Give and take: 缅北强奸 researcher says its crucial for couples to talk about their needs
When is the last time you and your partner had a heart-to-heart about your respective needs and how they are being met? A University of Toronto researcher, whose work focuses on sacrifice in romantic relationships, is encouraging couples to have that talk.
鈥淥pen discussions about needs generally is crucial to relationships, which may sound really silly and obvious, but I think it鈥檚 quite striking how little we know about our own needs or our partner鈥檚 needs, and the best way we can go about meeting each other鈥檚 needs,鈥 says Rebecca Horne, a PhD student in psychology at 缅北强奸 Mississauga.
Relationships are often built on give and take. That might mean watching a movie one partner wants to see or choosing a restaurant one partner prefers. But sometimes those little sacrifices can be much larger. Someone might give up their goals, their job or even their friends for their partner.
The impact those bigger sacrifices have is the focus of Horne鈥檚 research. She is currently collecting data on couples who relocate for one partner鈥檚 job and examining how relationships change as a result. She plans to follow 150 couples over a period of one year.
Her current project is an extension of a paper she co-authored , which takes this idea of sacrifice a step further and examines what consistently putting the needs of a partner before one鈥檚 own needs has on relationship satisfaction.
The key reason people in long-term relationships continue to give, even if it鈥檚 detrimental to them personally, is because they get some relational benefit, Horne says, noting it鈥檚 a tradeoff between personal well-being and relationship well-being. Whether that鈥檚 good or bad depends on the person, she says.
It is important for people to reflect on the type of supporter they tend to be when in a relationship, how they meet their partner鈥檚 needs and in what ways they like to meet their own needs, Horne says.
鈥淚s it in line with how you like to give care and support, or do you find it exhausting or overburdening?鈥 she asks. 鈥淒oes it work well for you or not?鈥
Doing things for a partner one might not do for themselves might be good for the relationship to some extent, but partners should be mindful of the boundaries of such giving behaviour and determine if there are some needs being neglected, Horne says.
Perhaps a couple hasn鈥檛 done something one partner wants to do for a long time. That partner needs to decide if they are OK with that, if there鈥檚 a reason this has happened, or if it鈥檚 a pattern that鈥檚 developing in the relationship, Horne explains. And if it is a pattern, then the partner needs to assess if they are comfortable with that.
鈥淚t鈥檚 really about taking stock of how support and care is playing out in a romantic relationship, in a more explicit way, so certain patterns and routines don鈥檛 become set in stone and set you on a trajectory you don鈥檛 really want to be on,鈥 Horne says.