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To arrive at the edge of the world's knowledge, seek out the most complex and sophisticated
minds, put them in a room together, and have them ask each other the questions they are
asking themselves.

THE MATHEMATICS OF LOVE


Conversation : MIND

THE MATHEMATICS OF LOVE


A Talk with
John Gottman [4.13.04]

Introduction
Psychologist John Gottman's goal is "to be like the guy who invented Velcro. Nobody
remembers his name, but everybody uses Velcro". He is a psychologist who looks at
relationships and focus on the interaction, the "fleeting architectural fluid form that
people are creating as they talk to each other, as they smile, as they move."
At Gottman's "Love Lab" he conducts empirical research projects that study human
nature scientifically. He follows up his empirical research of interviews, physiological
measurements, observations, and creates mathematical models that provide theoretical
understanding of all these processes.
Gottman, trained as a mathematician, has been influenced by the field of psycho-physiology, which is concerned
with "the study of the body and the face and voice and emotion in relationships, and just try to understand the
naturalistic development of relationships. How do people respond emotionally to one another?" He's made his own
contribution to this field of emotion with his concept of "met-emotion," or "how people feel about feelings, what
their history is with specific emotions like pride, respect or disrespect, love, fear, anger, sadness".
He is looking for nothing less than the universality in relationships. We are as social as bees, he points out, and
"Von Frisch discovered the language of bees by going right to the hive and watching them dance. So we will
discover the human dance."
So far, his surmise is that "respect and affection are essential to all relationships working and contempt destroys
them. It may differ from culture to culture how to communicate respect, and how to communicate affection, and
how not to do it, but I think we'll find that those are universal things".
JB

THE MATHEMATICS OF LOVE


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I look at relationships. What's different about what I do, compared with most psychologists, is that for me the
relationship is the unit, rather than the person. What I focus on is a very ephemeral thing, which is what happens
between people when they interact. It's not either person, it's something that happens when they're together. It is
like a structure that they're building by the way they interact. And I think of it that way, almost like a fleeting
architectural fluid form that people are creating as they talk to each other, as they smile, as they move.
I've been working on a couple of puzzles right now. One is trying to understand couple violence, and how violence
occurs between two people who supposedly love each other, and have a contract to nurture and protect one
another, and to support one another's dreams in a real and meaningful way. Violence occurs so frequently in
relationships in this country. Estimates by Leonard are that 36 percent of newlyweds in the United States have had
a violent fight before they get married. How does violence happen in an ordinary relationship? And is all violence
the same? At what point can you do something about it; is there a point of no return, where you can't do anything
about it? And it must be very ordinary, and so there must be a pattern to it that's understandable.
It's a very hard thing to look at.
We've reconstructed it from what we have learned by talking to people about it, and it does seem that there are
two very distinct forms of violence. One form is where the conflict escalates, and people somehow lose control.
They get to a point where the trigger seems to be feeling disrespected and there's a loss to their dignity. They
feel driven to defend that dignity, and start doing things like posturing and threatening while in a state of high and
diffuse physiological arousal, and they increasingly have a loss of control. The violence tends to be symmetrical,
and there is not a clear victim and perpetrator.
Another kind of violence, which is very different, is where one person in the relationship is using violence to
control and intimidate the other person and is very much not physiologically aroused, very much in control and
trying to do something to the other person that alters their idea of reality. There is a perpetrator and a victim
here, The late Neil Jacobsen and I have called this kind of mind control "gaslighting," after the movie with Ingrid
Bergman. I'd like to understand those two kinds of violence. I think the first one is treatable, particularly early, by
looking at the couple relationship and changing the relationship. It may be even treatable later on, by slowing
things down enough and physiological arousal has a place in it. The second type of violence is more elusive at the
moment, although some initial experiments that I and Julia Babcock and her students have designed show
promising proximal, that is, short term effects with these perpetrators.
That's one puzzle I'm working on trying to understand violence, and how to help people because it is so
common, and it has a huge effect on families, and especially on children, and their development.
Another puzzle I'm working on is just what happens when a baby enters a relationship. Our study shows that the
majority (67%) of couples have a precipitous drop in relationship happiness in the first 3 years of their first baby's
life. That's tragic in terms of the climate of inter-parental hostility and depression that the baby grows up in. That
affective climate between parents is the real cradle that holds the baby. And for the majority of families that
cradle is unsafe for babies.
There are some hopeful signs that interventions will be effective at changing all that. We have done two
randomized clinical trials so far and we can reverse almost all of these negative effects on relationships and on
babies. Also, at this point in the United States, it seems like we're going through a major sociological shift, and I
don't know where it came from. In the last 40 years it seems that men have really changed. Forty years ago men
didn't attend the birth of their babies, now 91 percent of men do attend the birth of their babies. That's
interesting. But there something else too. What I'm seeing everywhere in the United States, regardless of ethnicity,
and race, and culture, and social class, is that men have changed in very dramatic ways. And in a very fundamental
way that has to do with existential choice and meaning, men want to be involved in the life of their babies, to be
better fathers, and through that, to be better partners, as well. The major commitment is really to the baby. It's a
spectacular change.

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We are working with lower-income couples to see whether we can do something about when that baby arrives. So
far we've found that with middle-class couples, in just two days of the couple's life, ten hours, we can change the
drop in relationship satisfaction that happens to two-thirds of couples and not only change the relationship so
there's no increasing hostility over time so relationship satisfaction doesn't go down, and we can have a major
effect on postpartum depression. We can also really affect that baby's emotional and cognitive development in
quite a profound way, with a very brief intervention. And the baby didn't take the workshop. The question is can
we do it when there are many other problems present, like addiction, incarceration, violence, racism, and poverty.
Can we also have that kind of effect? That's what we're going to see in the next nine years, whether we can
change families. We are now engaged with the nonprofit policy group Mathematica in the largest randomized
clinical trial ever done with couples anywhere in the world. There will be 10,000 couples in this study.
Once again, like Head Start, it looks like families are changing in a major way, in terms of social class, from the
bottom up. And the government is thinking that when these scientifically based programs will teach social skills to
lower-income couples, couples on welfare, that they'll learn and they'll be better. They'll learn from what the
middle class is doing. But I think the major learning's going to come the other way because many of the couples
we have worked with who have been through a history of slavery, forcible breakups of families by slaveholders,
bad schooling, racism, poverty, unequal employment opportunities, bad parenting, criminals as their only successful
role models, incarceration, drug addiction, and alcoholism, and violence, and some of these couples are still
together. Many of these people who have triumphed despite it all are amazingly articulate when my wife talks to
them, and helps them to reveal their highly articulate wisdom. We are seeing a new kind of commitment on the
part of men, and on the part of women supporting the men, and who are staying with them in spite of
incarceration and addiction. It's breathtaking, because it's a real existential change.
The learning is going to come from the bottom up because a lot of the middle-class couples in this country are
lost, existentially. They're focusing much more on money and accomplishments and status, and achievement, and
having things. We see something different among these so-called "fragile families", a spiritual sense of meaning and
purpose that is coming largely from the baby from the optimism of having this new baby, and saying, it stops
here. The violence stops here. The lack of a father stops here. We're ending the heritage of slavery (AfricanAmericans are saying) and it stops with me, right now. Here I am, I am not going anywhere. I am going to be a
consistent presence in my baby's life. And I will mentor other fathers to take this same journey with me. It's a
breathtaking change. I think with the scientific application of studying people who really triumph through this,
compared with the people who have tremendous difficulty and the relationships are breaking up, or there is
increased violence and addiction, we can create a major change in this country. What an opportunity.
One thing we know from Peggy Sanday's work on male domination of women and women's power, in her classic
study of 186 hunting-gathering cultures is that when men are involved in the care of babies, not just children but
babies, that culture doesn't make war. I think that's what we're seeing now. We're seeing the possibility of an end
to war, where fathers are going to be saying, "not my kid. My kid's not going to that war. I am not going to let
that happen. My kid isn't dying for that cause, no way. I am going to change the values of this country. If I have to,
I'm getting out of here, I'm getting out of this country with my kid alive, I refuse to have my kid go to that war
and die for nothing." When fathers are involved in the care of babies everything changes. That's what I think we're
going to see, so I'm very excited, very optimistic. I want to write a book called "We fathers will now end war." Just
a dream, maybe, but, as John Lennon said, I'm not the only one. A scientific approach to helping this happen is
really very powerful, because the right information makes a big change.
A scientific approach to the study of families and relationships makes a real difference. The reason for us getting
all these significant effects changing up to 75 percent of couples, in a very short time period, is because all we're
doing is studying the people who cope well and how they're different from the people who don't cope well; in this
case it's about relationships. It's not rocket science, it's very simple science, like observing how stars and planets
move. Primitive science. And with that knowledge, with good information, people just take it and use it and run
with it. So it's a matter of really changing what people know.

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My goal is to be like the guy who invented Velcro. Nobody remembers his name, but everybody uses Velcro. I
think the same thing will be true here. This information is eventually going to become something everybody learns
in elementary school, and knows about. How to form and maintain relationships with other people, starting with
kids' friendships. It's so fundamental. We're such social creatures, to understand how to have relationships, how to
have friendships, how to love right, how to make relationships last is so basic to our health, longevity, our very
survival as a species. How to be a good father, a good mother. The principles are all there waiting to be
uncovered. Like Luenhook looking through his microscope and discovering a hidden world no one saw but him,
researchers now are uncovering the amazing world of emotion. Discovering very simple principles that are easy to
apply. And eventually everybody will know them.
Science comes into the study of families and relationships because a scientist always admits to profound
ignorance, doesn't presume to know about these things, takes this ignorance and goes to the people and observes
them in situations that are vitally important when people are having dinner, when they meet at the end of the
day, when they are in the bedrooms cuddling, when they're having sex, when they're interacting with their babies
in these very important moments, a scientist without preconceptions observes and tries to understand
interviews people, measures their physiology, and tries to get at their inner experience. And then creates
mathematical models that provide theoretical understanding of all these processes.
By putting this information together, in a way that is unbiased, with proper controls, so the observers are doubleblind and don't know the hypotheses and so on, then you can come up with information that is really useful and
helpful to people. It may have to be done over and over again when we do this research with French Creole, black
people, married to a Cuban black. Or when we go to Arizona and study Pima Indians or Navahos. It may be
different there. And when we do this work across cultures, we will discover, through doing this over and over
again, without bias, what the universality is in relationships.
I am sure that universality is there. We are no less social than bees, and Von Frisch discovered the language of
bees by going right to the hive and watching them dance. So we will discover the human dance. What's an
example of what we may find? So far I believe we're going to find that respect and affection are essential to all
relationships working and contempt destroys them. It may differ from culture to culture how to communicate
respect, and how to communicate affection, and how not to do it, but I think we'll find that those are universal
things.
I started off as a mathematician, and always thought I would be a mathematician. I was going to study math at
MIT, and my first year I was randomly paired with a roommate at MIT who was a psychologist, and I got really
interested in his books and changed fields, and went to the University of Wisconsin. And at the University of
Wisconsin there was a tremendous amount of interest in Pete Lang's work on psychophysiology, Harry Harlow's
work on love in mom and baby rhesus monkeys, and Dick McFall's work on social skills, Mavis Hetherington 's work
on families, and interaction, and especially using observational methods and tight quantitative analyses.
That was what really fascinated me: observing people and trying to see what you could learn from a much more
objective analysis. I've been influenced tremendously by my friend Paul Ekman's work Looking at Faces, which
started with Charles Darwin's and Sylvan Tomkin's work, looking at the universality of how emotions get expressed,
by Harry Harlow and John Bowlby's work in how normal dependency is in relationships. These views presented a
new alternative to behaviorism and also to psychoanalysis.
Like Harlow and Bowlby, for me the relationship was the unit. And I've looked at emotion and how it's really
communicated and what people are thinking. Showing people their videotapes and finding out what's going on
in their minds. Because we don't know. Also I've been influenced by the whole field of psycho-physiology, which
also developed in large measure at the University of Wisconsin. I've worked with Bob Levinson, who's a psychophysiologist and we've put together these influences. Ekman and Levenson and Darwin and psycho-physiology, and
the study of the body and the face and voice and emotion in relationships, and just try to understand the
naturalistic development of relationships. How do people respond emotionally to one another?
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What I have added to this field of emotion is my concept of "met-emotion," or how people feel about feelings,
what their history is with specific emotions like pride, respect or disrespect, love, fear, anger, sadness. What their
philosophy is about emotions and why they have this philosophy. It's critical to parenting and to couple
relationships as well. It determines emotional behavior in families. And with my former students Lynn Katz and Dan
Yoshimoto the study of meta-emotion now is providing us with new tools for changing families.
Bob Levenson and I were very surprised when, in 1983, we found that we could actually predict, with over 90
percent accuracy, what was going to happen to a relationship over a three-year period just by examining their
physiology and behavior during a conflict discussion, and later just from an interview about how the couple viewed
their past. 90% accuracy! Nobody was getting that kind of prediction in psychology. In fact, Walter Michel had just
published a book challenging psychology with really terribly low rates of being able to predict human behavior. He
said the Emperor has no clothes. But here we were with huge correlations, and getting enormous stability in
couples interaction over time (with no intervention). We thought at first that it might be just chance, but we
found after doing study after study that very simple patterns replicated in sample after sample. You could tell
from just looking at how a couple talked about how their day went, or talked about an area of conflict, what was
going to happen to the relationship with a lot of accuracy.
That was surprising to us. It seemed that people either started in a mean-spirited way, a critical way, started
talking about a disagreement, started talking about a problem as just a symptom of their partner's inadequate
character, which made their partner defensive and escalated the conflict, and people started getting mean and
insulting to one another. That predicted the relationship was going to fall apart. 96% of the time the way the
conflict discussion started in the first 3 minutes determined how it would go for the rest of the discussion. And
four years later it was like no time had passed, their interaction style was almost identical. Also 69% of the time
they were talking about the same issues, which we realized then were "perpetual issues" that they would never
solve. These were basic personality differences that never went away. She was more extroverted or she was more
of an explorer or he was more punctual or frugal.
Some couples were caught by the web of these perpetual issues and made each other miserable, they were "grid
locked" like bumper-to-bumper traffic with these issues, while other couples had similar issues but coped with
them and had a "dialogue" that even contained laughter and affection. It seemed that relationships last to the
extent that you select someone whose annoying personality traits don't send you into emotional orbit. Once again
conventional wisdom was wrong. The big issue wasn't helping couples resolve their conflicts, but moving them
from gridlock to dialogue. And the secret of how to do that turned out to be having each person talk about their
dream within the conflict and bringing Viktor Frankl's existential logotherapy into the marital boxing ring. Once
people talked about what they wished for and hoped for in this gridlock conflict and the narrative of why this was
so important to them, in 86% of the cases they would move from gridlock to dialogue. Again a new door opened.
Not all marital conflicts are the same. You can't teach people a set of skills and just apply them to every issue.
Some issues are deeper, they have more meaning. And then it turned out that the very issues that cause the most
pain and alienation can also be the greatest sources of intimacy and connection.
Another surprise: we followed couples for as long as 20 years, and we found that there was another kind of
couple that didn't really show up on the radar; they looked fine, they weren't mean, they didn't escalate the
conflict but about 16 to 22 years after the wedding they started divorcing. They were often the pillars of their
community. They seemed very calm and in control of their lives, and then suddenly they break up. Everyone is
shocked and horrified. But we could look back at our early tapes and see the warning signs we had never seen
before. Those people were people who just didn't have very much positive connection. There wasn't very much
affection and also especially humor between them.
These are the people you see in restaurants who've been married a long time and they're sitting there not talking
to each other throughout the whole dinner and they don't look very happy about the vast chasm between them.
Those are the couples where you say to your partner "Let's never become like them, okay?" These sorts of
emotionally disconnected relationships were another important dimension of failed relationships. We learned
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through them that the quality of the friendship and intimacy affects the nature of conflict in a very big way. My
former student Janice Driver studied this friendship aspect of emotional connection with detailed analyses of our
apartment lab tapes, hundreds of hours of people doing ordinary things like reading the paper or having dinner.
Again. Like Leunhook with his microscope, Jani discovered a hidden world in the ordinary everyday moments.
These moments were the key to how people build friendship and even sexual intimacy. Foreplay really happens all
the time. Eventually in our theory there were three circles having to do with conflict, friendship, and sense of
purpose and meaning, that were interlocked here. That became our theory, we called the "sound relationship
house theory." It also worked for the gay and lesbian couples that Levenson and I studied for a dozen years.
Over a decade ago I began working with James Murray, an amazingly gifted applied mathematician, who in many
ways is the father of a new field called mathematical biology. All that theorizing about chaos actually led to new
mathematical developments that could model very complex phenomena in biology with very few parameters
because the equations were nonlinear. So James and I and his students collaborated and after 4 year of meeting
once a week, we were able to get equations for marital interaction as well as physiology and perception, that
allowed us to understand our predictions, of what was going to happen to a relationship over time. Using these
parameters, we are not only be able to predict, but now understand what people are doing when they affect one
another.
And through the equations we could really build a quantitative theory, and we can understand how to intervene
and how to change things. Now the sound relationship house theory had a mathematical basis. That's when physics
really moved forward by leaps and bounds, after Newton and Leibnitz invented the math for it, the calculus. And
perhaps, who knows, perhaps we could do the same with our math. And how we could know what it is we're
affecting, what parameters, and maybe understand why our interventions are effective or why at times they fail.
This is the mathematics of love.
For the past eight years I've been really involved, working with my amazingly talented wife, trying to put these
ideas together and use our theory so that it that helps couples and babies. And we now know that these
interventions really make a big difference. We can turn around 75 percent of distressed couples with a two-day
workshop and nine sessions of marital therapy. These are couples that have waited as long as six years to get any
kind of help. So it's a considerably deteriorated situation.
Then we are also finding that if we intervene early, and do preventative intervention, our effects are much bigger,
and we have an impact not only on the couple, and changing their longitudinal course, in a dramatic way, in not a
very long time, but we can also have an impact on the emotional development of their children. We're following
those children we're now studying children whose parents went only to a two-day workshop, and their babies
are now turning three years old, and we'll know at the end of this year whether this emotional developmental
change continues and the children are in a dramatically different trajectory than kids whose parents didn't take the
workshop.
It sounds as if we have a stake in relationships staying together but we don't. My major stake is in
understanding. We have a stake in people not staying together if they don't feel good about their relationship and
it's not really going anywhere for them, it's not really helping them build one another's dreams, it's not a
relationship that has dignity. But we like to help people understand why it is that it didn't work, so that the next
relationship, or next set of relationships, can be better. One of the major things we found is that honoring your
partner's dreams is absolutely critical. A lot of times people have incompatible dreams or they don't want to
honor their partner's dreams, or they don't want to yield power, they don't want to share power. So that explains
a lot of times why they don't really belong together.
Psycho-physiology is an important part of this research. It's something that Bob Levenson brought to the search
initially, and then I got trained in psycho-physiology as well. And the reason we're interested in what was
happening in the body is that there's an intimate connection between what's happening to the autonomic nervous
system and what happening in the brain, and how well people can take in information how well they can just
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process information for example, just being able to listen to your partner that is much harder when your
heart rate is above the intrinsic rate of the heart, which is around a hundred to a hundred and five beats a minute
for most people with a healthy heart.
At that point we know, from Loren Rowling's work, that people start secreting adrenalin, and then they get into a
state of diffuse physiological arousal (or DPA) , so their heart is beating faster, it's contracting harder, the arteries
start getting constricted, blood is drawn away from the periphery into the trunk, the blood supply shuts down to
the gut and the kidney, and all kinds of other things are happening people are sweating, and things are
happening in the brain that create a tunnel vision, one in which they perceive everything as a threat and they react
as if they have been put in great danger by this conversation.
All of which are really great conditions for running away from a predator, or fighting aggressively to protect the
tribe. And survival. So when you have less blood in the periphery you create what Malcolm Gladwell calls a
bloodless armor that lets you strike without really bleeding too much, or run away without hurting yourself too
much. But in the context of a discussion with somebody you love clearly this DPA is not very functional. And we
found in fact that physiological arousal is one of the best predictors of what happens to that relationship. That's
why it predicts.
And men and women are somewhat different, not a lot, but enough, which is another fascinating puzzle, because
we find that if the woman is driving the husband's heart rate, that predicts the dissolution of the relationship
and not the other way around. Now why should that be? Why should it be that DPA, the general physiological
arousal of men is a worse indicator of the fate of a heterosexual relationship than that of the woman? Unless she's
been abused, physically or sexually, when the arousal of both of them is a really good indicator.
Because men are different. Men have a lot of trouble when they reach a state of vigilance, when they think there's
real danger, they have a lot of trouble calming down. and there's probably an evolutionary history to that. Because
it functioned very well for our hominid ancestors, anthropologists think, for men to stay physiologically aroused
and vigilant, in cooperative hunting and protecting the tribe, which was a role that males had very early in our
evolutionary history. Whereas women had the opposite sort of role, in terms of survival of the species, those
women reproduced more effectively who had the milk-let-down reflex, which only happens when oxytocin is
secreted in the brain, it only happens when women as any woman knows who's been breast-feeding, you have
to be able to calm down and relax. But oxytocin is also the hormone of affiliation. So women have developed this
sort of social order, caring for one another, helping one another, and affiliating, that also allows them to really
calm down and have the milk let-down reflex. And so it's one of nature's jokes. Women can calm down, men
can't; they stay aroused and vigilant.
So it's a real challenge, now that relationships, in the last couple of centuries, have started becoming important in
terms of affection and nurturance and support and we're having fathers come back into the equation in a big
way in baby's life. Physiology becomes really critical in this whole thing. A provocative finding from Alyson
Shapiro's recent dissertation is that if we take a look at how a couple argues when the woman is in the sixth
month of pregnancy, we can predict over half the variation in the baby, the three-month-old baby's vagal tone,
which is the ability of the vagus nerve, the major nerve of the parasympathetic branch of the autonomic nervous
system, which is responsible for establishing calm and focusing attention. That vagus nerve in the baby is
eventually going to be working well if the parents, during pregnancy, are fighting with each other constructively.
That takes us into fetal development, a whole new realm of inquiry.
And if they're not, if they're fighting destructively, that fetus, that baby is on a different longitudinal course its
neurological development is already handicapped from the time it's born. The fetal development is really
affecting the function of this vagus nerve, the tenth cranial nerve. Now this destructive process that happens to
two thirds of all couples can be reversed, just in a 10-hour workshop the parents take in the last trimester of
pregnancy. One of the things that's very interesting is that with psychological interventions you can change
neurological growth and development, and emotional growth and development in the baby. This makes for more
empathetic children and more empathetic infants as well. Daniel Siegel is beginning to help us understand how
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this happens, how to integrate attachment theory, relationship science and brain neurophysiology and growth. It's
a rich and exciting new field, what Jaak Panksepp calls this "affective neuroscience."
We find that there are differences between men and women and the way you to study these differences is
independent of sexual orientation. You have to study gay and Lesbian couples who are committed to each other as
well as heterosexual couples who are committed to each other, and try and match things as much as you can, like
how long they've been together, and the quality of their relationship. And we've done that, and we find that there
are two gender differences that really hold up.
One is that if a man presents an issue, to either a man he's in love with or a woman he's in love with, the man is
angrier presenting the issue. And we find that when a woman receives an issue, either from a woman she loves or
a man she loves, she is much more sad than a man would be receiving that same issue. It's about anger and
sadness. Why? Remember, Bowlby taught us that attachment and loss and grief are part of the same system. So
women are finely tuned to attaching and connecting and to sadness and loss and grief, while men are attuned to
defend, stay vigilant, attack, to anger. My friend Levenson did an acoustic startle study (that's where you shoot of
a blank pistol behind someone's head when they least expect it). Men had a bigger heart rate reactivity and took
longer to recover, which we would expect, but what even more interesting is that when you asked people what
they were feeling, women were scared and men were angry.
So that's probably why those two differences have held up. Physiologically people find over and over again in
heterosexual relationships and this hasn't been studied yet in gay and Lesbian relationships that men have a
lower flash point for increasing heart-rate arousal, and it takes them longer to recover. And not only that, but
when men are trying to recover, and calm down, they can't do it very well because they keep naturally rehearsing
thoughts of righteous indignation and feeling like an innocent victim. They maintain their own vigilance and arousal
with these thoughts, mostly of getting even, whereas women really can distract themselves and calm down
physiologically from being angered or being upset about something. If women could affiliate and secrete oxytocin
when they felt afraid, they's even calm down faster, probably.
So there are all these small but reliable differences, and I think they have big implications for what you do in
relationships. Now it's women who matter here, because we find that 80 percent of the time women are the ones
in our culture who raise issues, and they raise them harshly in an unhappy relationship and more gently in a happy
relationship.
But does that mean that women are to blame in some way for relationships going bad? The poor men get so
physiologically aroused they can't think straight and the women are calmer, so it's no wonder, we might think, that
men withdraw or aggress. Not so at all. Levenson and I did a study where we had couples talk about how their day
went before they talked about their big conflict area, and it turned out that the women who raised the issue
harshly and by the way, the men who raised the issue harshly as well, 20 percent of the time it's guys who raise
the issue had partners who weren't very interested in how their day went. They'd look at their watch, or, you
know, they were bored, or they were they were kind of insulting when the person started talking about their
day. Like one guy said to his wife, "Why don't you go first? It won't take you very long." Really a putdown, just in
their talking about how their day went. Those people had partners who started harshly. So it's really a circle.
Friendship and emotional connection and the management of conflict.
We've now gotten to the point where not only can we predict what's going to happen to the relationship, and not
only can we intervene to prevent decay of relationships for people who really want to stay together, not only can
we help people who really are continually unhappy with one another, to find out why their relationship isn't
working, but we're really starting to understand the whole equation of this process, of having close relationships.
Yes, there's enormous predictability. But there's nothing random or hard to understand about it. The principles are
very simple. And they're easy to learn, and it makes a difference if you have the right ways to think about this,
compared to the wrong ways of thinking about it. There's a lot of stuff that makes sort of logical sense, that
seems like it would be right, and turns out to be a complete myth about relationships. We're at the point where
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we're starting to understand how to have an impact on a societal level, not just on individual cases, but really to
change families in our whole culture.
But we are far from being done. There's so much we don't understand. Like sex. We have no clue about how sex
works in relationships, how it fits into everyday interaction, what good sex really is like, what great sex really is,
what everyday sex is, how it all works or fails. We have no descriptive data. A lot of that is because we are such a
prudish, low-touch culture. The New York Times recently reported, in an article about Kinsey, that 100 million
dollars of awarded research funds had been reversed by the religious right in the USA because they think that
federal dollars shouldn't be doing this kind of research. Even when it has health benefits, like understanding how
AIDS spreads. This has got to stop. We need to know about sex so we can advise couples, and so we can
understand. We just have Masters and Johnson's great breakthroughs, but they only really studied masturbation,
not sexual relations. So there is still a great frontier out there.

Reality Club Discussion

John Gottman
Psychologist; Co-founder, The Gottman Relationship Institute; Author, The Science of Trust

I look at relationships. What's different about what I do, compared with most psychologists, is that for me the
relationship is the unit, rather than the person. What I focus on is a very ephemeral thing, which is what happens
between people when they interact. It's not either person, it's something that happens when they're together. It is
like a structure that they're building by the way they interact. And I think of it that way, almost like a fleeting
architectural fluid form that people are creating as they talk to each other, as they smile, as they move.
I've been working on a couple of puzzles right now. One is trying to understand couple violence, and how violence
occurs between two people who supposedly love each other, and have a contract to nurture and protect one
another, and to support one another's dreams in a real and meaningful way. Violence occurs so frequently in
relationships in this country. Estimates by Leonard are that 36 percent of newlyweds in the United States have had
a violent fight before they get married. How does violence happen in an ordinary relationship? And is all violence
the same? At one point can you do something about it; is there a point of no return, where you can't do anything
about it? And it must be very ordinary, and so there must be a pattern to it that's understandable.
It's a very hard thing to look at.
We've reconstructed it from what we have learned by talking to people about it, and it does seem that there are
two very distinct forms of violence. One form is where the conflict escalates, and people somehow lose control.
They get to a point where the trigger seems to be feeling disrespected and there's a loss to their dignity. They
feel driven to defend that dignity, and start doing things like posturing and threatening while in a state of high and
diffuse physiological arousal, and they increasingly have a loss of control. The violence tends to be symmetrical,
and there is not a clear victim and perpetrator.
Another kind of violence, which is very different, is where one person in the relationship is using violence to
control and intimidate the other person and is very much not physiologically aroused, very much in control and
trying to do something to the other person that alters their idea of reality. There is a perpetrator and a victim
here, The late Neil Jacobsen and I have called this kind of mind control "gaslighting," after the movie with Ingrid
Bergman. I'd like to understand those two kinds of violence. I think the first one is treatable, particularly early, by
looking at the couple relationship and changing the relationship. It may be even treatable later on, by slowing
things down enough and physiological arousal has a place in it. The second type of violence is more elusive at the
moment, although some initial experiments that I and Julia Babcock and her students have designed show
promising proximal, that is, short term effects with these perpetrators.
That's one puzzle I'm working on trying to understand violence, and how to help people because it is so
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common, and it has a huge effect on families, and especially on children, and their development.
Another puzzle I'm working on is just what happens when a baby enters a relationship. Our study shows that the
majority (67%) of couples have a precipitous drop in relationship happiness in the first 3 years of their first baby's
life. That's tragic in terms of the climate of inter-parental hostility and depression that the baby grows up in. That
affective climate between parents is the real cradle that holds the baby. And for the majority of families that
cradle is unsafe for babies.
There are some hopeful signs that interventions will be effective at changing all that. We have done two
randomized clinical trials so far and we can reverse almost all of these negative effects on relationships and on
babies. Also, at this point in the United States, it seems like we're going through a major sociological shift, and I
don't know where it came from. In the last 40 years it seems that men have really changed. Forty years ago men
didn't attend the birth of their babies, now 91 percent of men do attend the birth of their babies. That's
interesting. But there something else too. What I'm seeing everywhere in the United States, regardless of ethnicity,
and race, and culture, and social class, is that men have changed in very dramatic ways. And in a very fundamental
way that has to do with existential choice and meaning, men want to be involved in the life of their babies, to be
better fathers, and through that, to be better partners, as well. The major commitment is really to the baby. It's a
spectacular change.
We are working with lower-income couples to see whether we can do something about when that baby arrives. So
far we've found that with middle-class couples, in just two days of the couple's life, ten hours, we can change the
drop in relationship satisfaction that happens to two-thirds of couples and not only change the relationship so
there's no increasing hostility over time so relationship satisfaction doesn't go down, and we can have a major
effect on postpartum depression. We can also really affect that baby's emotional and cognitive development in
quite a profound way, with a very brief intervention. And the baby didn't take the workshop. The question is can
we do it when there are many other problems present, like addiction, incarceration, violence, racism, and poverty.
Can we also have that kind of effect? That's what we're going to see in the next nine years, whether we can
change families. We are now engaged with the nonprofit policy group Mathematica in the largest randomized
clinical trial ever done with couples anywhere in the world. There will be 10,000 couples in this study.
Once again, like Head Start, it looks like families are changing in a major way, in terms of social class, from the
bottom up. And the government is thinking that when these scientifically based programs will teach social skills to
lower-income couples, couples on welfare, that they'll learn and they'll be better. They'll learn from what the
middle class is doing. But I think the major learning's going to come the other way because many of the couples
we have worked with who have been through a history of slavery, forcible breakups of families by slaveholders,
bad schooling, racism, poverty, unequal employment opportunities, bad parenting, criminals as their only successful
role models, incarceration, drug addiction, and alcoholism, and violence, and some of these couples are still
together. Many of these people who have triumphed despite it all are amazingly articulate when my wife talks to
them, and helps them to reveal their highly articulate wisdom. We are seeing a new kind of commitment on the
part of men, and on the part of women supporting the men, and who are staying with them in spite of
incarceration and addiction. It's breathtaking, because it's a real existential change.
The learning is going to come from the bottom up because a lot of the middle-class couples in this country are
lost, existentially. They're focusing much more on money and accomplishments and status, and achievement, and
having things. We see something different among these so-called "fragile families", a spiritual sense of meaning and
purpose that is coming largely from the baby from the optimism of having this new baby, and saying, it stops
here. The violence stops here. The lack of a father stops here. We're ending the heritage of slavery (AfricanAmericans are saying) and it stops with me, right now. Here I am, I am not going anywhere. I am going to be a
consistent presence in my baby's life. And I will mentor other fathers to take this same journey with me. It's a
breathtaking change. I think with the scientific application of studying people who really triumph through this,
compared with the people who have tremendous difficulty and the relationships are breaking up, or there is
increased violence and addiction, we can create a major change in this country. What an opportunity.
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One thing we know from Peggy Sanday's work on male domination of women and women's power, in her classic
study of 186 hunting-gathering cultures is that when men are involved in the care of babies, not just children but
babies, that culture doesn't make war. I think that's what we're seeing now. We're seeing the possibility of an end
to war, where fathers are going to be saying, "not my kid. My kid's not going to that war. I am not going to let
that happen. My kid isn't dying for that cause, no way. I am going to change the values of this country. If I have to,
I'm getting out of here, I'm getting out of this country with my kid alive, I refuse to have my kid go to that war
and die for nothing." When fathers are involved in the care of babies everything changes. That's what I think we're
going to see, so I'm very excited, very optimistic. I want to write a book called "We fathers will now end war." Just
a dream, maybe, but, as John Lennon said, I'm not the only one. A scientific approach to helping this happen is
really very powerful, because the right information makes a big change.
A scientific approach to the study of families and relationships makes a real difference. The reason for us getting
all these significant effects changing up to 75 percent of couples, in a very short time period, is because all we're
doing is studying the people who cope well and how they're different from the people who don't cope well; in this
case it's about relationships. It's not rocket science, it's very simple science, like observing how stars and planets
move. Primitive science. And with that knowledge, with good information, people just take it and use it and run
with it. So it's a matter of really changing what people know.
My goal is to be like the guy who invented Velcro. Nobody remembers his name, but everybody uses Velcro. I
think the same thing will be true here. This information is eventually going to become something everybody learns
in elementary school, and knows about. How to form and maintain relationships with other people, starting with
kids' friendships. It's so fundamental. We're such social creatures, to understand how to have relationships, how to
have friendships, how to love right, how to make relationships last is so basic to our health, longevity, our very
survival as a species. How to be a good father, a good mother. The principles are all there waiting to be
uncovered. Like Luenhook looking through his microscope and discovering a hidden world no one saw but him,
researchers now are uncovering the amazing world of emotion. Discovering very simple principles that are easy to
apply. And eventually everybody will know them.
Science comes into the study of families and relationships because a scientist always admits to profound
ignorance, doesn't presume to know about these things, takes this ignorance and goes to the people and observes
them in situations that are vitally important when people are having dinner, when they meet at the end of the
day, when they are in the bedrooms cuddling, when they're having sex, when they're interacting with their babies
in these very important moments, a scientist without preconceptions observes and tries to understand
interviews people, measures their physiology, and tries to get at their inner experience. And then creates
mathematical models that provide theoretical understanding of all these processes.
By putting this information together, in a way that is unbiased, with proper controls, so the observers are doubleblind and don't know the hypotheses and so on, then you can come up with information that is really useful and
helpful to people. It may have to be done over and over again when we do this research with French Creole, black
people, married to a Cuban black. Or when we go to Arizona and study Pima Indians or Navahos. It may be
different there. And when we do this work across cultures, we will discover, through doing this over and over
again, without bias, what the universality is in relationships.
I am sure that universality is there. We are no less social than bees, and Von Frisch discovered the language of
bees by going right to the hive and watching them dance. So we will discover the human dance. What's an
example of what we may find? So far I believe we're going to find that respect and affection are essential to all
relationships working and contempt destroys them. It may differ from culture to culture how to communicate
respect, and how to communicate affection, and how not to do it, but I think we'll find that those are universal
things.
I started off as a mathematician, and always thought I would be a mathematician. I was going to study math at
MIT, and my first year I was randomly paired with a roommate at MIT who was a psychologist, and I got really
interested in his books and changed fields, and went to the University of Wisconsin. And at the University of
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Wisconsin there was a tremendous amount of interest in Pete Lang's work on psychophysiology, Harry Harlow's
work on love in mom and baby rhesus monkeys, and Dick McFall's work on social skills, Mavis Hetherington 's work
on families, and interaction, and especially using observational methods and tight quantitative analyses.
That was what really fascinated me: observing people and trying to see what you could learn from a much more
objective analysis. I've been influenced tremendously by my friend Paul Ekman's work Looking at Faces, which
started with Charles Darwin's and Sylvan Tomkin's work, looking at the universality of how emotions get expressed,
by Harry Harlow and John Bowlby's work in how normal dependency is in relationships. These views presented a
new alternative to behaviorism and also to psychoanalysis.
Like Harlow and Bowlby, for me the relationship was the unit. And I've looked at emotion and how it's really
communicated and what people are thinking. Showing people their videotapes and finding out what's going on
in their minds. Because we don't know. Also I've been influenced by the whole field of psycho-physiology, which
also developed in large measure at the University of Wisconsin. I've worked with Bob Levinson, who's a psychophysiologist and we've put together these influences. Ekman and Levenson and Darwin and psycho-physiology, and
the study of the body and the face and voice and emotion in relationships, and just try to understand the
naturalistic development of relationships. How do people respond emotionally to one another?
What I have added to this field of emotion is my concept of "met-emotion," or how people feel about feelings,
what their history is with specific emotions like pride, respect or disrespect, love, fear, anger, sadness. What their
philosophy is about emotions and why they have this philosophy. It's critical to parenting and to couple
relationships as well. It determines emotional behavior in families. And with my former students Lynn Katz and Dan
Yoshimoto the study of meta-emotion now is providing us with new tools for changing families.
Bob Levenson and I were very surprised when, in 1983, we found that we could actually predict, with over 90
percent accuracy, what was going to happen to a relationship over a three-year period just by examining their
physiology and behavior during a conflict discussion, and later just from an interview about how the couple viewed
their past. 90% accuracy! Nobody was getting that kind of prediction in psychology. In fact, Walter Michel had just
published a book challenging psychology with really terribly low rates of being able to predict human behavior. He
said the Emperor has no clothes. But here we were with huge correlations, and getting enormous stability in
couples interaction over time (with no intervention). We thought at first that it might be just chance, but we
found after doing study after study that very simple patterns replicated in sample after sample. You could tell
from just looking at how a couple talked about how their day went, or talked about an area of conflict, what was
going to happen to the relationship with a lot of accuracy.
That was surprising to us. It seemed that people either started in a mean-spirited way, a critical way, started
talking about a disagreement, started talking about a problem as just a symptom of their partner's inadequate
character, which made their partner defensive and escalated the conflict, and people started getting mean and
insulting to one another. That predicted the relationship was going to fall apart. 96% of the time the way the
conflict discussion started in the first 3 minutes determined how it would go for the rest of the discussion. And
four years later it was like no time had passed, their interaction style was almost identical. Also 69% of the time
they were talking about the same issues, which we realized then were "perpetual issues" that they would never
solve. These were basic personality differences that never went away. She was more extroverted or she was more
of an explorer or he was more punctual or frugal.
Some couples were caught by the web of these perpetual issues and made each other miserable, they were "grid
locked" like bumper-to-bumper traffic with these issues, while other couples had similar issues but coped with
them and had a "dialogue" that even contained laughter and affection. It seemed that relationships last to the
extent that you select someone whose annoying personality traits don't send you into emotional orbit. Once again
conventional wisdom was wrong. The big issue wasn't helping couples resolve their conflicts, but moving them
from gridlock to dialogue. And the secret of how to do that turned out to be having each person talk about their
dream within the conflict and bringing Viktor Frankl's existential logotherapy into the marital boxing ring. Once
people talked about what they wished for and hoped for in this gridlock conflict and the narrative of why this was
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so important to them, in 86% of the cases they would move from gridlock to dialogue. Again a new door opened.
Not all marital conflicts are the same. You can't teach people a set of skills and just apply them to every issue.
Some issues are deeper, they have more meaning. And then it turned out that the very issues that cause the most
pain and alienation can also be the greatest sources of intimacy and connection.
Another surprise: we followed couples for as long as 20 years, and we found that there was another kind of
couple that didn't really show up on the radar; they looked fine, they weren't mean, they didn't escalate the
conflict but about 16 to 22 years after the wedding they started divorcing. They were often the pillars of their
community. They seemed very calm and in control of their lives, and then suddenly they break up. Everyone is
shocked and horrified. But we could look back at our early tapes and see the warning signs we had never seen
before. Those people were people who just didn't have very much positive connection. There wasn't very much
affection and also especially humor between them.
These are the people you see in restaurants who've been married a long time and they're sitting there not talking
to each other throughout the whole dinner and they don't look very happy about the vast chasm between them.
Those are the couples where you say to your partner "Let's never become like them, okay?" These sorts of
emotionally disconnected relationships were another important dimension of failed relationships. We learned
through them that the quality of the friendship and intimacy affects the nature of conflict in a very big way. My
former student Janice Driver studied this friendship aspect of emotional connection with detailed analyses of our
apartment lab tapes, hundreds of hours of people doing ordinary things like reading the paper or having dinner.
Again. Like Leunhook with his microscope, Jani discovered a hidden world in the ordinary everyday moments.
These moments were the key to how people build friendship and even sexual intimacy. Foreplay really happens all
the time. Eventually in our theory there were three circles having to do with conflict, friendship, and sense of
purpose and meaning, that were interlocked here. That became our theory, we called the "sound relationship
house theory." It also worked for the gay and lesbian couples that Levenson and I studied for a dozen years.
Over a decade ago I began working with James Murray, an amazingly gifted applied mathematician, who in many
ways is the father of a new field called mathematical biology. All that theorizing about chaos actually led to new
mathematical developments that could model very complex phenomena in biology with very few parameters
because the equations were nonlinear. So James and I and his students collaborated and after 4 year of meeting
once a week, we were able to get equations for marital interaction as well as physiology and perception, that
allowed us to understand our predictions, of what was going to happen to a relationship over time. Using these
parameters, we are not only be able to predict, but now understand what people are doing when they affect one
another.
And through the equations we could really build a quantitative theory, and we can understand how to intervene
and how to change things. Now the sound relationship house theory had a mathematical basis. That's when physics
really moved forward by leaps and bounds, after Newton and Leibnitz invented the math for it, the calculus. And
perhaps, who knows, perhaps we could do the same with our math. And how we could know what it is we're
affecting, what parameters, and maybe understand why our interventions are effective or why at times they fail.
This is the mathematics of love.
For the past eight years I've been really involved, working with my amazingly talented wife, trying to put these
ideas together and use our theory so that it that helps couples and babies. And we now know that these
interventions really make a big difference. We can turn around 75 percent of distressed couples with a two-day
workshop and nine sessions of marital therapy. These are couples that have waited as long as six years to get any
kind of help. So it's a considerably deteriorated situation.
Then we are also finding that if we intervene early, and do preventative intervention, our effects are much bigger,
and we have an impact not only on the couple, and changing their longitudinal course, in a dramatic way, in not a
very long time, but we can also have an impact on the emotional development of their children. We're following
those children we're now studying children whose parents went only to a two-day workshop, and their babies
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are now turning three years old, and we'll know at the end of this year whether this emotional developmental
change continues and the children are in a dramatically different trajectory than kids whose parents didn't take the
workshop.
It sounds as if we have a stake in relationships staying together but we don't. My major stake is in
understanding. We have a stake in people not staying together if they don't feel good about their relationship and
it's not really going anywhere for them, it's not really helping them build one another's dreams, it's not a
relationship that has dignity. But we like to help people understand why it is that it didn't work, so that the next
relationship, or next set of relationships, can be better. One of the major things we found is that honoring your
partner's dreams is absolutely critical. A lot of times people have incompatible dreams or they don't want to
honor their partner's dreams, or they don't want to yield power, they don't want to share power. So that explains
a lot of times why they don't really belong together.
Psycho-physiology is an important part of this research. It's something that Bob Levenson brought to the search
initially, and then I got trained in psycho-physiology as well. And the reason we're interested in what was
happening in the body is that there's an intimate connection between what's happening to the autonomic nervous
system and what happening in the brain, and how well people can take in information how well they can just
process information for example, just being able to listen to your partner that is much harder when your
heart rate is above the intrinsic rate of the heart, which is around a hundred to a hundred and five beats a minute
for most people with a healthy heart.
At that point we know, from Loren Rowling's work, that people start secreting adrenalin, and then they get into a
state of diffuse physiological arousal (or DPA) , so their heart is beating faster, it's contracting harder, the arteries
start getting constricted, blood is drawn away from the periphery into the trunk, the blood supply shuts down to
the gut and the kidney, and all kinds of other things are happening people are sweating, and things are
happening in the brain that create a tunnel vision, one in which they perceive everything as a threat and they react
as if they have been put in great danger by this conversation.
All of which are really great conditions for running away from a predator, or fighting aggressively to protect the
tribe. And survival. So when you have less blood in the periphery you create what Malcolm Gladwell calls a
bloodless armor that lets you strike without really bleeding too much, or run away without hurting yourself too
much. But in the context of a discussion with somebody you love clearly this DPA is not very functional. And we
found in fact that physiological arousal is one of the best predictors of what happens to that relationship. That's
why it predicts.
And men and women are somewhat different, not a lot, but enough, which is another fascinating puzzle, because
we find that if the woman is driving the husband's heart rate, that predicts the dissolution of the relationship
and not the other way around. Now why should that be? Why should it be that DPA, the general physiological
arousal of men is a worse indicator of the fate of a heterosexual relationship than that of the woman? Unless she's
been abused, physically or sexually, when the arousal of both of them is a really good indicator.
Because men are different. Men have a lot of trouble when they reach a state of vigilance, when they think there's
real danger, they have a lot of trouble calming down. and there's probably an evolutionary history to that. Because
it functioned very well for our hominid ancestors, anthropologists think, for men to stay physiologically aroused
and vigilant, in cooperative hunting and protecting the tribe, which was a role that males had very early in our
evolutionary history. Whereas women had the opposite sort of role, in terms of survival of the species, those
women reproduced more effectively who had the milk-let-down reflex, which only happens when oxytocin is
secreted in the brain, it only happens when women as any woman knows who's been breast-feeding, you have
to be able to calm down and relax. But oxytocin is also the hormone of affiliation. So women have developed this
sort of social order, caring for one another, helping one another, and affiliating, that also allows them to really
calm down and have the milk let-down reflex. And so it's one of nature's jokes. Women can calm down, men
can't; they stay aroused and vigilant.
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So it's a real challenge, now that relationships, in the last couple of centuries, have started becoming important in
terms of affection and nurturance and support and we're having fathers come back into the equation in a big
way in baby's life. Physiology becomes really critical in this whole thing. A provocative finding from Alyson
Shapiro's recent dissertation is that if we take a look at how a couple argues when the woman is in the sixth
month of pregnancy, we can predict over half the variation in the baby, the three-month-old baby's vagal tone,
which is the ability of the vagus nerve, the major nerve of the parasympathetic branch of the autonomic nervous
system, which is responsible for establishing calm and focusing attention. That vagus nerve in the baby is
eventually going to be working well if the parents, during pregnancy, are fighting with each other constructively.
That takes us into fetal development, a whole new realm of inquiry.
And if they're not, if they're fighting destructively, that fetus, that baby is on a different longitudinal course its
neurological development is already handicapped from the time it's born. The fetal development is really
affecting the function of this vagus nerve, the tenth cranial nerve. Now this destructive process that happens to
two thirds of all couples can be reversed, just in a 10-hour workshop the parents take in the last trimester of
pregnancy. One of the things that's very interesting is that with psychological interventions you can change
neurological growth and development, and emotional growth and development in the baby. This makes for more
empathetic children and more empathetic infants as well. Daniel Siegel is beginning to help us understand how
this happens, how to integrate attachment theory, relationship science and brain neurophysiology and growth. It's
a rich and exciting new field, what Jaak Panksepp calls this "affective neuroscience."
We find that there are differences between men and women and the way you to study these differences is
independent of sexual orientation. You have to study gay and Lesbian couples who are committed to each other as
well as heterosexual couples who are committed to each other, and try and match things as much as you can, like
how long they've been together, and the quality of their relationship. And we've done that, and we find that there
are two gender differences that really hold up.
One is that if a man presents an issue, to either a man he's in love with or a woman he's in love with, the man is
angrier presenting the issue. And we find that when a woman receives an issue, either from a woman she loves or
a man she loves, she is much more sad than a man would be receiving that same issue. It's about anger and
sadness. Why? Remember, Bowlby taught us that attachment and loss and grief are part of the same system. So
women are finely tuned to attaching and connecting and to sadness and loss and grief, while men are attuned to
defend, stay vigilant, attack, to anger. My friend Levenson did an acoustic startle study (that's where you shoot of
a blank pistol behind someone's head when they least expect it). Men had a bigger heart rate reactivity and took
longer to recover, which we would expect, but what even more interesting is that when you asked people what
they were feeling, women were scared and men were angry.
So that's probably why those two differences have held up. Physiologically people find over and over again in
heterosexual relationships and this hasn't been studied yet in gay and Lesbian relationships that men have a
lower flash point for increasing heart-rate arousal, and it takes them longer to recover. And not only that, but
when men are trying to recover, and calm down, they can't do it very well because they keep naturally rehearsing
thoughts of righteous indignation and feeling like an innocent victim. They maintain their own vigilance and arousal
with these thoughts, mostly of getting even, whereas women really can distract themselves and calm down
physiologically from being angered or being upset about something. If women could affiliate and secrete oxytocin
when they felt afraid, they's even calm down faster, probably.
So there are all these small but reliable differences, and I think they have big implications for what you do in
relationships. Now it's women who matter here, because we find that 80 percent of the time women are the ones
in our culture who raise issues, and they raise them harshly in an unhappy relationship and more gently in a happy
relationship.
But does that mean that women are to blame in some way for relationships going bad? The poor men get so
physiologically aroused they can't think straight and the women are calmer, so it's no wonder, we might think, that
men withdraw or aggress. Not so at all. Levenson and I did a study where we had couples talk about how their day
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went before they talked about their big conflict area, and it turned out that the women who raised the issue
harshly and by the way, the men who raised the issue harshly as well, 20 percent of the time it's guys who raise
the issue had partners who weren't very interested in how their day went. They'd look at their watch, or, you
know, they were bored, or they were they were kind of insulting when the person started talking about their
day. Like one guy said to his wife, "Why don't you go first? It won't take you very long." Really a putdown, just in
their talking about how their day went. Those people had partners who started harshly. So it's really a circle.
Friendship and emotional connection and the management of conflict.
We've now gotten to the point where not only can we predict what's going to happen to the relationship, and not
only can we intervene to prevent decay of relationships for people who really want to stay together, not only can
we help people who really are continually unhappy with one another, to find out why their relationship isn't
working, but we're really starting to understand the whole equation of this process, of having close relationships.
Yes, there's enormous predictability. But there's nothing random or hard to understand about it. The principles are
very simple. And they're easy to learn, and it makes a difference if you have the right ways to think about this,
compared to the wrong ways of thinking about it. There's a lot of stuff that makes sort of logical sense, that
seems like it would be right, and turns out to be a complete myth about relationships. We're at the point where
we're starting to understand how to have an impact on a societal level, not just on individual cases, but really to
change families in our whole culture.
But we are far from being done. There's so much we don't understand. Like sex. We have no clue about how sex
works in relationships, how it fits into everyday interaction, what good sex really is like, what great sex really is,
what everyday sex is, how it all works or fails. We have no descriptive data. A lot of that is because we are such a
prudish, low-touch culture. The New York Times recently reported, in an article about Kinsey, that 100 million
dollars of awarded research funds had been reversed by the religious right in the USA because they think that
federal dollars shouldn't be doing this kind of research. Even when it has health benefits, like understanding how
AIDS spreads. This has got to stop. We need to know about sex so we can advise couples, and so we can
understand. We just have Masters and Johnson's great breakthroughs, but they only really studied masturbation,
not sexual relations. So there is still a great frontier out there.

John Brockman, Editor and Publisher


Russell Weinberger, Associate Publisher
Nina Stegeman, Editorial Assistant

Contact Info:editor@edge.org
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