Coupling Stage
After you achieve independence, the
next stage in the
family life cycle is coupling. You explore your
ability to commit to a new family and a new way of life. While being in a
committed relationship with someone without the act of marriage does involve a
process of adaptation and relationship building, marriage often requires unique
skills.
When you join families through marriage, you form a new
family system. Your family system includes your personal ideas, expectations,
and values. These are shaped by the relationships and experiences with your
original family. When you marry, you combine your family system with your
spouse's. This requires reshaping your and your spouse's goals. In the most
functional marriages, partners have the ability to take two different points of
view and create an option that neither person had considered. It differs from a
compromise in that it is not giving up something. Rather, it is creating a
third, better option.
You may find that some of the ideas or
expectations that you held in the past are not realistic at this stage. Some
common areas of adjustment include:
- Finances.
- Lifestyle.
- Recreational
activities or hobbies.
- Relationships with
in-laws.
- Sexuality or sexual
compatibility.
- Friendships.
- Putting another person's
needs before your own.
The ultimate goal at this stage is to achieve
interdependence, which occurs when you are able to fully enter into a
relationship with another person. Interdependence also requires that you share
goals and that you are able to occasionally place the needs of another above
your own. But before you can achieve interdependence, you must have first
acquired a high degree of independence.
The relationship skills
you learn in coupling serve as a foundation for other relationships, such as
parent-child, teacher-student, or physician-patient.
Within a
couple, you learn:
- Advanced interpersonal
communication.
- Problem-solving skills.
- Common spiritual
and emotional development goals.
- How to form boundaries in
relationships.
- When to place the needs or importance of the other
person above your own.
Most research indicates that early on, a happy marriage is
full of passion and sexual intimacy, which can become less important in later
successful marriage. A satisfying marriage at this stage includes a high amount
of considerate or kind acts (such as doing something nice for the other person
without being asked) and praise.
The life skills you learn in
this stage are important in developing true interdependence and the ability to
have a cooperative and healthy relationship. Some of the challenges of this
stage include:
- Transitioning into the new family
system.
- Including your spouse in your relationships with friends
and family members.
- Being committed to making your marriage
work.
- Putting the needs of another ahead of your own.
You and your spouse will have less stress if the transition
into a new family system is smooth, and less stress often means better
health.
Your specific goals for this stage of the family life
cycle are:
- Forming a new family with your
spouse.
- Realigning your relationships with your family of origin
and your friends to now include your spouse.