Title: Marriages and Families: Changes, Choices, and Constraints Seventh Edition
1- Marriages and FamiliesChanges, Choices, and
ConstraintsSeventh Edition - Nijole V. Benokraitis
- Chapter Six
- Romance, Love, and Loving Relationships
2I Love You Man!!
- Love, both as an emotion and a behavior, is
essential to human survival. - The family is usually our first form of love it
provides not only the necessary physical things
to get by, but it also provides the necessary
emotional support we need to grow up.
3Self-Love
- For social scientists, self-love is an important
part of self-esteem. - Friendshipa friend is someone for whom you feel
affection and respectyou can count on them for
assistance and they can count on you. - Friends can even help you live a longer,
healthier life.
4 Eight Important Qualities of Friendshipby Keith
Davis
- 1. Enjoymentfriends enjoy being together.
- 2. Acceptancefriends accept each other the way
they are. - 3. Trustfriends trust and look out for each
other. - 4. Respectfriends respect each others
judgment.
5Eight Important Qualities of Friendshipby Keith
Davis
- 5. Mutual supportfriends help each other
without expecting anything in return. - 6. Confidingfriends share experiences and
feelings. - 7. Understandingfriends are sympathetic about
each others feelings and thoughts. - 8. Honestyfriends are open and honest. They
feel free to be themselves and say what they
think.
6What Is Love?
- Love includes all of the qualities of friendship
plus three more - Sexual desire
- Priority over other relationships
- Caring to the point of self-sacrifice
- Love, like friendship, is a process that grows
over time.
7What Is love?
- People sometimes make distinctions between loving
someonelike a family member, aunt, uncle, etc. - Being in love for most people is differentthis
is about romantic love. - Both types of love nonetheless are multifaceted,
based on respect, and are often demanding.
8Attraction
- What attracts people to each other? Does
everyone have one true love? Many cultural
norms and values bring us together and it isnt
necessarily as romantic as it seems. - We are influenced by all those around us,
especially our family, when it comes to who we
love.
9Love and Lust
- There is a distinct difference between love and
lust. Psychologists Pamela Regan and Ellen
Berscheid (1999) differentiated among sexual
arousal (or lust), sexual desire, and romantic
love. - They describe sexual arousal is a physiological
rather than a psychological state. Sexual
desire, in contrast, is a psychological state. - Romantic love is an intense feeling that can
provide ecstasy when fulfilled or deep suffering
when the feeling isnt reciprocated.
10Caring, Intimacy,and Commitment
- Love includes caring or wanting to help the other
person. Caring means responding to the other
persons needs. - Intimacy emphasizes feelings of closeness.
Couples experience intimacy when they have shared
history, an identity as a couple, emotional
interest in each other, and share hopes and
dreams for the future (P.M. Brown, 1995). - Commitment is a persons intention to remain in
a relationship and work through any problems. It
doesnt necessarily mean marriage but it may lead
to marriage.
11Caring, Intimacy,and Commitment
- Mutual commitment can arise out of a sense of
loyalty and fidelity to ones partner, a
religious or legal belief in the sanctity of
marriage, or a legal contract.
12Theories about Loveand Loving
- Biological theories maintain that love is
grounded in evolution, biology, and chemistry.
Some evolutionists and biologists see love as
necessary to form long-term relationships for the
continuation of the species. - They may see love as short-lived because it is a
chemical reaction in the brain.
13Helen Fisher of Rutgers University -3 stages of
love lust, attraction and attachment
Stage 1 Lust This is the first stage of love
and is driven by the sex hormones testosterone
and estrogen in both men and women.
14Does love change the way you think? A landmark
experiment in Pisa, Italy showed that early love
(the attraction phase) really changes the way you
think. Dr Donatella Marazziti, a
psychiatrist at the University of Pisa advertised
for twenty couples who'd been madly in love for
less than six months. She wanted to see if the
brain mechanisms that cause you to constantly
think about your lover, were related to the brain
mechanisms of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder. By
analysing blood samples from the lovers, Dr
Marazitti discovered that serotonin levels of new
lovers were equivalent to the low serotonin
levels of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
patients. Love needs to be blind Newly
smitten lovers often idealise their partner,
magnifying their virtues and explaining away
their flaws says Ellen Berscheid, a leading
researcher on the psychology of love. New
couples also exalt the relationship itself. It's
very common to think they have a relationship
that's closer and more special than anyone
else's. Psychologists think we need this
rose-tinted view. It makes us want to stay
together to enter the next stage of love
attachment.
15Stage 3 Attachment Attachment is the bond that
keeps couples together long enough for them to
have and raise children. Oxytocin - The cuddle
hormone Oxytocin is a powerful hormone released
by men and women during orgasm. It probably
deepens the feelings of attachment and makes
couples feel much closer to one another after
they have had sex. The theory goes that the more
sex a couple has, the deeper their bond becomes.
VasopressinVasopressin is another important
hormone in the long-term commitment stage and is
released after sex. Vasopressin (also called
anti-diuretic hormone) works with your kidneys to
control thirst. Its potential role in long-term
relationships was discovered when scientists
looked at the prairie vole. Prairie voles
indulge in far more sex than necessary for
reproduction. They also like humans - form
fairly stable pair-bonds. When male prairie
voles were given a drug that suppresses the
effect of vasopressin, the bond with their
partner deteriorated immediately as they lost
their devotion and failed to protect their
partner from new suitors.
16Theories about Loveand Loving
- Sociological perspectives and some psychological
theories claim that culture, not brain chemistry,
plays the role of Cupid.
17Theories about Loveand Loving
- These theories include
- Attachment theory
- Reisss wheel theory of love
- Sternbergs triangular theory of love
- Lees research on the styles of loving
- Exchange theories
18Attachment Theory
- This theory proposes that our primary motivation
in life is to be connected with other people,
because this is the only true security we will
ever have. - John Bowlby and Mary Ainsworth are researchers
associated most often with this theory. - Several studies have tracked attachment style
from toddlerhood through adulthood and have found
that attachment styles can change over the life
course, regardless of a childs early experiences.
19Reisss Wheel Theoryof Love
- Sociologist Ira Reiss and his associates have
proposed a wheel theory of love, that generated
much research for several decades. Reiss
described four stages of love rapport
self-revelation mutual dependence and
personality need fulfillment.
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21Sternbergs Triangular Theory of Love
- Sternberg said that love has three important
components - Intimacyencompasses feelings of closeness,
connectedness, and bonding. - Passionleads to romance, physical attraction,
and sexual consummation. - Decision/commitmenthas a short- and long-term
dimension. A couple makes a short-term
commitment to love each other, which can turn
into a long-term commitment to stay in love.
22Sternbergs Triangular Theory of Love
- According to Sternberg, the mix of intimacy,
passion, and commitment can vary from one
relationship to another. - Love can vary from one relationship in which
there is no love to another relationship in which
all kinds of love are present.
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24Lees Styles of Loving
- John Lee developed one the most widely cited and
studied theories of love. According to Lee,
there are six basic styles of loving eros,
mania, ludus, storge, agape, and pragma, all of
which overlap.
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26Exchange Theory
- Social scientists often describe love as a social
exchange process. Romantic love and long-term
relationships involve exchange and negotiation.
27Functions of Loveand Loving
- Love ensures human survivalloving someone and
being loved ensures the survival of our species. - Love enhances our physical and emotional
healthnumerous studies have shown a connection
between our emotions and our physical and
emotional health, and love is certainly one of
those essential emotions.
28Functions of Loveand Loving
- Love improves the quality of our liveslove
fosters self-esteem. From a solid basis of love,
children can then go out and face the world with
the emotional support of their families. - Love is funlove doesnt appear out of nowhere,
to get and keep love, one has be active and take
some chances.
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30Experiencing Love
- Who is most likely to be in love? According to
recent research, it is men between the ages of
30-49 and people who are married. Surprised? - For most people caring, trusting, respect, and
honesty are central to loving.
31Are Men or WomenMore Romantic?
- According to research, men are more likely to
fall in love quickly. Both men and women tend to
link love and sex. - Men can be very romantic, but not see love as
necessarily leading to marriage.
32Are Women or MenMore Intimate?
- Men and women show intimacy differently. Women
link intimacy with being held, cuddled, and with
communication. - Men link intimacy with sex.
- For women, sex comes after intimacy, for men, sex
is their way of expressing intimacy.
33Same-Sex Love
- Homophobiathe fear and hatred of homosexualshas
decreased in the past decade. Gay men and
lesbian women are more likely to openly display
their relationships and feelings for one another. - Breakups and all the relationship problems that
heterosexual couples go through also haunt
homosexual couples.
34Barriers toExperiencing Love
- A number of obstacles can block our search for
love - Mass society and demographic factorsbecause we
live in a media age, our face-to-face
conversations and lives have changed. We no
longer need to see people face-to-face to chat or
even to purchase something at a storewe can do
it online, which diminishes our chances of
meeting people.
35Barriers toExperiencing Love
- The double standardour society still
discriminates against women in the sense that if
men have premarital sex it is OK, but if a woman
does that she is labeled a tramp (or worse). - Me First individualismwe are a me first
generation. We want our own needs to be met
first and then we are willing to meet the needs
of othersa real relationship cannot be that one
sided.
36Barriers toExperiencing Love
- Personality and family characteristicsthose
around us have a large influence on who we are
attracted to and with whom we have relationships.
- We are responsible for our own relationships, but
we still look to others for advice, especially
family members, and when our family does not
approve of our dating partner, it makes it more
difficult to pursue that relationship.
37When Love Goes Wrong
- Narcissists are people who have exaggerated
feelings of power and self-importance. They
believe that they are unique. - Narcissistic partners can be dangerous in a
relationship. Depending, of course, on the
person, they may become intensely jealous over
meaningless things and try to control the partner.
38Jealousy
- Jealousy is a form of control of one partner over
another. The person exhibiting the jealousy or
control tries to isolate the victim by becoming
jealous of every minute they spend doing
something besides paying attention to them.
39Are Men or Women More Jealous?
- One researcher found that women are more jealous
of emotional infidelity than of sexual
infidelity. - This could be for two reasons
- 1. They could blame themselvesMaybe I wasnt
there enough for him. - 2. They see an emotional affair as more
threatening because it could develop into a
long-term relationship.
40Jealousy and Stalking
- Some jealous lovers become obsessed and stalk
their former lovers. Stalking behaviors include
telephone harassment, following a person,
threatening a person or their family, or now even
cyberstalking. Many women live in fear for their
lives because the men they once thought loved
them are being abusive.
41Other Controlling Behaviors
- Threats of homicide or suicide, threats against
family members or children, guilt trips,
emotional abuse, and physical abuse.
42How Couples Change Romantic and Long-Term Love
- Long-lasting love provides security and
constancy. - Love usually starts as romantic love which is
characterized by - Finding it impossible to do anything but think
about that one person. - Wildly fluctuating moods.
- Finding it impossible to believe that they will
ever love again. - Fantasizing about how their partner will declare
their love. - Caring so desperately for the other person that
nothing else seems to matter. - Being willing to do anything for the beloved.
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44Love in Long-Term Relationships
- Romance is just a stepping stone to long-term
love. Some characteristics of long-term and
romantic love overlap.
45Love in Long-Term Relationships
- Romantic love is fairly simple compared to
long-term love. - Romantic love is often self-centered, whereas
long-term love is altruistic. - Romance is typically short-lived because love
changes over time. - Long-term love grows and develops, whereas
romantic love is typically immature. - Companionate love is more characteristic of
long-term relationships compared with passion and
game-playing in romantic love.
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47A Global View of Love
- The meaning and expression of love differs from
culture to culture. - Romantic love is an important component of
marriage in about 89 of countries, whereas in
some cultures kinship ties take precedence over
romantic love. - In some countries arranged marriages still exist.