, one submissive
  • can last if values remain same
  • rigid roles
  • relate in stereotyped ways
  • low awareness of partners emotional needs

24
  • MARRIAGE
  • Young adulthood (20-45)
  • Conflict (Erikson)
  • Independence/loneliness
  • vs
  • Intimacy/loss of freedom

25
  • Advantages
  • intimacy (emotional, physical, sexual)
  • interdependence (sharing resources and tasks)
  • belongingness (Maslow)
  • shared parenting
  • continuity (memories, habits)
  • shared identities (partial)
  • men better mental, physical health, longevity

26
  • Disadvantages
  • constraints of shared decisions
  • loss of privacy
  • need to accept others habits, quirks
  • responsibilities
  • women double shift, others come first

27
  • TYPES OF MARRIAGE
  • Traditional
  • Modern (Sr./Jr. Partners)
  • Contemporary
  • Subjective perceptions differ from objective
  • assessments partners tend to see equality
  • where outside observers dont.

28
  • COHABITATION
  • More common today
  • POSSLQ Persons of the Opposite Sex Sharing
    Living Quarters
  • Young adults courtship, usually precedes
    marriage
  • Middle-aged and old widowed or divorced

29
  • SAME SEX COUPLES
  • Men
  • Relatively low monogamous
  • Women
  • Higher monogamy, serial monogamy common

30
  • DIVORCE
  • 40 Canada, 50 U.S.
  • Correlates with
  • immature identity
  • pseudointimacy
  • women good income
  • less social stigma
  • age of marriage
  • social context
  • expectations

31
  • Costs of divorce
  • children affected Wallerstein into 30s,
    affected their intimate relationships and
    self-esteem
  • increase in physical illness
  • increase in mental illness
  • decreased income, standard of living for women
    mens available income increases by 47, womens
    decreases by 74. Why?
  • women lower income
  • most women keep the children but 50 of fathers
    do not pay support despite court order

32
  • Divorce incidence by religious group, in
  • descending order
  • None
  • Protestant
  • Catholic
  • Jewish

33
  • When is divorce more likely to happen?
  • Within first seven years.
  • Increasingly, in middle age, either during kids
    adolescence (lowest marital satisfaction
    reported) or in the empty nest period.
  • New trend older couples, long past the parental
    stage. Influence of greater life expectancy.

34
  • Some correlates
  • pregnancy before marriage
  • young (under 23) at marriage
  • cohabitation before marriage
  • poverty
  • no religion
  • Longitudinal study with elderly couples
  • Selective memory of conflict if they stay
    together by their 80s declare a happy marriage
    all along. Forget divorce attempts, fights, etc.

35
  • Widowhood
  • More than half women over 65 are widows.
  • Only 15 men over 65 are widowers.
  • Varying time for grieving
  • personality, coping mechanisms
  • previous losses
  • happy or unhappy marriage

36
  • Unhappy spouses
  • longer grieving
  • sanctification
  • Recoupling
  • higher for men
  • Widows who are financially OK enjoy life
  • after acute grief over. More time to self. No
  • longer in purdah.
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