Developing Close Relationships - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 28
About This Presentation
Title:

Developing Close Relationships

Description:

Developing Close Relationships The man who trusts no others doesn t trust himself. --Napolean Hill Development of a Relationship Becoming aware our first ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:141
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 29
Provided by: dmaccEduI
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Developing Close Relationships


1
Developing Close Relationships
  • The man who trusts no others doesnt trust
    himself. --Napolean Hill

2
Development of a Relationship
  • Becoming awareour first impressions are the
    points at which we tend to make judgments about
    whether or not we will pursue a relationship
  • Making contactmere exposure to another person
    tends to increase the likelihood of a
    relationship developing
  • Disclosureletting the other person know about
    ourselves

3
Friendship
  • Psychology Today (1979) Qualities of a friend
  • Keeps confidence (89)
  • Loyalty (88)
  • Warmth and Affection (82)
  • Supportiveness (75)
  • Honesty and frankness (73)
  • Sense of humor (72)
  • Willingness to make time for me (62)
  • Independence (61)
  • Good Conversationalist (59)
  • Intelligence (58)

4
Friendship
  • Trust
  • How predictable is the individual?
  • Can I depend upon her or him?
  • Do I have faith in that person?
  • Similaritieswe tend to select friends who are
    similar to us in many different aspects such as
    ethnic background, social status, interests,
    income level, occupation, education level, and
    political preferences.

5
Finding Friendship
  • If we remember that proximity is a major factor
    in developing attraction, placing ourselves in
    situations and places where we can find other
    people with similar interests and needs will be
    key to finding new friends.

6
Opposites Attract?
  • While people who are our opposite are novel and
    sometimes exciting, opposite interests,
    backgrounds, etc. will eventually terminate a
    relationship
  • UNLESS, the needs of the other are complementary
    to our needswhere one persons strengths
    compensate for the other persons weaknesses

7
Social Exchange Theory
  • According to this theory, we tend to measure our
    actions on a cost-benefit basis.
  • In relationships, the cost and benefit are
    measured in intangible or tangible
    resourcesintelligence, attractiveness, warmth,
    social status, etc.

8
How to Win Friends and Influence People
  • Dale Carnegie (1998) outlined six rules for
    winning friends
  • Become genuinely interested in people
  • Smile
  • Remember that a mans name is to him the sweetest
    and most important sound in any language
  • Be a good listener. Encourage others to talk
    about themselves
  • Talk in terms of the other persons interests
  • Make the other person feel important and do it
    sincerely

9
Dating and Mating
  • Courtshipthe process by which two people decide
    to get together and stay together
  • These relationships are so important and we are
    so vulnerable to the effects of rejection and
    abandonment, that we experience many of our
    greatest risks and joys in life through being
    part of a couple. (p. 279)

10
Major hurdles
  • In our quest for love and intimacy, we face the
    challenges of
  • Recognizing what it takes to attract potential
    dates, mates and friends
  • Devising a strategy for meeting them

11
What do we do to make ourselves attractive
  • Flirtingnonverbal courtship signals
  • This set of behaviors generally falls upon the
    female and includes initial eye contact,
    gestures, body orientation, primping, play
    behaviors (teasing, mocking, joking, etc.)
  • It is generally the males role to interpret and
    respond to the flirting behavior

12
Love or Infatuation?
  • In its simplest terms, love is when
    satisfaction, security and development of another
    person is as important to you as your own
    satisfaction, security, and development, love
    exists. (Harry Stack Sullivan, 1953)
  • If you desire happiness for the other person to
    such an extent that it is important, even if you
    are not able to share in that happiness, this is
    love. (Raymond Short, c. 1981)

13
Myths about Love
  • True love lasts forever
  • Love can conquer all
  • Love is a purely positive experience
  • When you fall in love, youll know it.
  • When love strikes, you have no control over your
    behavior.

14
Love is
  • Sternberg (1988) developed a theory that love
    consists of three components
  • Passionan intense physiological desire for
    another person
  • Intimacythe feeling that one can share all ones
    thoughts and actions with another
  • Commitmentthe willingness to stay with a person
    through thick and thin, or for better or worse,
    or in sickness or health.

15
Triangular Model of Love
  • LikingIntimacy alone
  • Empty LoveCommitment alone
  • InfatuationPassion alone
  • Romantic LoveIntimacyPassion
  • Companionate LoveIntimacyCommitment
  • Fatuous LovePassionCommitment
  • Consummate LoveIntimacyPassionCommitment

16
Six Types of Love
  • Game-playingtreating love like a game or sport
  • Possessivewanting to bind the partner to an
    enduring relationship
  • Logicaltreating love as a practical, down to
    earth decision
  • Altruisticsacrificing for the sake of love
    putting another persons happiness above your own
  • Companionateloving, affection, companionate, and
    friendship that develops over time
  • Exoticsheer physical excitement and sexual
    pleasure

17
Love and Marriage
  • Bad Love and Marriage choices (Deangelis, 1993)
  • You care more about your partner than s/he does
    about you (and vice versa)
  • You are in love with your partners potential
  • You are on a rescue mission
  • You have partial compatibility
  • You choose a partner to be rebellious
  • Your partner is unavailable

18
Love and Marriage
  • Psychology Today (1985) most important reasons
    that marriages last
  • My spouse is my best friend
  • I like my spouse as a person
  • Marriage is a long-term commitment
  • Marriage is sacred
  • We agree on aims and goals
  • My spouse has grown more interesting
  • I want the relationship to succeed

19
Will it last?
  • Happily married couples spend a lot of focused
    time together
  • They share many of the same values
  • They are highly flexible
  • Other factors
  • Age at time of marriage
  • Socioeconomic class
  • Length of courtship
  • Family background
  • Personality

20
Expectations
  • As we have explored, expectations are one of the
    key predictors of happiness
  • Realistic expectations about roles, marriage,
    career, childrearing, etc. are keys to marital
    success

21
Conflict and marriage
  • Toxic negative emotions
  • Criticism
  • Contempt
  • Defensiveness
  • Stonewalling
  • Five-to-One Ratio
  • Successful communication is the cornerstone of
    any relationship

22
How to have a happy relationship
  • Learn to Calm down
  • Validate Your Partner
  • Learn to Speak and Listen Non-Defensively
  • Practice, Practice Practice

23
Codependence
  • When one person has allowed another persons
    behavior (abuse, chemical addiction, etc.) to
    affect him or her, and who is obsessed with
    controlling that persons behavior (Beattie,
    2001)
  • Codependency involves a habitual system of
    thinking, feeling and behaving toward ourselves
    or others that can cause us pain.

24
Codependence
  • We depend on the other for our mood
  • We depend on the other for our own worth
  • We depend on the other for their love
  • We may appear strong but feel weak
  • We may appear to be in control but are actually
    being controlled

25
Growing Apart
  • According to Dr. Phil
  • First, do not ever make life-changing decisions
    in the midst of emotional turmoil
  • Second, if you are going to quit, you earn the
    right to quit (McGraw, 2000)

26
Divorce Predictors
  • Your marriage will have a greater chance of
    lasting if
  • You marry after age 22
  • You grow-up in a stable, two-parent home
  • You dated for a long time prior to marriage
  • You are well and similarly educated
  • You have a stable income from a job you enjoy
  • You do not cohabit or become pregnant before
    marriage
  • You are religiously committed
  • You are of similar age, faith and education

27
Divorce Grief
  • Divorce, like any other loss, brings with it
    grief
  • Losses/changes include
  • Loss of emotional support
  • Loss/change in social ties
  • Loss/change in socioeconomic status
  • Loss of hopes and dreams for the future

28
Gay Relationships
  • The dynamics within a gay relationship are not
    different than those in heterosexual
    relationships
  • However, negative social attitudes, prejudice and
    discrimination effect the ways that relationships
    develop and are lived.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com