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Title: Marriages and Families: Changes, Choices, and Constraints Seventh Edition


1
Marriages and FamiliesChanges, Choices, and
ConstraintsSeventh Edition Nijole V.
Benokraitis Chapter Ten Marriage and
Communication in Intimate Relationships
2
Why Do People Marry?
  • In our culture, we assume that people get married
    because they love each other. In fact, the
    principal reasons for marriage reflect moral or
    religious views and social norms that its the
    right things to do. We marry for a variety of
    reasons.

3
Some of the Right Reasons for Getting Married
  • Love and companionshipthe single greatest
    attraction of marriage is continuous, intimate
    companionship with an intimate partner.
  • Childrena very traditional reason for getting
    married.
  • Adult identityyou have finally grown up!
  • Commitment and personal fulfillmentan
    overwhelming number of Americans (88) say
    marriage should be a life-long commitment.
  • Continuity and permanencemarriage promises
    stability!

4
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5
Some Wrong Reasons for Getting Married
  • Social legitimacygetting married to legitimate
    an out-of-wedlock pregnancy.
  • Social pressuresometimes parents pressure their
    children that havent married, especially if they
    are pregnant.
  • Economic securitysome marry others for their
    moneytypically these marriages dont last.
  • Rebellion or revengeyoung people sometimes do
    this to their parents.
  • Practical solutions to problemsthese types of
    relationships tend not to last either.

6
What Do We Expect from Marriage?
  • Marriage rituals are a cultural rite of passage
    in almost every culture.
  • Traditionally,an engagement formalizes a couples
    decision to marry.
  • It sends a hands off message to other
    interested parties.
  • It gives both partners a chance to become better
    acquainted with their future in-laws.
  • It provides each partner with information about a
    prospective spouses medical conditions.
  • It legitimates secular or religious premarital
    counseling.
  • It signals the intent to make the union permanent.

7
The Wedding
  • Typically legalizes and legitimizes the marriage
    to family, friends, and witnesses.
  • Does a marriage last longer if it is traditional?
    There are no national data, but family
    practitioners emphasize that the wedding is less
    important than the marriage.

8
Love and Prenuptial Agreements
  • Prenuptial agreements are common among the very
    wealthy. There are advantages and disadvantages
    to prenuptial agreements.

9
Types of Marriages
  • Types of Marriage in the United States
  • On the basis of a study of 400 upper-middle-class
    Cuber and Haroff (1965) identified five types of
    marriages.

10
Types of Marriages
  • Conflict-habituated marriagethe partners both
    fight verbally and physically but do not believe
    that fighting is a good reason for a divorce.

11
Types of Marriages
  • Passive-congenial marriagethe partners have a
    low emotional investment in their marriage and
    have low expectations of each other. Fairly
    independent of each other, they often find
    intimacy in other relationships. They often both
    maintain separate activities and interests.

12
Types of Marriages
  • Devitalized marriagethe partners were deeply in
    love when they married. As the years go by, they
    spend their time together raising children,
    entertaining, and meeting community
    responsibilities, but begin to do so out of
    obligation rather than love.

13
Types of Marriages
  • Vital marriagethe partners lives are closely
    intertwined. They spend a great deal of time
    together, resolve conflicts through comprise, and
    often make sacrifices. They consider sex
    pleasurable and necessary.

14
Types of Marriages
  • Total marriage similar to a vital marriage, but
    more encompassing. Partners participate in each
    others lives at all levels and have few areas of
    tension or hostility.

15
What Is Important in a Successful Marriage?
  • Compatibility
  • Flexibility
  • Positive attitude
  • Communication and conflict resolution
  • Emotional support

16
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17
Cross-Cultural Variations in Marriage Types
  • LAT (Living Apart Together)
  • Example Chinamen work temporarily in nearby
    urban areas while women and children stay in the
    rural areas.

18
Marital Success and Happiness
  • Social scientists studied people who had been
    married over 50 years. They all had one important
    thing in commona sense of humor.

19
Are Married Couples Happy?
  • As an overall group, women tend to be less happy
    in marriages than men.
  • Because happiness is a self-reported and
    subjective measure, its impossible to know how
    respondents define it in marriage.

20
How Does Marriage Affect Health?
  • Health benefits of marriage
  • Selection EffectHealthy people are attracted to
    other healthy people, thus they select to be with
    others who are healthy.
  • Protection EffectMarriage itself makes people
    healthier. Receiving emotional, social, and
    financial support actually helps make people
    healthier.

21
Gender and Health
  • Many studies report that women are less healthy
    than men who are married. On average, women live
    longer than men, but unlike husbands, many wives
    experience depression and other health problems.
  • Why are husbands healthier? They enjoy emotional
    capital, because wives promote nurturance.
  • If their wives work more than 40 hours a week,
    however, their husbands are less healthy than
    other husbands.

22
Marital Quality and Health
  • Marriage and life satisfactiongenerally married
    people tend to be happier than unmarried people
    because marriage makes an already happy life
    better.
  • Troubled marriagesthe quality of our marriages
    is critical for our emotional and physical
    well-being.

23
Marital Roles
  • Marital roles are the specific ways in which we
    interactit defines the behavior and the
    structure of the marriage.
  • New roleswhether his marriage is better than
    hers is debatable, but there are many gender
    differences in modern marriage roles.

24
Marital Roles
  • Wifework includes
  • Performing up to ¾ of the unpaid housework
  • Assuming total responsibility for the husbands
    emotional caretaking
  • Taking full responsibility for child care and
    drudgework
  • Monitoring his physical well-being
  • Preparing meals tailored to his tastes
  • Maintaining his extended family relationships

25
More Roles
  • Marriage also increases the number of roles that
    each partner performs, thereby raising the
    possibility of role conflict.

26
Gender
  • The amount of housework that American women and
    men do has changed considerably. Men do
    considerably more housework now than they did in
    the past. However, of the two, women are doing
    considerably more than their husbands.

27
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28
Children
  • Child rearing is highly rewarding, but it is also
    a 24-hour, 7-day job! It is physically and
    emotionally exhausting.
  • Women do more housework and men do less when the
    children arrive.
  • Social classthe division of household labor also
    has to do with social class. The higher a wife's
    socioeconomic class the more likely it is that
    her husband will help with the tasks.

29
Domestic Rolesand Marital Quality
  • Men are usually happy in their marriage when
    theres greater equality in decision-making but
    not in housework.
  • Women are happier when theres greater equality
    in decision-making and when the spouses share
    more equally in the housework.
  • What happens when there is a gender gap in
    domestic roles? In time, women feel worn out and
    may become dissatisfied with the relationship.

30
How Marriages Change Throughout the Life Course
  • The Early Years
  • After the vowsthe first year involves basic
    adjustment. One adjustment for both is the new
    basic roles of husband and wife. One new basic
    role for both includes setting the role above all
    others.
  • Settling inif both partners grew up in a home
    where there was equality, they are much more
    likely to share in everything equally.

31
Young Children
  • Socializing children takes enormous time and
    patience. Families with young children spend
    much of their time living up to cultural
    expectations.
  • Adolescentsraising adolescents is difficult.
    The chance of family stress increases as the
    child gets older.

32
Marriage at Midlife
  • The most common adjustment at midlife is divorce
    and remarriage.
  • Intergenerational tiesOur family of origin plays
    a significant role in shaping our values over our
    lifetime.

33
Relationshipswith the In-Laws
  • After couples marry, the most squabbles are
    between the female in-laws. Brides may feel that
    they dont yet know their place in the family.
  • We dont have clearly delineated roles for what
    elders in our society elders are supposed to do.
  • Tension is compounded because of generational
    differences, particularly after the birth of a
    grandchild.

34
Marriage in Later Life
  • Many older couples describe their marriage as the
    best years of their lives. They have developed
    trust and intimacy over the years but in later
    life another adjustment has to be maderetirement
    and new life goals.
  • Adjustment to retirement can be difficult for
    some, especially for men when their jobs have
    generally been their identity.

35
Communication
  • Communication is a key to successful
    relationships. Our most intimate communication
    is usually with our families, but being able to
    communicate well among our friends and others can
    help as well.

36
Sex Differences in Communication
  • Males and females do communicate differently, but
    just how differently is still up for debate.
  • Women tend to use more communication to develop
    relationships. Women talk more on average per a
    day.
  • Men tend to use less words per day and they give
    speech to get special points across.

37
What Do CouplesFight About?
  • Men complain that women give them the silent
    treatment, bring up things the men have done in
    the remote past, are too critical and stubborn in
    never giving in.
  • Women complain that men forget important dates,
    dont work hard enough at their jobs, nosily burp
    or pass gas, and stare at other women.

38
Money
  • Nationally, 51 of American dont talk about
    money before marriage and another 4 lie about
    their finances.
  • In another national survey, 84 of couples said
    that money creates tension in their marriage
    several times a week or more.

39
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40
Housework
  • There is considerable concern over housework and
    who has to do it. 24 of husbands and 31 of
    wives say that household chores are a major
    source of friction in their household.

41
Fidelity and Sex
  • In practically every recent national survey,
    sexual infidelity is at the top of the list of
    concerns that couples have.

42
Children
  • Children can cause tremendous joy and tremendous
    strain on a relationship.
  • Partners need to talk about parenting before they
    have a child.

43
Conflict
  • Conflict is normal, but how a couple deals with
    it is important.
  • Resolution approaches
  • Intimate couples typically use four techniques to
    end, though not necessarily resolve, conflict.

44
Conflict
Accommodationone person submits to the
other. Compromisepartners find a middle
ground. Standoffthe disputants drop the argument
without resolving it. Withdrawthe disputant can
refuse to continue with the argument.
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