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Communication and relational dynamics

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COMMUNICATION AND RELATIONAL DYNAMICS CHAPTER TOPICS Why We Form Relationships Relational Development and Maintenance Communicating about Relationships – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Communication and relational dynamics


1
Communicationand relational dynamics
  • Chapter topics
  • Why We Form Relationships
  • Relational Development and Maintenance
  • Communicating about Relationships

2
Why We Form Relationships
  • Appearance
  • Is especially important in the early stages
  • Partners create positive illusions, viewing
    another as more attractive over time
  • Similarity
  • We like people who are similar to us
  • Friendships are more likely to last when friends
    are similar to one another

3
Why We Form Relationships
  • Complementarily
  • Differences strengthen relationships when they
    are complementary
  • Each partners characteristics satisfy the
    others needs
  • Reciprocal Attraction
  • We like people who like us usually
  • People who approve of us, bolster our self-esteem

4
Why We Form Relationships
  • Competence
  • We like to be around talented people
  • If a person is too talented it can be difficult
    to be around them because they make us look bad
  • Disclosure
  • Revealing information about yourself can help to
    build liking
  • Not all disclosure leads to liking

5
Why We Form Relationships
  • Proximity
  • We are likely to develop relationships with
    people we interact with frequently
  • Familiarity can also breed contempt
  • Most aggravated assaults occur within the family
  • Rewards
  • Social Exchange Theory
  • Relationships that give us rewards greater than
    or equal to the costs of the relationship

6
Relational Development and Maintenance
  • Models of Relational Development

7
Relational Development and Maintenance
  • Knapps Ten Stages of the Relationship
  • Initiating
  • Communication during this stage is usually brief
  • Simplistic communication is a way of signaling
    you may want to begin a relationship
  • Experimenting
  • After initial contact we decide if we with to
    pursue the relationship further
  • Uncertainty reduction
  • Getting to know others by gaining more information

8
Relational Development and Maintenance
  • Knapps Ten Stages of the Relationship
  • Intensifying
  • The interpersonal relationship begins to develop
  • The expression of feeling becomes more common
  • Giving tokens of affection, hinting and flirting
  • Integrating
  • Parties begin to take on identity as a social
    unit
  • Partners begin to take on each others
    commitments
  • Close friends may begin to speak alike

9
Relational Development and Maintenance
  • Knapps Ten Stages of the Relationship
  • Bonding
  • Parties make symbolic public gestures
  • Commitment is increased during this stage
  • Being together comes to be relied on
  • Differentiating
  • The We orientation shifts back to I
  • The stage is likely to occur when the
    relationship experiences its first feelings of
    stress

10
Relational Development and Maintenance
  • Knapps Ten Stages of the Relationship
  • Circumscribing
  • Partners behave towards each other in old,
    familiar ways
  • Communication decreases in quantity and quality
  • Shrinking of interest and commitment
  • Stagnating
  • No growth occurs
  • The relationship is a hollow shell of its former
    self

11
Relational Development and Maintenance
  • Knapps Ten Stages of the Relationship
  • Avoiding
  • Parties begin to create physical distance
    between each other
  • Unsuccessful couples deal with their problems by
    avoidance, indirectness and less involvement
  • Terminating
  • Includes summary dialogue
  • Depending on each persons feelings, this stage
    can be quite short or drawn out over time

12
Relational Development and Maintenance
  • Models of Relational Development
  • Alternate patters of relational development

13
Relational Development and Maintenance
  • Models of Relational Development
  • Dialectical Perspectives
  • Communicators seek important but inherently
    incompatible goals through their relationship
  • Dialectical Tensions
  • Conflicts that arise when two opposing or
    incompatible forces exist simultaneously
  • Managing dialectical tensions can create the most
    powerful dynamic in relational communication

14
Relational Development and Maintenance
  • Models for Relational Development
  • Dialectical Tensions
  • Connection versus Autonomy
  • We seek out involvement with others
  • We are unwilling to sacrifice our entire identity
    to even the most satisfying relationship
  • One of the most common reasons for relational
    breakups involve failure of partners to satisfy
    each others needs for connection
  • We barely spent any time together.
  • I was feeling trapped.

15
Relational Development and Maintenance
  • Models for Relational Development
  • Dialectical Tensions
  • Openness versus Privacy
  • Along with the need to disclose, we have an
    equally important drive to maintain space
  • Even the strongest relationships require some
    distance
  • Predictability versus Novelty
  • Too much predictability can lead to feelings of
    staleness
  • The challenge is to juggle the desire for
    predictability with the desire for novelty that
    keeps a relationship fresh

16
Relational Development and Maintenance
  • Models for Relational Development
  • Managing Dialectical Tensions
  • In one study married couples reported
  • Connection-autonomy was the most frequent (30.8)
  • Predictability novelty was second (21.7)
  • Openness-privacy was least (12.7)

17
Relational Development and Maintenance
  • Models for Relational Development
  • Managing Dialectical Tensions
  • Other Strategies
  • Denial
  • Reporting to one end of the dialectical spectrum
    and ignoring the other
  • Disorientation
  • Communicators feel so overwhelmed and helpless
    they are unable to confront their problems
  • Alternation
  • Alternating between extremes on the spectrum

18
Relational Development and Maintenance
  • Models for Relational Development
  • Managing Dialectical Tensions
  • Other Strategies
  • Segmentation
  • Partners use this tactic to compartmentalize
    different areas of their relationship
  • Balance
  • Communicators try to balance dialectical tensions
  • Integration
  • Simultaneously accept opposing forces without
    trying to diminish them

19
Relational Development and Maintenance
  • Models for Relational Development
  • Managing Dialectical Tensions
  • Other Strategies
  • Recalibration
  • Responding to dialectical challenges by reframing
    them so that apparent contradictions disappear
  • Reaffirmation
  • This strategy acknowledges that dialectical
    tensions will never disappear

20
Relational Development and Maintenance
  • Characteristics of Relationships
  • Relationships
  • Are constantly changing
  • Are affected by culture
  • Require Maintenance
  • Require Commitment
  • Relation commitment involves a promise
    sometimes implied and sometimes explicit to
    remain in the relationship and make it successful

21
Relational Development and Maintenance
  • Repairing Damaged Relationships
  • Types of relational transgressions
  • Minor versus Significant
  • Recognize problems for what they are
  • Social versus Relational
  • Some transgression violate social, not relational
    norms
  • Deliberate versus Unintentional
  • Transgressions are not always intentional
  • One-time versus Incremental
  • Accidents do happen

22
Relational Development and Maintenance
  • Repairing Damaged Relationships
  • An apology requires three elements
  • An acknowledgment that the transgression was
    wrong I acted like a jerk.
  • A sincere apology Im really sorry. I feel
    awful for letting you down.
  • Some type of compensation If I act that way
    again, you can call me on it.

23
Communicating about Relationships
  • Content and Relational Messages
  • Content Messages
  • The subject being discussed
  • Relational Messages
  • How the parties feel toward one another
  • Types of Relational Messages
  • Affinity
  • Immediacy
  • Respect
  • Control

24
Communicating about Relationships
  • Metacommunication
  • Messages that people exchange, verbally or
    nonverbally, about their relationship
  • Communication about communication
  • Can be used as a way to reinforce the satisfying
    aspects of a relationship
  • I really appreciate it when you complement me
    about my work in front of the boss.

25
Chapter Review
  • Why We Form Relationships
  • Relational Development and Maintenance
  • Communicating about Relationships
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