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Top 10 Marriage Myths

This is an interesting article by David Popenoe… Let me know
1. What surprised you?
2. What you think about the article

Top 10 Marriage Myths

With nearly half of all marriages ending in divorce, many couples are starting to re-evaluate their relationships.

But before you start any heady analysis, it’s important to know the facts from the myths when it comes to marriage:

Marriage Myth 1: Marriage benefits men much more than women.

Fact: Contrary to earlier and widely publicized reports, recent research finds men and women to benefit about equally from marriage, although in different ways. Both men and women live longer, happier, healthier and wealthier lives when they are married. Husbands typically gain greater health benefits, while wives gain greater financial advantages.

Marriage Myth 2: Having children typically brings a married couple closer together and increases marital happiness.

Fact: Many studies have shown that the arrival of the first baby commonly has the effect of pushing the mother and father farther apart, and bringing stress to the marriage. However, couples with children have a slightly lower rate of divorce than childless couples.

Marriage Myth 3: The keys to long-term marital success are good luck and romantic love.

Fact: Rather than luck and love, the most common reasons couples give for their long-term marital success are commitment and companionship. They define their marriage as a creation that has taken hard work, dedication and commitment (to each other and to the institution of marriage). The happiest couples are friends who share lives and are compatible in interests and values.

Marriage Myth 4: The more educated a woman becomes, the lower are her chances of getting married.

Fact: A recent study based on marriage rates in the mid-1990s concluded that today’s women college graduates are more likely to marry than their non-college peers, despite their older age at first marriage. This is a change from the past, when women with more education were less likely to marry.

Marriage Myth 5: Couples who live together before marriage, and are thus able to test how well suited they are for each other, have more satisfying and longer-lasting marriages than couples who do not.

Fact: Many studies have found that those who live together before marriage have less satisfying marriages and a considerably higher chance of eventually breaking up. One reason is that people who cohabit may be more skittish of commitment and more likely to call it quits when problems arise. But in addition, the very act of living together may lead to attitudes that make happy marriages more difficult. The findings of one recent study, for example, suggest “there may be less motivation for cohabiting partners to develop their conflict resolution and support skills.” (One important exception: Cohabiting couples who are already planning to marry each other in the near future have just as good a chance at staying together as couples who don’t live together before marriage).

Marriage Myth 6: People can’t be expected to stay in a marriage for a lifetime as they did in the past because we live so much longer today.

Fact: Unless our comparison goes back a hundred years, there is no basis for this belief. The enormous increase in longevity is due mainly to a steep reduction in infant mortality. And while adults today can expect to live a little longer than their grandparents, they also marry at a later age. The life span of a typical, divorce-free marriage, therefore, has not changed much in the past 50 years. Also, many couples call it quits long before they get to a significant anniversary: Half of all divorces take place by the seventh year of a marriage.

Marriage Myth 7: Marrying puts a woman at greater risk of domestic violence than if she remains single.

Fact: Contrary to the proposition that for men “a marriage license is a hitting license,” a large body of research shows that being unmarried — and especially living with a man outside of marriage — is associated with a considerably higher risk of domestic violence for women. One reason for this finding is that married women may significantly underreport domestic violence. Further, women are less likely to marry and more likely to divorce a man who is violent. Yet it is probably also the case that married men are less likely to commit domestic violence because they are more invested in their wives’ well-being, and more integrated into the extended family and community. These social forces seem to help check men’s violent behavior.

Marriage Myth 8: Married people have less satisfying sex lives, and less sex, than single people.

Fact: According to a large-scale national study, married people have both more and better sex than do their unmarried counterparts. Not only do they have sex more often but they enjoy it more, both physically and emotionally.

Marriage Myth 9: Cohabitation is just like marriage, but without “the piece of paper.”

Fact: Cohabitation typically does not bring the benefits — in physical health, wealth and emotional wellbeing — that marriage does. In terms of these benefits, cohabitants in the United States more closely resemble singles than married couples. This is due, in part, to the fact that cohabitants tend not to be as committed as married couples, and they are more oriented toward their own personal autonomy and less to the well-being of their partner.

Marriage Myth 10: Because of the high divorce rate, which weeds out the unhappy marriages, people who stay married have happier marriages than people did in the past when everyone stuck it out, no matter how bad the marriage.

Fact: According to what people have reported in several large national surveys, the general level of happiness in marriages has not increased and probably has declined slightly. Some studies have found in recent marriages, compared to those of 20 or 30 years ago, significantly more work-related stress, more marital conflict and less marital interaction.

Talk Back- What do you think?

HELP … My Schedule is out of Control!


In the late 70’s and early 80’s the “experts” predicted that the biggest challenge we would experience entering the new millennium was what to do with our spare time. These futurists predicted the rise in robotics and computers would leave us with 35 hour work weeks and leisure time activities would be a premium. Think of it- 168 hours in a week- 35 for work, 56 for sleep; that would leave us with 77 hours for recreation and leisure or 11 hours a day! Experts? Futurists?

I don’t know what your work week is like but many of us are working more hours not less. Our biggest challenge is how to find time for our marriage and family.

When Sandy and I got married I was still very active athletically (you know- back in the day). I played several sports a year (Sandy was always there cheering me on) and that seemed to work. By the time I was 36 years old, I needed to make adjustments in a huge way. I was playing AAU basketball and enjoyed the competition but, my son was 8 and he began to play organized sports as well. The problem was we often played on the same day. Now Sandy was taking my son and daughter to practices and to a game or two without me. It was a real wakeup call- I found myself and my family heading in opposite directions. It had to change. I gave up league play and got more involved in my kids lives. I can’t believe I let it go that far. This weekend we are going to discuss how to Hurry Home- how to get to the place that really matters.

Talk Back

  1. What adjustments have you made to Hurry Home?
  2. Where do you need to make an adjustment?

Men’s Brains? … Women’s Brains?


This guy brings interesting insight(?) to our understanding of communication. If you missed this weekend click this link to hear the teaching on communication. This video may take a moment to play- it is worth the wait!

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This weekend is about communication


We all have communication patterns. I know there are times when I am more available for conversation (especially the tough ones) . I have discovered that people who understand timing seem to be better communicators. What if we also let the significant people in our lives in on our personal communication patterns, ie., when we are most available to have an involved conversation. For example, the best time to really communicate with me(about difficult issues) is :

  • After I have been home for 1 hour
  • Mid-week is better than either end of the week
  • Earlier in the day rather than later

I am also least likely to communicate:

  • Sunday afternoon
  • Saturday afternoon
  • Late at night

Now, in a perfect world we would all get what we wanted! But, as much as I hope to have conversations at my best times- I know what reality is and I must do my best to be as James says “quick to listen and slow to speak”.

Your Turn:
1. When are you apt to be most conversational?
2. When is it best to stay away?
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