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© 2002 by David Popenoe, the National Marriage Project,
Rutgers University, New Brunwick, New Jersey. Reprinted with permission.
Myth #1: Marriage benefits
men much more than women.
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.
Myth #2: Having children
typically brings a married couple closer together and increases
marital happiness.
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.
Myth #3: The keys to long-term
marital success are good luck and romantic love.
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.
Myth #4: The more educated a woman becomes, the lower
are her chances of getting married.
A recent study based on marriage rates in the mid-1990s concluded
that todays 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.
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.
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 dont live together before marriage).
Myth #6: People cant
be expected to stay in a marriage for a lifetime as they did in
the past because we live so much longer today.
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.
Myth #7: Marrying puts a
woman at greater risk of domestic violence than if she remains single.
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
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 mens violent behavior.
Myth #8: Married people have
less satisfying sex lives, and less sex, than single people.
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.
Myth #9: Cohabitation is just like marriage, but
without the piece of paper.
Cohabitation typically does not bring the benefits in physical
health, wealth, and emotional well-being 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.
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.
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.
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