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Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Myths about Marriage: Marriage is the recipe for a healthy life

Myths about Marriage: Marriage is the recipe for a healthy life
Marriage benefits:
Marriage is the best recipe for a healthy, happy and fulfilled life, concludes research on emotional health
The research proves, married people are happier, healthier and richer. Dr. Waite has found that "marriage changes people's behavior in ways that make them better off." Married partners monitor each other's health, for example. They also drink less alcohol and use less marijuana and cocaine.
Research by professor of sociology presented a brand new recipe for a healthy life. The recipe is to get married. At the annual Smart Marriages Conference in Washington Dr. Waite said.

"People need to know this fact... Marriage is good for everyone."

As a University of Chicago researcher Dr. Waite says, she has found that marriage brings considerable benefits to both women and men. It lengthens life, substantially boosts physical and emotional health and raises income over that of single or divorced people or those who live together, she says.

The myth that marriage is an oppressive institution
The notion that marriage damages women's emotional well-being is just a wrong myth. Publication from 1972 reported that married men are better off than single men on four measures of psychological distress: depression, neurotic symptoms, phobic tendency and passivity.

These positive effects on women were not acknowledged, back then. Instead, single women, were portrait, to score higher on these traits than married women.

These findings were never replicated and were disputed even then. Yet the myth stayed in our popular culture. "They helped de-romanticize marriage", said Dr. William J. Doherty, a professor of psychology at the University of Minnesota.

"They matched the then-evolving belief that marriage is an oppressive institution for women."

New findings on emotional health
Since the 1970's, researchers have come up with better measures of emotional health, and on these, married women and men generally score very well. Further, in the last two years several large studies that tracked people in and out of relationships over a long period have produced evidence that marriage actually causes psychological well-being in both sexes.

By contrast, Dr. Bernard's material consisted of one-time glimpses of people's lives. While both Dr. Bernard and Dr. Waite based their conclusions on data from many studies, reducing the likelihood that either was reporting a fluke, marriage itself has changed in the intervening years in ways that generally make women happier.

Dr. Waite told the conference that her curiosity was aroused four years ago when she stumbled across "the marriage mortality benefit" -- statistics showing that married men and women live longer.

In a large national sample of adults followed for 18 years beginning at the age of 48, slightly more than 60 percent of divorced and never-married women made it to 65, as opposed to nearly 90 percent of married women. Widowed women, for reasons not entirely clear, fared almost as well as married women. Among men, however, those unmarried for any reason -- whether widowed, divorced or never married -- had only a 60 to 70 percent chance of living to 65, versus 90 percent for married men.

Increase in "bad behaviors" among those who stayed single
From detailed reports on 50,000 men and women followed from their senior year in high school to the age of 32 by University of Michigan researchers, Dr. Waite discerned a steep increase in "bad behaviors" among those who stayed single, but a "precipitous drop" in bad behaviors like the use of alcohol or illegal drugs among those who married.

Drawing heavily on a study of 13,000 adults assessed in 1987 and 1988 and again in 1992 and 1993, Dr. Waite demonstrated the positive impact that marriage has on mental health. The study, conducted by two psychologists at the University of Wisconsin, Nadine F. Marks and James D. Lambert, will be published in November in The Journal of Family Issues.

It is not just that people who remained married reported significantly higher levels of happiness than those who remained single. The data showed that those who separated or divorced over the five-year period became, in Dr. Waite's word, miserable.

Married women happier than single women
Men and especially women who married for the first time during the course of the study experienced a sharp increase in happiness. Remarriage, however, brought only a modest increase in happiness.

Dr. Waite noted that Dr. Bernard similarly found married women happier than single women, but relegated that fact to her book's appendix.

In addition, marriage appeared to reduce the degree of depression. Men and especially women whose marriages ended over the five-year period experienced high levels of depression compared with those who stayed married. Single men as a group were depressed at the outset of the study and became more depressed if they stayed single.

Compelling as he found these data, Dr. Doherty, the University of Minnesota professor, noted that they represent population-based averages. They do not mean that everyone is better off married than single, or that people are bound to be happy and healthy if they marry the wrong person.

Hinges satisfaction with sex in marriage
Emotional health also hinges on satisfaction with sex, and in this realm marriage serves both men and women, but delivers a special bonus to women. First of all, Dr. Waite said, married people have sex twice as often as single people. Unmarried couples who live together also have an active sex lives but, like unmarried people, get less emotional satisfaction from it than married people, the studies found.

For married men, satisfaction hinges on sexual frequency, fidelity and emotional commitment to the relationship. For women, these elements are equally important, but just the fact of being married added an extra kick to their sexual satisfaction. "Men make an investment in pleasing their partner because of their ongoing relationship," Dr. Waite said. "People who are committed to a partner get more than sex out of sex."

Married people are better off financially

Married people also have more money. From her own analysis of a National Institute of Aging survey of 12,000 people 51 to 61 years of age, Dr. Waite found that married people have more than twice as much money, on average, as unmarried people. Married couples not only save more while enjoying some economies of scale, but married men also earn up to 26 percent more than single men.

Similarly, married women earn more than unmarried women, but only if they have no children. When they have children, "they trade some time earning for time with their children," Dr. Waite said. If the women continue to work, she added, they have difficulty getting child care, and experience stress trying to balance two sets of demands.

Less domestic violence among married couples
Married women are not only happier and wealthier than single women, Dr. Waite found, they are also safer. Moderate domestic violence (defined as as hitting, shoving or throwing things at a partner) occurred half as often with married couples and cohabiting couples engaged to marry than it did with cohabiting couples not planning to marry.

The findings suggest that there is more to marriage than just a social bond. There appears to be something specifically protective about the long-term commitment that marriage entails.

All told, marriage seems to be "an unmitigated good" for men, Dr. Waite added. For women, marriage indeed brings increased life satisfaction and happiness, but those benefits are "part of a package" that also includes family demands that are sometimes burdensome.

Perhaps, she suggested, this was what Jessie Bernard really meant.


Tuesday, August 4, 1998,
Excerpts from The New York Times article

Purpose of life: If you never failed you never lived
Secular Humanism hurts marriage and children
A NEW TIME IS COMING: Golden Age of Spiritual Awakening
Myths about Marriage: Marriage is the recipe for a healthy life

2 comments:

  1. Really? Less stress and less responsibility happens when you stay single. Also you can save more money by being single with no kids or spouse. This article has it all backwards.

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  2. Thanks! I agree. It sounds more logical for singles to be more happy, more reach and more sexually satisfied, but statistics and all social studies show otherwise. Married people are happier, richer and more sexually satisfied.

    So how that happens! There are in fact many psychological and spiritual reasons for that. I bet that single person will never really understand them, because he has no idea what he is missing. But the comfort, the psychological, emotional and spiritual effect of being in lasting relationship of true love, in the security of mutual trust, support and encouragement are enormous. That's what I can say from my own experience before even knowing these statistics support that fact.

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