uh oh...maybe i should stay single!

lederr

Cathlete
http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20080205/sc_livescience/marriageitsonlygoingtogetworse


Marriage: It's Only Going to Get Worse Jeanna Bryner
LiveScience Staff Writer
LiveScience.com
Tue Feb 5, 3:11 PM ET



If your spouse already bugs you now, the future is bleak. New research suggests couples view one another as even more irritating and demanding the longer they are together.


The same trend was not found for relationships with children or friends.


The study results could be a consequence of accumulated contact with a spouse, such that the nitpicking or frequent demands that once triggered just a mild chafe develops into a major pain. But accumulated irritation has its silver lining.


"As we age and become closer and more comfortable with one another, it could be that we're more able to express ourselves to each other," said lead study author Kira Birditt, a research fellow at the University of Michigan's Institute for Social Research. "In other words, it's possible that negativity is a normal aspect of close relationships that include a great deal of daily contact."


Rather than breeding unhappy couples and ill health, the increase in negativity could be a normal part of relationships.


"Because we found that pattern was overall among the participants, it appears to be normative. It's not something unusual that happens," Birditt said.


Relationship report


Birditt and U-M colleagues Lisa Jackey and Toni Antonucci looked at how negative views of spouses, friends and children changed over time and among different age groups, including young adults (ages 20 to 39), middle-aged adults (40 to 59) and older adults (60 and over).


The researchers analyzed responses collected in 1992 and 2005 as part of the Social Relations and Health Over the Life Course study, a regionally representative sample of people from the greater Detroit metropolitan area.


More than 800 individuals indicated the level of negativity in relationships with their spouses or partners, children and best friends. Participants also noted whether or not their responses referred to the same spouse, child and friend during the 2005 interviews.


Each participant rated how strongly they agreed or disagreed with two statements:

"My (spouse/partner, child, friend) gets on my nerves." "My (spouse/partner, child, friend) makes too many demands on me."

Irksome partners


In all age groups, individuals reported viewing their spouse as the most negative compared with children and friends. The negative view of spouses tended to increase over time.


"We were surprised because in the gerontological research, it suggests that as people age they get better at regulating their emotions and experience less negative relationships," Birditt told LiveScience. "But we found that it depends on which relationship you're looking at."


As relationships with spouses became more negative, relationships with children and friends seemed to become less demanding and irritating over time. Negativity toward friends decreases over time partially because we can continuously choose and weed our friends, ditching those pals who are irritating, according to the researchers.


"Relationships with children may become less negative because of role changes as children move through adolescence and young adulthood, grow and mature, usually becoming more stable and independent," Birditt explained. Kids moving out didn't seem to impact spousal negativity, however, as the researchers found the same trend for spouses irrespective of the age group.


Participants in their 20s and 30s reported having the most negative relationships overall. Older adults had the least negative relationships with spouses, children and friends. Past research by Birditt and others has shown that older adults are more likely to report less conflict in their relationships compared with younger adults.


"Older adults are more likely than younger people to report that they try to deal with conflict by avoiding confrontations, rather than by discussing problems," Birditt said.

In general, the longer partners stay together, the more they have to deal with the other's idiosyncrasies, for instance. "When you’re living together, it’s a lot harder to avoid each other," Birditt said.

The research was presented in November at an annual meeting of the Gerontological Society of America, and it has also been submitted to a journal for publication.

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I heard the senior men (I teach water class to seniors at a rich retirement resort - oy, what a crew!) - gabbing and one said - and I"m sure he ripped this off from a joke book, that marriage is good for men because married men outlive single men......BUT most married men just WISH they were dead....harhar ......I suspect they tell the same dumb joke every morning! But it was cute...they are all married, and too healthy for their own good!
 
Thanks for sharing this study, I found it quite comforting! I'm 50, have been married for 24 years and although I adore and admire DH he really does drive me crazy sometimes!! I wonder if women are more irritated with their husbands than men are with their wives, in general. I read an article about that somewhere, saying that women are the ones who tend to be more annoyed because our relationships are of prime importance to us, whereas men focus more on work and don't put most of their eggs into the relationship basket - for many women their wedding day is the happiest day of their life, that's their number-one goal in life, and when it doesn't turn out to be perfect it can be irritating! Among my women friends several say their hubby has very annoying habits, and among my men friends they sort of shrug and say "not really, she doesn't annoy me, no..." My own hubby says he doesn't get bugged by me the same way he bugs me. I have found that over the course of my marriage it seems to come in cycles for me, there will be periods of several months (I'm just now coming to an end to one) where DH just GRATES on my nerves, his allergies drive me nuts, etc. Then it seems to fade away and he's back to being my prince. When I'm irritated with him I always try to stop and think whether what's bugging me is really important, and mostly it isn't so I don't complain about it, don't want to be like the Everybody Loves Raymond couple LOL! But anyhow, I was glad to read that I'm not a freak. I've thought about going to a therapist about it, to see if I have a low-grade recurring depression or something that's causing me to be irritable, but the weird thing is other things in my life don't irritate me the same way, JUST DH LOL.
 

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