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America
in the age of
No-fault Divorce.
The License
Freedom From Fear
Freedom From Want
Monday, September 18, 2000
Dissecting the Dysfunctions That Lead Down the Path to Divorce
http://www.latimes.com/living/20000917/t000088109.htmlBy KATHLEEN KELLEHER, Special to The LA Times
No one gets married thinking they're destined
for Splitsville. But the chance of a first marriage ending in
divorce over a 40-year-period is 67%, according to research. With
such dire statistics casting a pall over the state of marriage,
research psychologists have made it their mission to understand what
happens when good marriages go bad.
To that
end, psychologists recently discovered that marriages usually
disintegrate by becoming dysfunctional in two distinct ways and that
the patterns of these marital interactions foretell divorce at two
vulnerable points in the conjugal life span.
Half of all divorces occur in the first seven years of marriage. But
a new study, which followed couples for nearly 20 years, has found
that unions that end in early divorce are characterized by explosive
interactions that leave one or both partners feeling overwhelmed by
negative feelings, according to research conducted by John Gottman,
a University of Washington professor of psychology, and Robert
Levenson, a UC Berkeley professor of
psychology.
The second vulnerable period for
divorce is in midlife when many couples are raising teenagers and
taking stock of their lives, according to the study published in the
current issue of the Journal of Marriage and the Family. These
relationships are defined by emotional coolness and the suppression
of feelings, the flip side of couples who split
early.
The researchers started compiling data
in 1983, when 79 couples who participated in the study had been
married for five years. The couples were periodically contacted over
14 years, answering questions about marital quality. They were also
observed in a lab, conversing with their spouse about a subject of
conflict and about a pleasant topic. Researchers videotaped and
monitored physiological responses during the conversations. At the
study's end, 22 couples (28%) had divorced. Of those couples,
roughly, 60% divorced early compared with the 40% who split up in
midlife.
"There are these two bad versions of
a bad marriage," said Levenson. "One is too hot, one is too cold.
Both marriages end up in the same place. But one dynamic takes
longer."
The early divorcers have "an attack
and defend mode with escalating conflict," said Gottman, who has
written six books on relationships, most recently "The Seven
Principles for Making Marriages Work" (Three Rivers Press, 1999).
"They are desperate and don't know what's wrong with their
relationship. Many of these marriages end in quick bailouts or
divorces."
Couples who split early are flooded
with feelings of disappointment after a fight, possess vague
memories of their past together and experience mutual anger when
fighting. Their interactions are characterized by what Gottman calls
"the four horsemen of the apocalypse" for marriage--criticism,
contempt, defensiveness and withdrawal.
The
second marriage-eroding dynamic is slow-acting, "a kind of dire
dance," explains Levenson. "This interaction looked like a burned
out, disengaged dance."
"These couples are
alienated and avoidant," said Gottman. "They stifle things and do
not raise issues with their partner. Their marriages are a
suppression of negative emotions and a lack of positive emotions.
This style of suppression can cause intense loneliness that's almost
like dying."
Earlier research by Temple
University psychologist Laurence Steinberg established that the
lowest point of marital satisfaction is when a couple is raising a
teenager. Long-standing unexpressed disillusionment about the
marriage is amplified by midlife triggers (the proverbial "Is that
all there is?" life question). These feelings are expressed when one
spouse, usually the one who suppresses more than the other, forms an
alliance with a teenager, usually of the same gender. "Then you get
this coalition [of two against one]," added Gottman. "The teenager
is like a loose cannon ready to fire at anything. It is very
destructive."
But there is hope for
dysfunctional couples in either camp, said Gottman. Volatile couples
can learn how to express emotions constructively. Couples
disconnected in midlife can use the crisis as a bridge to find one
another again.
For more information, the Gottman Institute Web site is at
http://www.gottman.com.
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