Can Denial Bring Marital Bliss? ( Archived) (5)

Apr 24, 2009 12:35 PM CST Can Denial Bring Marital Bliss?
romeo22
romeo22romeo22Bangkok, Central Thailand Thailand54 Threads 2 Polls 132 Posts
Denial Can Bring Marital Bliss


With the divorce rate hovering around 50 percent, and so many people married more than once, it sometimes feels like humans are terrible at figuring out long-term love.

The typical pattern starts with falling head-over-heels for someone, with all its heat-thumping, starry-eyed craziness, and it takes a while before that fog dissipates and the real object of desire comes into focus. Often, the truth doesn't hit until after marriage when the real person, warts and all, wakes up next to you in bed wearing a wedding ring.

Reality check, with it's evil twin disillusionment, are sure ways to kill off a marriage.

In a study to be published in July in the journal Psychological Science, Northwestern University psychologist Daniel Molden and colleagues were interested in the possible differences between the way dating and married couples see each other. They asked 92 dating couples and 77 married couples to complete questionnaires about satisfaction with their relationship, and not surprising, marriage changes things.

Everyone, married or dating, thinks the best partner is one who acts as a cheering section and brings out our best. But that sort of relationship only translates into a truly happy marriage when the partner seems to accept real commitment and helps in the day-to-day obligations of life as a couple.

The surprise here is not the switch from a focus on "me" to a focus on "us," as anyone who has gone from the first blush of love to picking up someone else's underwear off the floor knows to be true. What really stands out is the idea that satisfaction within any relationship is based on perception rather than actual fact, and therein lies the rub of not only love, but also of living with someone on intimate terms.

In Molden's study, the authors focus on their subjects' "perception" of the other person, not the reality of the situation. If we perceive a date to be supportive of our goals, we're happy. If we perceive a spouse as committed to the family, we're even more happy. Although the researchers point to the shift in the focus of perception from ourselves to the couple as an indicator of a good or bad marriage, the real problem for love is the very issues of projecting anything on another person, no matter the focus.

Humans seem to think they are really good at knowing others, but the truth is our own agendas get in the way of really knowing someone. As self-interested, self-absorbed creatures, our own thoughts, feelings, needs and goals come first, and that sometimes means fooling ourselves into thinking we are the center of other people's thoughts, feelings, needs and goals when, in fact, they are mired in their own business.

But should we be disillusioned by our own illusions? Maybe not. Happy marriages might just be those in which both partners uphold a very nice projection of each other, even when things aren't so great. And this makes sense. Happiness is a state of mind, and if denial paints a partner better than they really are, the relationship is bound to be satisfying, as long as no one is slapped in the face with reality.

On the other hand, surely there are couples who see exactly who is in front of them, and reality actually matches perception. Those lucky couples are not in a state of continual denial, but a state of continual bliss.
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Apr 24, 2009 1:18 PM CST Can Denial Bring Marital Bliss?
Subridenta
SubridentaSubridentaJeffersonville, Indiana USA33 Posts
Interesting.

As long as we don't project too many differences on each other and keep our heads on straight, denial by overlooking the small stuff could certainly shift our ideas into keeping a relaitionship together. I think that whoever we choose is with us to ultimately share joy while we teach each other who we are by what works and what does not. We both play our part in being teacher and student.
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May 4, 2009 7:22 PM CST Can Denial Bring Marital Bliss?
Crystalpistol2
Crystalpistol2Crystalpistol2La Grange Park, Illinois USA21 Threads 383 Posts
I can overlook the small stuff, it is the big stuff that causes problems in the relationship and if one partner does not want to work on the relationship it ends in divorce.
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May 4, 2009 7:25 PM CST Can Denial Bring Marital Bliss?
sxc666
sxc666sxc666unknown, Queensland Australia51 Threads 16,853 Posts
I think it ends in divorce because you have tried all avenues and it just isn't working............hence the divorce.
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May 4, 2009 10:29 PM CST Can Denial Bring Marital Bliss?
bestat45
bestat45bestat45saint john, New Brunswick Canada8 Threads 1,169 Posts
sxc666: I think it ends in divorce because you have tried all avenues and it just isn't working............hence the divorce.

that sums it up pretty well...at least i think so
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