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Back in 2003 when my marriage blew up, I did an awful lot of relationship research very fast. Unfortunately, we didn't follow aggressively enough on some of the research I did, but I did learn some really interesting basic stuff:

  1. Couples Therapy has a horrific failure rate
  2. Its the best game in town
  3. There are a tiny number of people getting about a 20% or some such success rate ('success' being defined as 'the couple is still around 1-3 years later, depending upon whose math you use)
  4. The Gottman Institute seems to have the most serious research-derived models and seems to be getting the best results. Notably, above 70% success rates, which is a damned far cry from 20%.

  5. And it seems that the work that the Gottman Institute has been doing has continued on apace. Here is a very recent speech. Wow. Just wow.

Date: 2005-07-12 06:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cat-herder.livejournal.com
As I get farther and farther away from the married state (something like 12+ years now?), I get less interested in doing it again. However, I find the Gottman work extremely useful for life in general. He wrote of the four horsemen of the apocalypse as relationship killers. This can apply to anything, be it a coupleness, work, friends, and so on. I find that by reigning in my horsemen, I have managed to improve any relationship I have. For work, it keeps me out of trouble. I just button my lip and keep my head down. For friendships, it helps me pick my battles. For relationships, it forces me to be honest in some ways and annoyingly circumspect in others.

There seems to be, in hacker circles, this insistence on "truth". In reality, a lot of "truth" is simply being annoyingly opinionated. Once folks learn to let a lot slide, life gets better. Everyone gets calmer. I mean, is it worth turning beet red over someone choosing to play Myst on an Apple or DOS box?

As for post marital fu, its an interesting exercise in the invevitable Monday morning quarterbacking, but realize that what you learn can help you everywhere, not just in the next relationship.

Date: 2005-07-15 02:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] achinhibitor.livejournal.com
Once folks learn to let a lot slide, life gets better.

I imagine so.

But how many fractious couples are actually in the state where one or both of them would be better off without the other? Nobody is surprised when it's time for you to get a different employer...

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