OUR SEVEN CORE VALUES:
(Psychology Today) — Americans value marriage more than people do in any other culture, and it holds a central place in our dreams. Over 90 percent of young adults aspire to marriage—although fewer are actually choosing it, many opting instead for cohabitation. But no matter how you count it, Americans have the highest rate of romantic breakup in the world, says Andrew J. Cherlin, professor of sociology and public policy at Johns Hopkins. …
“By age 35, 10 percent of American women have lived with three or more husbands or domestic partners,” Cherlin reports in his recent book, The Marriage-Go-Round: The State of Marriage and the Family in America Today. …
With general affluence has come a plethora of choices, including constant choices about our personal and family life. Even marriage itself is now a choice. “The result is an ongoing self-appraisal of how your personal life is going, like having a continual readout of your emotional heart rate,” says Cherlin. You get used to the idea of always making choices to improve your happiness.
The heightened focus on options “creates a heightened sensitivity to problems that arise in intimate relationships.” And negative emotions get priority processing in our brains. “There are so many opportunities to decide that it’s unsatisfactory,” says Cherlin.
It would be one thing if we were living more satisfied lives than ever. But just gauging by the number of relationships wrecked every year, we’re less satisfied, says Cherlin. “We’re carrying over into our personal lives the fast pace of decisions and actions we have everywhere else, and that may not be for the best.” More than ever, we’re paying attention to the most volatile parts of our emotional makeup—the parts that are too reactive to momentary events to give meaning to life.
Because our intimate relationships are now almost wholly vehicles for meeting our emotional needs, and with almost all our emotions invested in one relationship, we tend to look upon any unhappiness we experience—whatever the source—as a failure of a partner to satisfy our longings. Disappointment inevitably feels so personal we see no other possibility but to hunt for individual psychological reasons—that is, to blame our partners for our own unhappiness.
But much—perhaps most—of the discontent we now encounter in close relationships is culturally inflicted, although we rarely interpret our experience that way. Culture—the pressure to constantly monitor our happiness, the plethora of choices surreptitiously creating an expectation of perfection, the speed of everyday life—always climbs into bed with us. An accumulation of forces has made the cultural climate hostile to long-term relationships today.
Attuned to disappointment and confused about its source, we wind up discarding perfectly good relationships. People work themselves up over “the ordinary problems of marriage, for which, by the way, they usually fail to see their own contributions,” says William Doherty, professor of family sciences at the University of Minnesota. “They badger their partners to change, convince themselves nothing will budge, and so work their way out of really good relationships.” Doherty believes it’s possible to stop the careering disappointment even when people believe a relationship is over.
It’s not going to happen by putting the genie back in the bottle. It’s not possible to curb the excess of options life now offers. And speed is a fixture of the ongoing technological revolution, no matter how much friction it creates in personal lives. Yet new research points to ways that actually render them irrelevant. …
From We to Me
Our mind-set has shifted over the past few decades, experts suggest. Today, the minute one partner is faced with dissatisfaction—feeling stressed-out or neglected, having a partner who isn’t overly expressive or who works too hard or doesn’t initiate sex very often—then the communal ideal we bring to relationships is jettisoned and an individualistic mentality asserts itself. We revert to a stingier self that has been programmed into us by the consumer culture, which has only become increasingly pervasive, the current recession notwithstanding.
Psychologically, the goal of life becomes my happiness. “The minute your needs are not being met then you appropriate the individualistic norm,” says Doherty. This accelerating consumer mind-set is a major portal through which destructive forces gain entry and undermine conjoint life.
“Marriage is for me” is the way Austin, Texas, family therapist Pat Love puts it. “It’s for meeting my needs.” It’s not about what I do, but how it makes me feel.
Such beliefs lead to a sense of entitlement: “I deserve better than I’m getting.” Doherty sees that as the basic message of almost every advertisement in the consumer culture. You deserve more and we can provide it. You begin to think: This isn’t the deal I signed up for. Or you begin to feel that you’re putting into this a lot more than you’re getting out. “We believe in our inalienable right to the intimate relationships of our choice,” says Doherty.
In allowing such free-market values to seep into our private lives, we come to believe that a partner’s job is, above all, to provide pleasure. “People do not go into relationships because they want to learn how to negotiate and master difficulties,” observes Brown University psychiatrist Scott Haltzman. “They want the other person to provide pleasure.” It’s partner as service provider. The pleasure bond, unfortunately, is as volatile as the emotions that underlie it and as hollow and fragile as the hedonic sense of happiness.
The Expectations Trap: Perfection, Please
If there’s one thing that most explicitly detracts from the enjoyment of relationships today, it’s an abundance of choice. Psychologist Barry Schwartz would call it an excess of choice—the tyranny of abundance. We see it as a measure of our autonomy and we firmly believe that freedom of choice will lead to fulfillment. Our antennae are always up for better opportunities, finds Schwartz, professor of psychology at Swarthmore College.
Just as only the best pair of jeans will do, so will only the best partner—whatever that is. “People walk starry-eyed looking not into the eyes of their romantic partner but over their romantic partner’s shoulder, in case there might be somebody better walking by. This is not the road to successful long-term relationships.” It does not stop with marriage. And it undermines commitment by encouraging people to keep their options open.
Like Doherty, Schwartz sees it as a consequence of a consumer society. He also sees it as a self-fulfilling phenomenon. “If you think there might be something better around the next corner, then there will be, because you’re not fully committed to the relationship you’ve got.”
It’s naive to expect relationships to feel good every minute. Every relationship has its bumps. How big a bump does it have to be before you do something about it? As Hopkins’s Cherlin says, if you’re constantly asking yourself whether you should leave, “there may be a day when the answer is yes. In any marriage there may be a day when the answer is yes.”
One of the problems with unrestrained choice, explains Schwartz, is that it raises expectations to the breaking point. A sense of multiple alternatives, of unlimited possibility, breeds in us the illusion that perfection exists out there, somewhere, if only we could find it. This one’s sense of humor, that one’s looks, another one’s charisma—we come to imagine that there will be a package in which all these desirable features coexist. We search for perfection because we believe we are entitled to the best—even if perfection is an illusion foisted on us by an abundance of possibilities.
If perfection is what you expect, you will always be disappointed, says Schwartz. We become picky and unhappy. The cruel joke our psychology plays on us, of course, is that we are terrible at knowing what will satisfy us or at knowing how any experience will make us feel.
If the search through all possibilities weren’t exhausting (and futile) enough, thinking about attractive features of the alternatives not chosen—what economists call opportunity costs—reduces the potential pleasure in whatever choice we finally do make. The more possibilities, the more opportunity costs—and the more we think about them, the more we come to regret any choice. “So, once again,” says Schwartz, “a greater variety of choices actually makes us feel worse.”
Ultimately, our excess of choice leads to lack of intimacy. “How is anyone going to stack up against this perfect person who’s out there somewhere just waiting to be found?” asks Schwartz. “It creates doubt about this person, who seems like a good person, someone I might even be in love with—but who knows what’s possible out there? Intimacy takes time to develop. You need to have some reason to put in the time. If you’re full of doubt at the start, you’re not going to put in the time.”
Moreover, a focus on one’s own preferences can come at the expense of those of others. As Schwartz said in his 2004 book, The Paradox of Choice: Why More Is Less, “most people find it extremely challenging to balance the conflicting impulses of freedom of choice on the one hand and loyalty and commitment on the other.”
And yet, throughout, we are focused on the partner we want to have, not on the one we want—or need—to be. That may be the worst choice of all.
Disappointment—or Tragedy?
The heightened sensitivity to relationship problems that follows from constantly appraising our happiness encourages couples to turn disappointment into tragedy, Doherty contends.
Inevitably, images of the perfect relationship dancing in our heads collide with our sense of entitlement: “I’m entitled to the best possible marriage.” The reality of disappointment becomes intolerable. “It’s part of a cultural belief system that says we are entitled to everything we feel we need.”
Through the alchemy of desire, wants become needs, and unfulfilled needs become personal tragedies. “A husband who isn’t very expressive of his feelings can be a disappointment or a tragedy, depending on whether it’s an entitlement,” says Doherty. “And that’s very much a cultural phenomenon.” We take the everyday disappointments of relationships and treat them as intolerable, see them as demeaning—the equivalent of alcoholism, say, or abuse. “People work their way into ‘I’m a tragic figure’ around the ordinary problems of marriage.” Such stories are so widespread, Doherty is no longer inclined to see them as reflecting an individual psychological problem, although that is how he was trained—and how he practiced for many years as an eminent family therapist. “I see it first now as a cultural phenomenon.”
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Important as it is to choose the right partner, it’s probably more important to be the right partner. Most people are focused on changing the wrong person in the relationship; if anyone has to change in a relationship, it’s you—although preferably with the help of your partner.
Ultimately, “marriage is an inside job,” Pat Love told the 2009 SmartMarriages Conference. “It’s internal to the person. You have to let it do its work.” And its biggest job is helping individuals grow up. “Marriage is about getting over yourself. Happiness is not about focusing on yourself.” Happiness is about holding onto your values, deciding who you are and being that person, using your particular talent, and investing in others.
Unfortunately, says Marin family therapist and PT blogger Susan Pease Gadoua, not enough people today are willing to do the hard work of becoming a more mature person. “They think they have a lot more choices. And they think life will be easier in another relationship. What they don’t realize is that it will be the same relationship—just with a different name.” …
Like growth, commitment is an inside job. It’s not a simple vow. Partners see each other in ways that enhance their connection and fend off threats. It fosters the perception that the relationship you’re in is better than that of others. It breeds the inclination to react constructively—by accommodation—rather than destructively when a partner does something inconsiderate. …
It is a willingness—stemming in part from an understanding that your well-being and your partner’s are linked over the long term—to depart from direct self-interest, such as erecting a grudge when you feel hurt. …
You can’t find the perfect person; there is no such thing. And even if you think you could, the person he or she is today is, hopefully, not quite the person he or she wants to be 10 years down the road. You and your partner help each other become a more perfect person—perfect, that is, according to your own inner ideals.
Case Studies
Here’s a closer look at two couples who faced big changes:
Stephen and Christina
Five years into his marriage, not long after the birth of his first son, most of Stephen G.’s interactions with his wife were not pleasant. “I thought the difficulties would pass,” he recalls. “My wife, Christina, got fed up faster and wanted me to leave.” He was traveling frequently and finances were thin; she’d gone back to school full-time after having worked until the baby was born. “Very few needs were being met for either of us. We were either yelling or in a cold war.”
They entered counseling to learn how to co-parent if they indeed separated. “It helped restore our friendship: At least we could talk civilly. That led to deeper communication—we could actually listen to each other without getting defensive. We heard that we were both hurting, both feeling the stress of new parenthood without a support system of either parents or friends. We could talk about the ways we weren’t there for each other without feeling attacked. It took a lot longer for the romance to return.”
Stephen, now 37, a sales representative for a pharmaceutical company in San Francisco, says it was a time of “growing up. I had to accept that I had new responsibilities. And I had to accept that my partner, now 38, is not ideal in every way although she is ideal in many ways. But her short temper is not enough of a reason to leave the relationship and our two kids. When I wish she’d be different, I have to remind myself of all the ways she is the person I want to be with. It’s not something you ‘get over.’ You accept it.”
Patty and Rod
Patty Newbold had married “a really great guy,” but by the time their 13th anniversary rolled around, she had a long list of things he needed to change to make the marriage work. At 34, she felt depressed, frantic—and guilty, as Rod was fighting a chronic disease. But she had reached a breaking point. “I read my husband my list of unmet needs and suggested a divorce,” even though what she really wanted was her marriage back. “I wanted to feel loved again. But it didn’t seem possible.”
Newbold has had a long time to think about that list. Her husband died the next day, a freak side effect of his medications. “He was gone, but the list remained. Out of perhaps 30 needs, only one was eased by losing him. I was free now to move the drinking glasses next to the sink.”
As she read through the list the morning after he died, she realized that “marriage isn’t about my needs or his needs or about how well we communicate about our needs. It’s about loving and being loved. Life is about meeting (or letting go of) my own needs. Marriage is about loving another person and receiving love in return. It suddenly became oh so clear that receiving love is something I make happen, not him.” And then she was flooded with memories of all the times “I’d been offered love by this wonderful man and rejected it because I was too wrapped up in whatever need I was facing at the time.”
Revitalized is “a funny word to describe a relationship in which one party is dead,” she reports, “but ours was revitalized. I was completely changed, too.” Everything she learned that awful day has gone into a second marriage, now well into its second decade.
(Click HERE for original article.)