Close relationships II- maintaining relationships Flashcards
Responsiveness:
- what is it?
- 3 things?
- often measures as?
- Attentive and supportive recognition of one person’s needs and interests by another
- Perceived partner responsiveness
— Feeling understood
— Feeling valued, respected, and validated
— Feeling cared for - Often measures as people’s own perceptions of their partner’s responsiveness towards them.
Benefits of responsiveness
(2 outcomes)
- Personal outcomes (e.g., health, wellbeing, non-defensiveness, intellectual openness)
- Relationship outcomes (e.g., satisfaction, closeness, trust, commitment, prosocial orientation)
- One of the strongest predictors of relationship quality across 43 longitudinal studies (Joel et al., 2020)
Predictors of Perceived Responsiveness
Perceived responsiveness may not be accurate
Where do perceptions stem from?
- Remember Epley (2008): “ego-centric simulations”- we assume that other people are thinking, feeling, viewing the world in the way we would but actually this might not be the case (aka “projection”). Projecting our own beliefs, attitudes, intentions onto other people.
- Attachment orientation (anxious: hypervigilant to signs of rejection) (Collins & Feeney, 2004)
Responsive Acts in Daily Life: Sacrifices
Examples
- People may sacrifice by doing extra chores around the house because their partner needs to meet a work deadline..
- Or agree to spend time with a partner’s friends when you had wanted to see your own friends,
- Or maybe support the partner’s wish to go on an adventurous camping trip when you really preferred to just relax at an all-inclusive resort.
Visserman et al., 2019 looking at when one partner decides to sacrifice for the other, do people actually perceive that their partner gave up something important for them?
(explain study + results)
In two diary studies, I followed couples for a few weeks, and each day at the end of the day, I asked both partners separately…
- “Did you make a sacrifice today?”
- “Did your partner make a sacrifice today?”
(so I could compare partners’ independent reports about what happened in their relationship that day.)
- Only 50% of sacrifices were detected!
- But also “false alarms”
(In other words, we tend miss many of our partner’s sacrifices.)
Sacrifices:
- what does seeing partners sacrifices boost?
- what do missed sacrifices cause?
- what does this lead to?
1- Seeing partner’s sacrifices boosts gratitude
2- Missed sacrifices leave partner feeling under appreciated after they sacrificed. They are missed opportunities to feel grateful towards a partner, which can also make the partner who sacrificed feel bad, because they may also not feel appreciated for the sacrifice they made.
3- Both partners less satisfied
Impact of gratitude:
1- what does feeling grateful benefit?
2- benefits what?
3- what does feeling appreciated by partner buffer?
4- BUT…
1- Feeling grateful benefits people’s health and happiness (Wood et al., 2010)
2- Benefits the quality and longevity of relationships (Algoe et al., 2010; Gordon et al., 2012)
3- Feeling appreciated by partner buffers insecurely attached individuals’ relationship satisfaction and commitment (Park et al. 2019)
4- BUT as the findings on sacrifice detection showed: we may miss out on these benefits because missing partner’s responsive acts that would have elicited gratitude and feeling appreciated by them. So this example not only illustrated the inaccuracy with which people perceive a partner’s responsiveness but also the implications this may have!
When do conflicts arise?
Conflicts arise when partners’ motives, goals, beliefs, opinions, or behaviour interfere with those of another.
(But of course given that we are coordinating our lives and goals with another person there are times when these goals will conflict. What one partner wants will not jive with what another partner wants.)
Conflict Frequency
Conflict is inevitable in relationships
Dating couples
2.3 conflicts per week
Married couples
“Memorable differences of opinion”:
~3 to 4 per week
“Unpleasant disagreements”:
~1 to 2 per month
Conflict
what matters?
It is not whether couples experience conflict, but how they approach conflict that matters
”A big conflict might lead to a big problem getting fixed” (Baker & McNulty, 2020)
(fighting with partner= believe relationship will be worthwhile in the long run)
Conflict
What does John Gottman talk about?
He has mapped out some of the most negative patterns of conflict. In other words, these should be avoided.
In terms of conflict patterns he talks about 4 negative approaches to conflict that can be detrimental to relationships. He calls these strategies the four horseman of the apocalypse.
What are the four horseman of the apocalypse?
- criticism
- contempt
- defensivness
- stonewalling
Explain Criticism as a horseman of the apocalypse
Attacking personality or character rather than airing disagreements by focusing on specific behaviour
“I can’t believe you didn’t take out the trash. You are so irresponsible!”
Vs.
“I’m upset that you didn’t take out the trash.”
Explain Contempt as a horseman of the apocalypse
One step up from criticism – involves tearing down or being insulting towards partner
Disrespect and disgust, acting superior
e.g., rolling eyes, sneering, or using sarcastic put-downs
“You are so stupid, you wouldn’t know the answer if it walked up and hit you in the face.”
Explain Defensiveness as a horseman of the apocalypse
Denying responsibility, making excuses, or cross-complaining
Natural response to ‘attack,’ but engenders feelings of tension and prevents partners from hearing each other
“I did not cheat on you, we were on a break! And you were the one who left me in the first place!”