"Love does tend to grow, but loving each other may not prevent break-up," according to psychologist Susan Sprecher, Ph.D. "Couples break up because of decreased levels of satisfaction in the relationship not because they stop loving each other."
Dr. Sprecher discovered that satisfaction and commitment were as, or more, important than love for couples in their desire to stay together by surveying both partners of 101 heterosexual couples at a Midwestern university. She examined both their actual and perceived changes in love, satisfaction and commitment for each other over a four-year period.
By the end of the study, 59 percent of the couples had ended their relationships. These couples reported decreased levels of satisfaction and commitment before the relationship actually ended, but said that their love remained unchanged.
"These results suggest that people do not end their relationship because of the disappearance of love," said Dr. Sprecher, "but because of a dissatisfaction or unhappiness that develops, which may cause love to stop growing." She also noted that love might not completely end when the relationship ends.
Of the 41 couples who remained together, 71 percent had married. The couples who remained together reported that their love, satisfaction and commitment increased over time. The other couples who did break up often reported that they still loved their former partner.
Reference: "I Love You More Today Than Yesterday': Romantic Partners' Perceptions of Changes in Love and Related Affect Over Time," Susan Sprecher, Ph.D. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Vol. 76, No. 1.
This information received from the American Psychological Association (APA), in Washington, DC.
About the Author
Dr. Marlene M. Maheu is the Editor-in-Chief of SelfHelpMagazine, an award winning online electronic-zine, SelfhelpMagazine at http://www.selfhelpmagazine.com/. Article Link: http://selfhelpmagazine.com/article/break-up
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