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| At Last, the Secret
to a Happy Marriage Revealed: It's the Small
Stuff |
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By KATHLEEN
KELLEHER, Special to The Times
One of the questions forever nagging
humankind:
What makes a
good marriage good?
In seeking the elusive answer, researchers
at the University of Washington in Seattle have
consulted the experts: couples in fabulously
high-functioning, happy marriages. The field
research has included narrative-type interviewing
with newlyweds and long-married couples; engaging
in "Candid Camera"-type antics, such as
filming a couple in a raging fight; and inviting
couples for a videotaped stay at the "Love
Lab," where they hang out in a studio
apartment and do whatever they please over the
course of 24 hours.
What researchers
have gleaned is that couples with the most
successful unions are experts at repairing the
marital bond when someone commits a blunder.
These couples use everyday moments to reconnect
with one another, said John Gottman, a University
of Washington psychologist who runs the lab,
trains clinicians and conducts couples workshops.
"Everybody
screws up in marriage," said Gottman, author
of several books on marriage, including "The
Seven Principles of a Happy Marriage"
(Crown, 2000). "The masters of successful
marriages, and we have studied them across the
ages, repair their marriages with panache. The
basis of effective repair is in these everyday
small moments in which people connect. It turns
out that these people make bids for connection
with their partners either noticing them or
responding in a kind of prickly, irritable
way."
Bids for connection
might include listening when your spouse is
talking or brightening when he or she enters the
room; reading the Dilbert comic she points out
(even though you'd rather finish reading the
front page first) or inquiring about the book
your spouse is reading at bedtime. The small
stuff matters. It works as an emotional savings
account, said Gottman, and it says: "I
really care about you." Couples who have
successful marriages connect about 40% of the
time they are together, according to research
conducted by Gottman and his colleagues.
Gottman said that
he has also studied nonverbal bids for
connection, small gestures such as turning toward
your spouse, turning away or not turning at all.
"It tells someone, 'I am really there for
you,' " Gottman said.
In looking at the
phenomenon, Gottman said that if one spouse turns
away, the probability of the spurned spouse
"rebidding" for connection is nil.
"If their partner turns away, they kind of
crumple and won't ask again in that time
frame."
University of
Washington research psychologist Sybil Carrere
conducted intermittent oral interviews with 95
Puget Sound-area couples, starting when they were
newlyweds and continuing through seven to nine
years. She found that happily married couples
described the relationship as central to their
lives.
They functioned,
she said, a little like Ginger Rogers and Fred
Astaire, perfectly in sync. They knew their
spouse's inner longings, dreams and goals
intimately, they finished each other's sentences,
remembered every detail of their courtship,
wedding and marriage, and showed a profound
caring for one another that was essential to
resolving conflicts.
"We have found
that couples have the same fight over and over
again even after 50 years of marriage," said
Carrere, whose study is forthcoming in the
Journal of Family Psychology. "Successful
couples know how to take care of each other even
during fights. They stop paying attention to
trying to win the argument and they start trying
to take care of their partner's feelings. They
stop trying to defend their very reasonable
behavior and say, 'I think I hurt your feelings.'
"
Birds & Bees is
a weekly column on relationships and sexuality.
Kathleen Kelleher can be reached via e-mail at kellehr@gte.net.
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