Marriage & divorce
Marriage and divorce are both common experiences. In Western cultures, more than 90 percent of people marry by age 50. Healthy marriages are good for couples’ mental and physical health. They are also good for children; growing up in a happy home protects children from mental, physical, educational and social problems. However, about 40 to 50 percent of married couples in the United States divorce. The divorce rate for subsequent marriages is even higher.
Adapted from the Encyclopedia of Psychology
What You Can Do
- Nine psychological tasks for a good marriage
Research on what makes a marriage work shows that people in a good marriage have completed these psychological "tasks.”
- Making stepfamilies work
Parents of a “blended family” face plenty of challenges, but there are things you can do to make communication easier and help children adjust to their new reality.
Getting Help
- Find a Psychologist
- Marital Education Programs Help Keep Couples Together
In the United States, couples marrying for the first time have approximately a fifty percent chance of divorcing. Psychologists are helping couples' "I do" last a lifetime through development and application of scientifically tested relationship education programs.
- Civil wars
Psychologists who work as parenting coordinators help moms and dads keep the peace.
News
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Couples who cohabitate are happier than marrieds
January 19, 2012, MSNBC
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Work-life balance tougher for couples with similar jobs
January 15, 2012, USA TODAY
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Couples benefit from friendships with other couples
January 8, 2012, USA TODAY
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Couples avoid marriage because they fear divorce
December 21, 2011, Fox News
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Legalized same-sex marriage may boost gay men's health
December 17, 2011, USA TODAY
Monitor on Psychology Articles
- Must babies always breed marital discontent?
October 2011
- Psychology’s case for same-sex marriage
October 2010
- Does marriage make us happy?
October 2010
- Less fighting, better outcomes
February 2009
