Talk! Talk! As conversation lowers stress in relationships

Posted by: admin on: April 12, 2012

Young couples who easily engage in rewarding conversations with their partners, experience less relationship stress and higher satisfaction, says researchers.

-Team@CMHF

 

  • According to research from Kansas State University, young adults who have optimal conversation with their partners are less likely to hold onto anger and are more likely to be happy with their relationship.
  • Brenda McDaniel, assistant professor of psychology, has been studying conflict and conflict recovery in young dating couples by examining self-reported questionnaires, physiological markers of stress and videotaped emotional reactions.
  • For the research, McDaniel and her team worked with more than 50 couples aged between 18 to 20 who had been dating for at least six months but were not engaged, married or living together.
  • These relationships are, by nature, unstable to begin with, said McDaniel.
  • They are early dating relationships. Sometimes it is hard to even get the couples to engage in conflict. Conflict does exist but, because the relationship is so new to them, they don’t want to cause a break-up, she explained.
  • To observe stress hormone levels, researchers had participants spend 20 minutes talking about a topic that continually causes relationship tension.
  • Often, conflict occurred when one partner treated the other differently in front of family, did not introduce the other to parents and friends, or was flirting with someone else.
  • Typically, the couple is not going to come to a resolution regarding the reoccurring conflict within the 20 minute discussion, said McDaniel.
  • But we want to get the stress response to see how couples recover from that relationship stress, she revealed.
  • After the stressful discussion, couples spent 20 minutes discussing a positive shared time during their relationship.
  • The researchers tracked physiological markers of stress and videotaped emotional reaction before, during and after both the conflict discussion and the happier discussion.
  • McDaniel said that whenever you get into a fight and you get amped up, it is typically more adaptive to let that go after the fight.
  • If you ruminate and keep that anger, it can have negative mental and physical consequences. It’s better to have a nice downward recovery after conflict, she elucidated.
  • To see if a downward recovery occurred in couples, researchers examined levels of the stress hormone cortisol before the conflict discussion, after the conflict discussion and after the “happy times” discussion.
  • If the cortisol levels resembled an inverted V shape, low before the conflict discussion, high after the conflict discussion, and low again after the happier discussion, the person often reported higher relationship satisfaction and higher relationship closeness
  • Participants whose cortisol levels stayed high instead of coming back down after the happier discussion reported lower relationship satisfaction and less relationship closeness.
  • McDaniel said in addition to recovery being associated with positive relationship outcomes, we also saw recovery being related to conversation flow.
  • Those individuals whose stress hormone levels remained high didn’t enter into that state of flow.
  • Flow is like being “in the zone,” McDaniel said.
  • People might be in a state of flow if they are so engaged they lose track of time, or get a sense of enjoyment or creativity from an experience.
  • A majority of the literature focuses on experiencing flow in a job or activity, McDaniel said.
  • But our study examined how couples might experience flow during conversation, she said.
  • The researchers found that engaging in flow is often associated with positive characteristics of relationships.
  • Somewhat surprisingly, it didn’t depend on what one partner was doing a person who was happy and in a positive mood could engage in flow even if his or her partner was not “in the zone.”
  • McDaniel said this disconnect in flow may be due to the nature of late adolescent relationships, 18 to 20-year-olds are still more focused on themselves than on others.
  • In relationships, they are often more focused on how they feel about the relationship and what they are getting out of it rather than a mutual process that includes how the other person feels about the relationship.
  • McDaniel said while more research needs to be done, this positive rewarding state of flow during conversation may be one of the factors that create enduring marital relationships.
  • Hence, these early relationships may serve as practice for later long-term relationship, she added.

For further reading log on to
http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2012-02-10/man-woman/31045791_1_conflict-discussion-cortisol-stress-hormone

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