Chapter 8 Marital Relationships Over the Life Cycle

Transcription

Chapter 8 Marital Relationships Over the Life Cycle
Chapter 8
Marital Relationships Over
the Life Cycle
© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter Preview
Preview
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Chapter Questions

Can I be happy if my marriage
isn’t?

How do families change over
time?
Preview
© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter Questions
Preview

What adjustments are necessary
for newly married people?

So how much will my life change
when I have a baby?
© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter Questions

What issues do middle-aged couples
deal with?

What changes do older adults have to
contend with?

What are the special challenges for
widows?
Preview
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Guided Learning Process
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Text Assignment
Preview
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Can I be happy if my
marriage isn’t?
A
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How do families change
over time?
 What
changes happen in a typical
American family?
B 1-2-3

How happy are people with their
marriages at different points in life?

What special challenges do gay and
lesbian families face?
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What adjustments are necessary
for newly married people?

What kinds of adjustments do couples
need to make?

What are the most common problems
couples have in the early years of
marriage?
C 1-2
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So how much will my life
change when I have a baby?

Just how stressful is it going to be?

How does fathering affect a man?
D 1-2
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What issues do middleaged couples deal with?

What can couples do about a long
marriage that is no longer satisfying?

What kinds of adjustments do parents
of grown children need to make?
E 1-2
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What changes do older adults
have to contend with?

What makes life satisfying for older adults?

How happy are older adults in their marriages?

What is the effect of divorce between older adults?

How do older parents and grown children get
along?
F 1-2-3-4
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What are the special
challenges for widows?
G
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Special Sections
Preview SS
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Personal Perspective:
Widowhood
What does it feel like to
be a widow?
Preview PP
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Cultural Perspectives:
Individualism versus Familism
What can we learn from the
Mexican American culture that
could strengthen our families?
Preview CP
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At Issue Today
Who cares for the elderly?
Preview AI
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A Question of Policy:
Long-Term Health Care
How will we be able to afford the
health care costs of an aging
baby boom generation?
Preview QP
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Preview SS END
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Marriage & Personal
Happiness
A

Quality of marriage has strong effect
on happiness and life satisfaction

Marriages have to change with life
circumstances to be happy

Partners’ flexibility and willingness to
make adjustments is critical
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A End
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The Family Life Cycle
B

Family life is divided into phases
(stages) over the life span

Structure and function of family
change with each stage
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The Family Life Cycle
B1

Two children born two years apart.

Children leave at age 20.

Retirement at age 65

Men die at age 74, women at age 80.

Women spend at least 6 years as a
widow.
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The Family Life Cycle –
Intact Marriage
B1

Married when woman is 25 and man
is 27.

First child born when woman is 27
and man is 29.

When last child leaves home, woman
is 48 and man is 51.
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The Family Life Cycle –
Intact Marriage
B1

Woman has 16 empty-nest years,
man has 14, until retirement

Couple has 9 post-retirement years
together
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The Family Life Cycle –
Divorced and Remarried
B1

More complicated

Divorce when she is 30 and he is 32
and children are 3 and 5

Women remarry 3 years later

Men remarry 4 years later

Children live with their mothers
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The Family Life Cycle –
Divorced and Remarried
 Women
B1
are 33 when they remarry

Children are 6 and 8.

Youngest child leaves when mother is 47.

18 empty-nest years before retirement.

9 post-retirement years with new husband.
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The Family Life Cycle –
Divorced and Remarried
 Men are 36 when they remarry

He becomes a stepfather.

Spouses are 33 w/ 2 children ages 6 and 8.

Youngest child leaves when man is 50.

15 empty-nest years before retirement

8 years together after retirement.
B1
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Changes in Marital Satisfaction
1. Stable/Positive
 2. Stable/Neutral
 3. Stable/Negative
 4. Continuous decline
 5. Continuous increase
 6. Curvilinear-most common

B2
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Changes in Marital Satisfaction

Curvilinear most common
– High satisfaction at time of marriage
– Lower during child-rearing years
– Rebounds — youngest child beyond
adolescent years
B2
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Gay and Lesbian Families

Similarities to other family types:
– Negotiate relationships with larger
community and families of origin
– Decide how to meet needs
Whole family
 Individual members

B3
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B End
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Marital Adjustment Process
G

Modifying and adapting behavior and
interaction patterns

Both individual and couple changes

Goal: Marital satisfaction and success
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Marital Adjustment Tasks
Emotional fulfillment & support
Sexual adjustment
Personal habits
Gender roles
Material concerns & finances
Work, employment, & achievement
G1
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Marital Adjustment Tasks
Social life, friends, and recreation
Family and relatives
Communication
Power and decision making
Handling conflict and solving problems
Morals, values, and ideology
G1
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Adjustment depends on:

How many other issues couple has to
deal with regarding:
– Degree of compatibility
– How many issues unresolved
G1
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Major Issues at Early Stages
Table 8.2 = challenges couples face early
Money is number one, then:
Before marriage: jealousy, relatives, friends
First year of marriage: communication and sex
After first birth: sex, communication, relatives;
jealousy and friends drop to bottom of list
C2
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C End
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Requirements for Adjusting
to Parenthood
Living with a totally dependent person is
very challenging!
Preparation
Willingness to ask for and accept help
Flexibility in adjusting life to meeting
another’s needs
D
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Degree of stress depends on:
 How
well prepared parents are
 How
easy child is to care for
 Maturity
of parents
 Economic
 Social
D1
status
support
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Being a Father

What men consider important in
fathering:
– Love
– Being a provider
– “Being there”
– Being a model, teacher, moral guide
D2
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Being a Father
D2

Affected development more than
anything else

Much more positive than negative,
despite challenges

Gave meaning to life
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D End
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Midlife Issues
Physical changes
Awareness of finite time left –
personalization of mortality
Introspection and self-analysis
Heavy financial responsibilities
Entering prime of life’s fulfillment
E
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Adjustments during Middle
Adulthood
– Marital satisfaction lowest –
school age/teenage children
– Time for revitalization
– Sandwich generation
– Postparental years
 Empty
nest
 No so empty nest — boomerang kids
E1
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E End
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Late Adulthood Means
Maintaining:
–Health and activity level
–Adequate income
–Fulfilling work roles
–Acceptable living conditions
–Identity and social status
F1
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Late Adulthood Means
Maintaining:
-Companionship and friendship
-Leisure time
-New familial roles
-Acceptance of one’s life and
achieving ego integrity
F1
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Adjustments during Late
Adulthood
Marital satisfaction usually increased
— second honeymoon
 Divorce more difficult when older

– Negatively affects parent-adult child
relationship

F 2-3-4
Maintaining parent-adult child
relations is important
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F End
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Life Expectancies
G

Men die at 74

Women die at 80

Most women will be widows

Widows exceed widowers — at all ages

Spouse’s death — one of most traumatic
events
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Widowhood

Widows need more family contact

Problems
– Major loneliness
– Home and car repair
– Finances
– Role changes
G
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G End
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