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Wikipedia

Intimate relationship

An intimate relationship is an interpersonal relationship that involves physical or emotional intimacy.[1] Although an intimate relationship is commonly a sexual relationship,[2] it may also be a non-sexual relationship involving family, friends, or acquaintances.[2][3]

Emotional intimacy involves feelings of closeness, relatedness, and vulnerability.[citation needed] This concept has been proven to be an essential aspect for a healthy relationship.[4] Once deeper feelings of liking or loving one or more people arise, it may result in physical intimacy. However, emotional intimacy may or may not be present in physical intimacy depending on the depth of the relationship. Physical intimacy is characterized by romantic love, sexual activity, or other passionate attachment.[1] These relationships play a central role in the overall human experience.[5] Humans have a general desire to belong and to love, which is usually satisfied within an intimate relationship.[6] Such relationships allow a social network for people to form strong emotional attachments.[3][5]

Intimacy

Intimacy involves the feeling of being in a close, personal association and belonging together.[7] It is a familiar and very close affective connection with another as a result of a bond that is formed through knowledge and experience of the other.[7] Genuine intimacy in human relationships requires dialogue, transparency, vulnerability, and reciprocity.[7] Dalton (1959) discussed how anthropologists and ethnographic researchers access "inside information" from within a particular cultural setting by establishing networks of intimates capable (and willing) to provide information unobtainable through formal channels.[8]

 
Bonding between a mother and child.

In human relationships, the meaning and level of intimacy varies within and between relationships.[7] In anthropological research, intimacy is considered the product of a successful seduction, a process of rapport building that enables parties to confidently disclose previously hidden thoughts and feelings. Intimate conversations become the basis for "confidences" (secret knowledge) that bind people together.[9]

Sexual relations and moments of intimacy decline significantly after delivering a newborn.[10] Extreme sleep deprivation was the most common response from women on why they are less sexually active with their spouse.[11]  Due to the lack of sleep and obligations of taking care of the baby, sexual intimacy becomes a less significant priority.[10] Women viewed themselves as being unattractive, not because their spouse expressed this, but they are uncomfortable with their appearance of their changed body.[10] Only 5% of partners stated that their sexual relations were more frequent post childbirth.[12] Some women viewed it as important for their marriage regardless of their level of desire.[10] A breast-feeding mother forms a strong emotional bond between her and baby. Many times, the mother’s emotional needs are met through this experience.[10] This can cause the husband to feel less connected to his wife.[11]

Sustaining intimacy for a length of time involves well-developed emotional and interpersonal awareness. Intimacy involves the ability to be both separate and together as participants in an intimate relationship. Murray Bowen called this "self-differentiation", which results in a connection in which there is an emotional range involving both robust conflict and intense loyalty.[13] Lacking the ability to differentiate oneself from the other is a form of symbiosis, a state that is different from intimacy, even if feelings of closeness are similar.[citation needed]

Intimate behavior joins family members and close friends, as well as those in love.[2] It evolves through reciprocal self-disclosure and candor.[7] Poor skills in developing intimacy can lead to getting too close too quickly; struggling to find the boundary and to sustain connection; being poorly skilled as a friend, rejecting self-disclosure or even rejecting friendships and those who have them.[14] Psychological consequences of intimacy problems are found in adults who have difficulty in forming and maintaining intimate relationships. Individuals often experience the human limitations of their partners, and develop a fear of adverse consequences of disrupted intimate relationships. Studies show that fear of intimacy is negatively related to comfort with emotional closeness and with relationship satisfaction, and positively related to loneliness and trait anxiety.[15]

The interdependence model of Levinger and Snoek divides the development of an intimate relationship into four stages: the first one is the zero contact stage, in which is no contact between the two parties in the relationship; The second stage is awareness, which means the parties don't have any superficial or deep contact with each other, but only know each other; The third stage is surface contact, in which both parties know each other and have had superficial contact; The fourth stage of coexistence phase (mutuality), refers to mutual dependence having greatly increased, as well as deep contact existing.[16]

Scholars distinguish between different forms of intimacy, including physical, emotional, cognitive, or spiritual intimacy:[17][18]

 
Holding hands is an example of affective intimacy between humans.
  • Physical intimacy can include being inside someone's personal space, holding hands, hugging, kissing, heavy petting, or other sexual activity.[citation needed]
  • Emotional intimacy, particularly in sexual relationships, typically develops after a certain level of trust has been reached and personal bonds have been established.[7] The emotional connection of "falling in love", however, has both a biochemical dimension driven through reactions in the body stimulated by sexual attraction (PEA, phenylethylamine),[19] and a social dimension driven by "talk" that follows from regular physical closeness or sexual union.[20] Love is an important factor in emotional intimacy. It is qualitatively and quantitatively different from liking, and the difference is not merely in the presence or absence of sexual attraction. There are three types of love in a relationship: passionate love, companionate love, and sacrificial love. Sacrificial love reflects the subsumption of the individual self will within a union. Companionate love involves diminished potent feelings of attachment, an authentic and enduring bond, a sense of mutual commitment, the profound feeling of mutual caring, feeling proud of a mate's accomplishments, and the satisfaction that comes from sharing goals and perspective. In contrast, passionate love is marked by infatuation, intense preoccupation with the partner, throes of ecstasy, and feelings of exhilaration that come from being reunited with the partner.[21]
  • Cognitive or intellectual intimacy takes place when two people exchange thoughts, share ideas and enjoy similarities and differences between their opinions.[18][22]
  • Spiritual intimacy involves bonding over spirituality.[18]

Research

Empirical research

The use of empirical investigations in 1898 was a major revolution in social analysis.[23] A study conducted by Monroe examined the traits and habits of children in selecting a friend. Some of the attributes included in the study were kindness, cheerfulness and honesty.[5] Monroe asked 2336 children aged 7 to 16 to identify "what kind of chum do you like best?" The results of the study indicated that children preferred a friend that was their own age, of the same sex, of the same physical size, a friend with light features (hair and eyes), friends that did not engage in conflict, someone that was kind to animals and humans, and finally friends that were honest. Two characteristics that children reported as least important included wealth and religion.[5]

The study by Monroe was the first to mark the significant shift in the study of intimate relationships from analysis that was primarily philosophical to those with empirical validity.[5] This study is said to have finally marked the beginning of relationship science.[5] In the years following Monroe's study, very few similar studies were done. There were limited studies done on children's friendships, courtship and marriages, and families in the 1930s but few relationship studies were conducted before or during World War II.[23] Intimate relationships did not become a broad focus of research again until the 1960s and 1970s when there was a vast number of relationship studies being published.[5]

Other studies

 
Personal intimate relationship is often crowned with marriage.

The study of intimate relationships uses participants from diverse groups and examines a wide variety of topics that include family relations, friendships, and romantic relationships, usually over a long period.[5] Current study includes both positive and negative or unpleasant aspects of relationships.[citation needed]

Research being conducted by John Gottman (2010) and his colleagues involves inviting married couples into a pleasant setting, in which they revisit the disagreement that caused their last argument. Although the participants are aware that they are being videotaped, they soon become so absorbed in their own interaction that they forgot they were being recorded.[5] With the second-by-second analysis of observable reactions as well as emotional ones, Gottman is able to predict with 93% accuracy the fate of the couples' relationship.[5]

Terri Orbuch and Joseph Veroff (2002) monitored newlywed couples using self-reports over a long period (a longitudinal study). Participants are required to provide extensive reports about the natures and the statuses of their relationships.[5] Although many of the marriages have ended since the beginning of the study, this type of relationship study allows researchers to track marriages from start to finish by conducting follow-up interviews with the participants in order to determine which factors are associated with marriages that last and which with those that do not.[5] Though the field of relationship science is still relatively young, research conducted by researchers from many different disciplines continues to broaden the field.[5]

Evidence also points to the role of a number of contextual factors that can impact intimate relationships. In a recent study on the impact of Hurricane Katrina on marital and partner relationships, researchers found that while many reported negative changes in their relationships, a number also experienced positive changes. More specifically, the advent of Hurricane Katrina led to a number of environmental stressors (for example, unemployment, prolonged separation) that negatively impacted intimate relationships for many couples, though other couples' relationships grew stronger as a result of new employment opportunities, a greater sense of perspective, and higher levels of communication and support.[24] As a result, environmental factors are also understood to contribute heavily to the strength of intimate relationships.[citation needed]

A Northwestern University research team summarized the literature in 2013, finding that "negative-affect reciprocity" – retaliatory negativity between partners during a conflict – is arguably the most robust predictor of poor marital quality. However, this degradation can be softened (according to their 120 heterosexual couple Chicago sample) by undertaking a reappraisal writing task every four months.[25]

One study suggests that married straight couples and cohabiting gay and lesbian couples in long-term intimate relationships may pick up each other's unhealthy[when defined as?] habits. The study reports three distinct findings showing how unhealthy habits are promoted in long-term intimate relationships: through the direct bad influence of one partner, through synchronicity of health habits, and through the notion of personal responsibility.[further explanation needed][26][27]

 
Men kissing intimately.

Some research indicates that pornography is a possible source of education about sex and relationships. In the absence of inclusive same-sex relationship education in traditional sources (i.e., schools, parents, friends, and mainstream media), gay pornography may be used by men who have sex with men as a source of information about intimacy, while serving its main purpose as a masturbatory aid.[28] A 2020 study indicated that gay pornography depicts both physical (kissing, cuddling, affectionate touch, and genital touch before and after sex) and verbal intimacy (compliments, personal disclosure, and expressions of care). Most forms of physical and verbal intimacy occurred before or during sex, with intimacy being least evident post-sex.[29]

History

Ancient philosophers: Aristotle

Over 2,300 years ago, interpersonal relationships were being contemplated by Aristotle. He wrote: "One person is a friend to another if he is friendly to the other and the other is friendly to him in return" (Aristotle, 330 BC, trans. 1991, pp. 72–73). Aristotle believed that by nature humans are social beings.[6] Aristotle also suggested that relationships were based on three different ideas: utility, pleasure, and virtue. People are attracted to relationships that provide utility because of the assistance and sense of belonging that they provide. In relationships based on pleasure, people are attracted to the feelings of pleasantness when the parties engage. However, relationships based on utility and pleasure were said to be short-lived if the benefits provided by one of the partners were not reciprocated. Relationships based on virtue are built on an attraction to the others' virtuous character.[5]

Aristotle also suggested that relationships based on virtue would be the longest lasting and that virtue-based relationships were the only type of relationship in which each partner was liked for themselves. The philosophical analysis used by Aristotle dominated the analysis of intimate relationships until the late 1880s.[23]

1880s to early 1900s

 
Emperor Pedro II of Brazil and his wife Teresa Cristina in Petrópolis, 1887

Modern psychology and sociology began to emerge in the late 19th century. During this time theorists often included relationships into their current areas of research and began to develop new foundations which had implications in regards to the analysis of intimate relationships.[23] Freud wrote about parent–child relationships and their effect on personality development.[6] Freud's analysis proposed that people's childhood experiences are transferred or passed on into adult relationships by means of feelings and expectations.[23] Freud also founded the idea that individuals usually seek out marital partners who are similar to that of their opposite-sex parent.[23]

In 1891, William James wrote that a person's self-concept is defined by the relationships endured with others.[6] In 1897, Émile Durkheim's interest in social organization led to the examination of social isolation and alienation.[6] This was an influential discovery of intimate relationships in that Durkheim argued that being socially isolated was a key antecedent of suicide.[6] This focus on the darker side of relationships and the negative consequences associated to social isolation were what Durkheim labeled as anomie.[23] Georg Simmel wrote about dyads, or partnerships with two people.[5] Simmel suggested that dyads require consent and engagement of both partners to maintain the relationship but noted that the relationship can be ended by the initiation of only one partner.[23] Although the theorists mentioned above sought support for their theories, their primary contributions to the study of intimate relationships were conceptual and not empirically grounded.[5]

1960s and 1970s

An important shift was taking place in the field of social psychology that influenced the research of intimate relationships. Until the late 1950s, the majority of studies were non-experimental.[23] By the end of the 1960s more than half of the articles published involved some sort of experimental study.[23] The 1960s was also a time when there was a shift in methodology within the psychological discipline itself. Participants consisted mostly of college students, experimental methods and research were being conducted in laboratories and the experimental method was the dominant methodology in social psychology.[23] Experimental manipulation within the research of intimate relationships demonstrated that relationships could be studied scientifically.[5] This shift brought relationship science to the attention of scholars in other disciplines and has resulted in the study of intimate relationships being an international multidiscipline.[5]

1980s to 2000s

In the early 1980s the first conference of the International Network of Personal Relationships (INPR) was held. Approximately 300 researchers from all over the world attended the conference.[23] In March 1984, the first journal of Social and Personal Relationships was published.[23] In the early 1990s the INPR split off into two groups; in April 2004 the two organizations rejoined and became the International Association for Relationship Research (IARR).[5]

Donald Nathanson, a psychiatrist who built his study of human interactions off of the work of Silvan Tomkins, argues that an intimate relationship between two individuals is best when the couple agrees to maximize positive affect, minimize negative affect and allow for the free expression of affect. These findings were based on Tomkin's blueprint for emotional health, which also emphasizes doing as much of the maximizing, minimizing and expressing as possible.[30]

In the year 1993, dating as society knew it was going to change forever. An online company called Match.com was the first dating site to launch.[citation needed] A high correlation exists for those that are computer literate and their tendency to attempt online dating due to the new development of the internet.[31] In 2004, Guinness World Records rewarded Match.com with being the largest dating site in the world by having over 42 million people sign up for their services.[32]

2010s to 2020s

In the year 2016, there were an estimated 240 million dating app users, but as of 2021 that number has risen to around 323 million users worldwide due to the Covid 19 pandemic.[33] Even though there has been rapid growth of users, there have been many reports of the negative effects regarding dating app usage. The intention of dating app usage varies between each individual.[34] For example, a study of Grindr[citation needed] users was done to detect their reasonings for using that dating site. The final report concluded that 67.2% of users were interested in finding a dating companion while 62.1% of users were desiring casual sex.[35] The risk for sexually transmitted disease increases significantly for individuals who participate in casual sex.[36] A sexual assault researcher from the Associate Dean of Brigham Young University College of Nursing notes that there were around 2,000 cases of reported sexual assaults from dating apps alone over the course of three years.[37] Many of those cases were due to catfishing, which is when one portrays to be someone else.[38] Studies have also been done to determine the effects of online dating on mental health. They found that there is an increase of depression, anxiety, and low self-esteem for users.[39] Regardless of the negative outcomes, the convenience of dating apps makes it so that they are here to stay in society.[34]

See also

Terms for members of intimate relationships

References

  1. ^ a b Wong DW, Hall KR, Justice CA, Wong L (2014). Counseling Individuals Through the Lifespan. SAGE Publications. p. 326. ISBN 978-1483322032. Intimacy: As an intimate relationship is an interpersonal relationship that involves physical or emotional intimacy. Physical intimacy is characterized by romantic or passionate attachment or sexual activity.
  2. ^ a b c Ribbens JM, Doolittle M, Sclater SD (2012). Understanding Family Meanings: A Reflective Text. Policy Press. pp. 267–268. ISBN 978-1447301127.
  3. ^ a b Derlega VJ (2013). Communication, Intimacy, and Close Relationships. Elsevier. p. 13. ISBN 978-1483260426.
  4. ^ GAIA, A. CELESTE (2002). "Understanding Emotional Intimacy: A Review of Conceptualization, Assessment and the Role of Gender". International Social Science Review. 77 (3/4): 151–170. ISSN 0278-2308. JSTOR 41887101.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Miller, Rowland & Perlman, Daniel (2008). Intimate Relationships (5th ed.). McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0073370187
  6. ^ a b c d e f Perlman, D. (2007). The best of times, the worst of times: The place of close relationships in psychology and our daily lives. Canadian Psychology, 48, 7–18.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Mashek DJ, Aron A (2004). Handbook of Closeness and Intimacy. Psychology Press. pp. 1–6. ISBN 978-1135632403.
  8. ^ Dalton, M. (1959) Men Who Manage, New York: Wiley.
  9. ^ Moore, M. (1985) "Nonverbal Courtship Patterns in Women: Contact and Consequences", Ethnology and Sociobiology, 6: 237–247.
  10. ^ a b c d e Woolhouse, Hannah; McDonald, Ellie; Brown, Stephanie (13 September 2012). "Women's experiences of sex and intimacy after childbirth: making the adjustment to motherhood". Journal of Psychosomatic Obstetrics & Gynecology. 33 (4): 185–190. doi:10.3109/0167482x.2012.720314. ISSN 0167-482X. S2CID 37025280.
  11. ^ a b Delicate, Amy; Ayers, Susan; McMullen, Sarah (June 2018). "A systematic review and meta-synthesis of the impact of becoming parents on the couple relationship". Midwifery. 61: 88–96. doi:10.1016/j.midw.2018.02.022. ISSN 0266-6138. S2CID 4343958.
  12. ^ Barrett, Geraldine; Pendry, Elizabeth; Peacock, Janet; Victor, Christina; Thakar, Rance; Manyonda, Isaac (February 2000). "Women's sexual health after childbirth". BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology. 107 (2): 186–195. doi:10.1111/j.1471-0528.2000.tb11689.x. ISSN 1470-0328. S2CID 20957398.
  13. ^ Aronson, E. (2003) The Social Animal, Ninth Edition, New York: Worth Publishers.
  14. ^ Bershad C, Haber DS (1997). Prentice Hall human sexuality. Prentice Hall. p. 30. ISBN 978-0134248219.
  15. ^ Khaleque, A. (2004). Intimate Adult Relationships, Quality of Life and Psychological Adjustment. Social Indicators Research, 69, 351–360.
  16. ^ Emery, Lydia F.; Muise, Amy; Dix, Emily L.; Le, Benjamin (17 September 2014). "Can You Tell That I'm in a Relationship? Attachment and Relationship Visibility on Facebook". Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin. 40 (11): 1466–1479. doi:10.1177/0146167214549944. PMID 25231798. S2CID 206445338.
  17. ^ Kakabadse, A., Kakabadse, N. (2004) Intimacy: International Survey of the Sex Lives of People at Work, Basingstoke: Palgrave
  18. ^ a b c Hutchison ED (2018). Dimensions of Human Behavior: The Changing Life Course. SAGE Publications. pp. 254–255. ISBN 978-1544339351.
  19. ^ Lowndes, L. (1996) How to Make Anyone Fall in Love with You, London: Element.
  20. ^ Giddens, A. (1990) The Consequences of Modernity, Blackwell Publishers Ltd.
  21. ^ doi:10.1080/10532528.1993.10559885
  22. ^ Theiss JA (2003). Communication and the Emotional, Cognitive, and Relational Consequences of First Sexual Encounters in Heterosexual Dyads. University of Wisconsin. pp. 9, 56, 70.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Vangelisti, A.L., & Perlman, D. (2006). The Cambridge Handbook of Personal Relationships. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.
  24. ^ Lowe, Sarah R.; Rhodes, Jean E.; Scoglio, Arielle A. J. (2012). "Changes in Marital and Partner Relationships in the Aftermath of Hurricane Katrina". Psychology of Women Quarterly. 36 (3): 286–300. doi:10.1177/0361684311434307. PMC 3486647. PMID 23125478.
  25. ^ Finkel, Eli J.; Slotter, Erica B. (26 June 2013). "A Brief Intervention to Promote Conflict Reappraisal Preserves Marital Quality Over Time" (PDF). Psychological Science OnlineFirst. 24 (8): 1595–1601. doi:10.1177/0956797612474938. PMID 23804960. S2CID 2254080.
  26. ^ Fuller, Dawn (17 August 2011). "Long-Term, Intimate Partnerships Can Promote Unhealthy Habits". UC News online Aug, 18, 2011. Retrieved 26 August 2011.
  27. ^ Reczek, Corinne (2012). . Social Science & Medicine. 75 (6): 1114–21. doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.04.019. PMC 5008030. PMID 22703888. Archived from the original on 2 September 2011. Retrieved 26 August 2011.
  28. ^ Grubbs, J. B.; Wright, P. J.; Braden, A. L.; Wilt, J. A.; Kraus, S. W. (20 February 2019). "Internet pornography use and sexual motivation: A systematic review and integration". Annal of the International Communication Association. 43 (2): 117–155. doi:10.1080/23808985.2019.1584045. S2CID 150764824.
  29. ^ Newton, James D. A.; Halford, W. Kim; Barlow, Fiona K. (26 September 2020). "Intimacy in Dyadic Sexually Explicit Media Featuring Men Who Have Sex with Men". The Journal of Sex Research. 58 (3): 279–291. doi:10.1080/00224499.2020.1817837. PMID 32975464. S2CID 221918661.
  30. ^ Costello, Bob (2009). The Restorative Practices Handbook. Pennsylvania: International Institute for Restorative Practices. pp. 71–72.
  31. ^ Sautter, Jessica M.; Tippett, Rebecca M.; Morgan, S. Philip (2010). "The Social Demography of Internet Dating in the United States". Social Science Quarterly. 91 (2): 554–575. doi:10.1111/j.1540-6237.2010.00707.x.
  32. ^ "Largest online dating service". Guinness World Records. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  33. ^ "Dating App Revenue and Usage Statistics (2022)". Business of Apps. 26 November 2020. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  34. ^ a b Chin, Kristi; Edelstein, Robin S.; Vernon, Philip A. (January 2019). "Attached to dating apps: Attachment orientations and preferences for dating apps". Mobile Media & Communication. 7 (1): 41–59. doi:10.1177/2050157918770696. ISSN 2050-1579. S2CID 150257644.
  35. ^ Chan, Lik Sam (1 July 2017). "Who uses dating apps? Exploring the relationships among trust, sensation-seeking, smartphone use, and the intent to use dating apps based on the Integrative Model". Computers in Human Behavior. 72: 246–258. doi:10.1016/j.chb.2017.02.053. ISSN 0747-5632.
  36. ^ Landovitz, Raphael J.; Tseng, Chi-Hong; Weissman, Matthew; Haymer, Michael; Mendenhall, Brett; Rogers, Kathryn; Veniegas, Rosemary; Gorbach, Pamina M.; Reback, Cathy J.; Shoptaw, Steven (1 August 2013). "Epidemiology, Sexual Risk Behavior, and HIV Prevention Practices of Men who Have Sex with Men Using GRINDR in Los Angeles, California". Journal of Urban Health. 90 (4): 729–739. doi:10.1007/s11524-012-9766-7. ISSN 1468-2869. PMC 3732683. PMID 22983721.
  37. ^ "Just Science Podcast: Just Research of Dating Apps and Violent Sexual Assault Cases". Office of Justice Programs. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  38. ^ Lauckner, Carolyn; Truszczynski, Natalia; Lambert, Danielle; Kottamasu, Varsha; Meherally, Saher; Schipani-McLaughlin, Anne Marie; Taylor, Erica; Hansen, Nathan (3 July 2019). ""Catfishing," cyberbullying, and coercion: An exploration of the risks associated with dating app use among rural sexual minority males". Journal of Gay & Lesbian Mental Health. 23 (3): 289–306. doi:10.1080/19359705.2019.1587729. ISSN 1935-9705. S2CID 151292337.
  39. ^ Holtzhausen, Nicol; Fitzgerald, Keersten; Thakur, Ishaan; Ashley, Jack; Rolfe, Margaret; Pit, Sabrina Winona (4 March 2020). "Swipe-based dating applications use and its association with mental health outcomes: a cross-sectional study". BMC Psychology. 8 (1): 22. doi:10.1186/s40359-020-0373-1. ISSN 2050-7283. PMC 7055053. PMID 32127048.

External links

  • International Association for Relationship Research

intimate, relationship, intimacy, redirects, here, other, uses, intimacy, disambiguation, sexual, relationship, redirects, here, sexual, relationships, between, human, animals, mating, system, intimate, relationship, interpersonal, relationship, that, involves. Intimacy redirects here For other uses see Intimacy disambiguation Sexual relationship redirects here For sexual relationships between non human animals see Mating system An intimate relationship is an interpersonal relationship that involves physical or emotional intimacy 1 Although an intimate relationship is commonly a sexual relationship 2 it may also be a non sexual relationship involving family friends or acquaintances 2 3 Emotional intimacy involves feelings of closeness relatedness and vulnerability citation needed This concept has been proven to be an essential aspect for a healthy relationship 4 Once deeper feelings of liking or loving one or more people arise it may result in physical intimacy However emotional intimacy may or may not be present in physical intimacy depending on the depth of the relationship Physical intimacy is characterized by romantic love sexual activity or other passionate attachment 1 These relationships play a central role in the overall human experience 5 Humans have a general desire to belong and to love which is usually satisfied within an intimate relationship 6 Such relationships allow a social network for people to form strong emotional attachments 3 5 Contents 1 Intimacy 2 Research 2 1 Empirical research 2 2 Other studies 3 History 3 1 Ancient philosophers Aristotle 3 2 1880s to early 1900s 3 3 1960s and 1970s 3 4 1980s to 2000s 3 5 2010s to 2020s 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksIntimacy EditIntimacy involves the feeling of being in a close personal association and belonging together 7 It is a familiar and very close affective connection with another as a result of a bond that is formed through knowledge and experience of the other 7 Genuine intimacy in human relationships requires dialogue transparency vulnerability and reciprocity 7 Dalton 1959 discussed how anthropologists and ethnographic researchers access inside information from within a particular cultural setting by establishing networks of intimates capable and willing to provide information unobtainable through formal channels 8 Bonding between a mother and child In human relationships the meaning and level of intimacy varies within and between relationships 7 In anthropological research intimacy is considered the product of a successful seduction a process of rapport building that enables parties to confidently disclose previously hidden thoughts and feelings Intimate conversations become the basis for confidences secret knowledge that bind people together 9 Sexual relations and moments of intimacy decline significantly after delivering a newborn 10 Extreme sleep deprivation was the most common response from women on why they are less sexually active with their spouse 11 Due to the lack of sleep and obligations of taking care of the baby sexual intimacy becomes a less significant priority 10 Women viewed themselves as being unattractive not because their spouse expressed this but they are uncomfortable with their appearance of their changed body 10 Only 5 of partners stated that their sexual relations were more frequent post childbirth 12 Some women viewed it as important for their marriage regardless of their level of desire 10 A breast feeding mother forms a strong emotional bond between her and baby Many times the mother s emotional needs are met through this experience 10 This can cause the husband to feel less connected to his wife 11 Sustaining intimacy for a length of time involves well developed emotional and interpersonal awareness Intimacy involves the ability to be both separate and together as participants in an intimate relationship Murray Bowen called this self differentiation which results in a connection in which there is an emotional range involving both robust conflict and intense loyalty 13 Lacking the ability to differentiate oneself from the other is a form of symbiosis a state that is different from intimacy even if feelings of closeness are similar citation needed Intimate behavior joins family members and close friends as well as those in love 2 It evolves through reciprocal self disclosure and candor 7 Poor skills in developing intimacy can lead to getting too close too quickly struggling to find the boundary and to sustain connection being poorly skilled as a friend rejecting self disclosure or even rejecting friendships and those who have them 14 Psychological consequences of intimacy problems are found in adults who have difficulty in forming and maintaining intimate relationships Individuals often experience the human limitations of their partners and develop a fear of adverse consequences of disrupted intimate relationships Studies show that fear of intimacy is negatively related to comfort with emotional closeness and with relationship satisfaction and positively related to loneliness and trait anxiety 15 The interdependence model of Levinger and Snoek divides the development of an intimate relationship into four stages the first one is the zero contact stage in which is no contact between the two parties in the relationship The second stage is awareness which means the parties don t have any superficial or deep contact with each other but only know each other The third stage is surface contact in which both parties know each other and have had superficial contact The fourth stage of coexistence phase mutuality refers to mutual dependence having greatly increased as well as deep contact existing 16 Scholars distinguish between different forms of intimacy including physical emotional cognitive or spiritual intimacy 17 18 Holding hands is an example of affective intimacy between humans Physical intimacy can include being inside someone s personal space holding hands hugging kissing heavy petting or other sexual activity citation needed Emotional intimacy particularly in sexual relationships typically develops after a certain level of trust has been reached and personal bonds have been established 7 The emotional connection of falling in love however has both a biochemical dimension driven through reactions in the body stimulated by sexual attraction PEA phenylethylamine 19 and a social dimension driven by talk that follows from regular physical closeness or sexual union 20 Love is an important factor in emotional intimacy It is qualitatively and quantitatively different from liking and the difference is not merely in the presence or absence of sexual attraction There are three types of love in a relationship passionate love companionate love and sacrificial love Sacrificial love reflects the subsumption of the individual self will within a union Companionate love involves diminished potent feelings of attachment an authentic and enduring bond a sense of mutual commitment the profound feeling of mutual caring feeling proud of a mate s accomplishments and the satisfaction that comes from sharing goals and perspective In contrast passionate love is marked by infatuation intense preoccupation with the partner throes of ecstasy and feelings of exhilaration that come from being reunited with the partner 21 Cognitive or intellectual intimacy takes place when two people exchange thoughts share ideas and enjoy similarities and differences between their opinions 18 22 Spiritual intimacy involves bonding over spirituality 18 Research EditEmpirical research Edit The use of empirical investigations in 1898 was a major revolution in social analysis 23 A study conducted by Monroe examined the traits and habits of children in selecting a friend Some of the attributes included in the study were kindness cheerfulness and honesty 5 Monroe asked 2336 children aged 7 to 16 to identify what kind of chum do you like best The results of the study indicated that children preferred a friend that was their own age of the same sex of the same physical size a friend with light features hair and eyes friends that did not engage in conflict someone that was kind to animals and humans and finally friends that were honest Two characteristics that children reported as least important included wealth and religion 5 The study by Monroe was the first to mark the significant shift in the study of intimate relationships from analysis that was primarily philosophical to those with empirical validity 5 This study is said to have finally marked the beginning of relationship science 5 In the years following Monroe s study very few similar studies were done There were limited studies done on children s friendships courtship and marriages and families in the 1930s but few relationship studies were conducted before or during World War II 23 Intimate relationships did not become a broad focus of research again until the 1960s and 1970s when there was a vast number of relationship studies being published 5 Other studies Edit This section relies largely or entirely upon a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Personal intimate relationship is often crowned with marriage The study of intimate relationships uses participants from diverse groups and examines a wide variety of topics that include family relations friendships and romantic relationships usually over a long period 5 Current study includes both positive and negative or unpleasant aspects of relationships citation needed Research being conducted by John Gottman 2010 and his colleagues involves inviting married couples into a pleasant setting in which they revisit the disagreement that caused their last argument Although the participants are aware that they are being videotaped they soon become so absorbed in their own interaction that they forgot they were being recorded 5 With the second by second analysis of observable reactions as well as emotional ones Gottman is able to predict with 93 accuracy the fate of the couples relationship 5 Terri Orbuch and Joseph Veroff 2002 monitored newlywed couples using self reports over a long period a longitudinal study Participants are required to provide extensive reports about the natures and the statuses of their relationships 5 Although many of the marriages have ended since the beginning of the study this type of relationship study allows researchers to track marriages from start to finish by conducting follow up interviews with the participants in order to determine which factors are associated with marriages that last and which with those that do not 5 Though the field of relationship science is still relatively young research conducted by researchers from many different disciplines continues to broaden the field 5 Evidence also points to the role of a number of contextual factors that can impact intimate relationships In a recent study on the impact of Hurricane Katrina on marital and partner relationships researchers found that while many reported negative changes in their relationships a number also experienced positive changes More specifically the advent of Hurricane Katrina led to a number of environmental stressors for example unemployment prolonged separation that negatively impacted intimate relationships for many couples though other couples relationships grew stronger as a result of new employment opportunities a greater sense of perspective and higher levels of communication and support 24 As a result environmental factors are also understood to contribute heavily to the strength of intimate relationships citation needed A Northwestern University research team summarized the literature in 2013 finding that negative affect reciprocity retaliatory negativity between partners during a conflict is arguably the most robust predictor of poor marital quality However this degradation can be softened according to their 120 heterosexual couple Chicago sample by undertaking a reappraisal writing task every four months 25 One study suggests that married straight couples and cohabiting gay and lesbian couples in long term intimate relationships may pick up each other s unhealthy when defined as habits The study reports three distinct findings showing how unhealthy habits are promoted in long term intimate relationships through the direct bad influence of one partner through synchronicity of health habits and through the notion of personal responsibility further explanation needed 26 27 Men kissing intimately Some research indicates that pornography is a possible source of education about sex and relationships In the absence of inclusive same sex relationship education in traditional sources i e schools parents friends and mainstream media gay pornography may be used by men who have sex with men as a source of information about intimacy while serving its main purpose as a masturbatory aid 28 A 2020 study indicated that gay pornography depicts both physical kissing cuddling affectionate touch and genital touch before and after sex and verbal intimacy compliments personal disclosure and expressions of care Most forms of physical and verbal intimacy occurred before or during sex with intimacy being least evident post sex 29 History EditAncient philosophers Aristotle Edit Over 2 300 years ago interpersonal relationships were being contemplated by Aristotle He wrote One person is a friend to another if he is friendly to the other and the other is friendly to him in return Aristotle 330 BC trans 1991 pp 72 73 Aristotle believed that by nature humans are social beings 6 Aristotle also suggested that relationships were based on three different ideas utility pleasure and virtue People are attracted to relationships that provide utility because of the assistance and sense of belonging that they provide In relationships based on pleasure people are attracted to the feelings of pleasantness when the parties engage However relationships based on utility and pleasure were said to be short lived if the benefits provided by one of the partners were not reciprocated Relationships based on virtue are built on an attraction to the others virtuous character 5 Aristotle also suggested that relationships based on virtue would be the longest lasting and that virtue based relationships were the only type of relationship in which each partner was liked for themselves The philosophical analysis used by Aristotle dominated the analysis of intimate relationships until the late 1880s 23 1880s to early 1900s Edit Emperor Pedro II of Brazil and his wife Teresa Cristina in Petropolis 1887 Modern psychology and sociology began to emerge in the late 19th century During this time theorists often included relationships into their current areas of research and began to develop new foundations which had implications in regards to the analysis of intimate relationships 23 Freud wrote about parent child relationships and their effect on personality development 6 Freud s analysis proposed that people s childhood experiences are transferred or passed on into adult relationships by means of feelings and expectations 23 Freud also founded the idea that individuals usually seek out marital partners who are similar to that of their opposite sex parent 23 In 1891 William James wrote that a person s self concept is defined by the relationships endured with others 6 In 1897 Emile Durkheim s interest in social organization led to the examination of social isolation and alienation 6 This was an influential discovery of intimate relationships in that Durkheim argued that being socially isolated was a key antecedent of suicide 6 This focus on the darker side of relationships and the negative consequences associated to social isolation were what Durkheim labeled as anomie 23 Georg Simmel wrote about dyads or partnerships with two people 5 Simmel suggested that dyads require consent and engagement of both partners to maintain the relationship but noted that the relationship can be ended by the initiation of only one partner 23 Although the theorists mentioned above sought support for their theories their primary contributions to the study of intimate relationships were conceptual and not empirically grounded 5 1960s and 1970s Edit An important shift was taking place in the field of social psychology that influenced the research of intimate relationships Until the late 1950s the majority of studies were non experimental 23 By the end of the 1960s more than half of the articles published involved some sort of experimental study 23 The 1960s was also a time when there was a shift in methodology within the psychological discipline itself Participants consisted mostly of college students experimental methods and research were being conducted in laboratories and the experimental method was the dominant methodology in social psychology 23 Experimental manipulation within the research of intimate relationships demonstrated that relationships could be studied scientifically 5 This shift brought relationship science to the attention of scholars in other disciplines and has resulted in the study of intimate relationships being an international multidiscipline 5 1980s to 2000s Edit In the early 1980s the first conference of the International Network of Personal Relationships INPR was held Approximately 300 researchers from all over the world attended the conference 23 In March 1984 the first journal of Social and Personal Relationships was published 23 In the early 1990s the INPR split off into two groups in April 2004 the two organizations rejoined and became the International Association for Relationship Research IARR 5 Donald Nathanson a psychiatrist who built his study of human interactions off of the work of Silvan Tomkins argues that an intimate relationship between two individuals is best when the couple agrees to maximize positive affect minimize negative affect and allow for the free expression of affect These findings were based on Tomkin s blueprint for emotional health which also emphasizes doing as much of the maximizing minimizing and expressing as possible 30 In the year 1993 dating as society knew it was going to change forever An online company called Match com was the first dating site to launch citation needed A high correlation exists for those that are computer literate and their tendency to attempt online dating due to the new development of the internet 31 In 2004 Guinness World Records rewarded Match com with being the largest dating site in the world by having over 42 million people sign up for their services 32 2010s to 2020s Edit In the year 2016 there were an estimated 240 million dating app users but as of 2021 that number has risen to around 323 million users worldwide due to the Covid 19 pandemic 33 Even though there has been rapid growth of users there have been many reports of the negative effects regarding dating app usage The intention of dating app usage varies between each individual 34 For example a study of Grindr citation needed users was done to detect their reasonings for using that dating site The final report concluded that 67 2 of users were interested in finding a dating companion while 62 1 of users were desiring casual sex 35 The risk for sexually transmitted disease increases significantly for individuals who participate in casual sex 36 A sexual assault researcher from the Associate Dean of Brigham Young University College of Nursing notes that there were around 2 000 cases of reported sexual assaults from dating apps alone over the course of three years 37 Many of those cases were due to catfishing which is when one portrays to be someone else 38 Studies have also been done to determine the effects of online dating on mental health They found that there is an increase of depression anxiety and low self esteem for users 39 Regardless of the negative outcomes the convenience of dating apps makes it so that they are here to stay in society 34 See also EditAffection Dating Free union Human sexuality Limerence Love Loving kindness Marriage Monogamy Outline of relationships Parenting Polygamy Polyamory Power and control in abusive intimate relationships Relationship status Romantic friendship Social connection Terms for members of intimate relationships Boyfriend Girlfriend Companion Concubine Confidant or confidante Life partner Lover Mistress Partner Sexual partner Significant other Spouse Back up partner Hanzi 備胎對象 References Edit a b Wong DW Hall KR Justice CA Wong L 2014 Counseling Individuals Through the Lifespan SAGE Publications p 326 ISBN 978 1483322032 Intimacy As an intimate relationship is an interpersonal relationship that involves physical or emotional intimacy Physical intimacy is characterized by romantic or passionate attachment or sexual activity a b c Ribbens JM Doolittle M Sclater SD 2012 Understanding Family Meanings A Reflective Text Policy Press pp 267 268 ISBN 978 1447301127 a b Derlega VJ 2013 Communication Intimacy and Close Relationships Elsevier p 13 ISBN 978 1483260426 GAIA A CELESTE 2002 Understanding Emotional Intimacy A Review of Conceptualization Assessment and the Role of Gender International Social Science Review 77 3 4 151 170 ISSN 0278 2308 JSTOR 41887101 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Miller Rowland amp Perlman Daniel 2008 Intimate Relationships 5th ed McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0073370187 a b c d e f Perlman D 2007 The best of times the worst of times The place of close relationships in psychology and our daily lives Canadian Psychology 48 7 18 a b c d e f Mashek DJ Aron A 2004 Handbook of Closeness and Intimacy Psychology Press pp 1 6 ISBN 978 1135632403 Dalton M 1959 Men Who Manage New York Wiley Moore M 1985 Nonverbal Courtship Patterns in Women Contact and Consequences Ethnology and Sociobiology 6 237 247 a b c d e Woolhouse Hannah McDonald Ellie Brown Stephanie 13 September 2012 Women s experiences of sex and intimacy after childbirth making the adjustment to motherhood Journal of Psychosomatic Obstetrics amp Gynecology 33 4 185 190 doi 10 3109 0167482x 2012 720314 ISSN 0167 482X S2CID 37025280 a b Delicate Amy Ayers Susan McMullen Sarah June 2018 A systematic review and meta synthesis of the impact of becoming parents on the couple relationship Midwifery 61 88 96 doi 10 1016 j midw 2018 02 022 ISSN 0266 6138 S2CID 4343958 Barrett Geraldine Pendry Elizabeth Peacock Janet Victor Christina Thakar Rance Manyonda Isaac February 2000 Women s sexual health after childbirth BJOG An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology 107 2 186 195 doi 10 1111 j 1471 0528 2000 tb11689 x ISSN 1470 0328 S2CID 20957398 Aronson E 2003 The Social Animal Ninth Edition New York Worth Publishers Bershad C Haber DS 1997 Prentice Hall human sexuality Prentice Hall p 30 ISBN 978 0134248219 Khaleque A 2004 Intimate Adult Relationships Quality of Life and Psychological Adjustment Social Indicators Research 69 351 360 Emery Lydia F Muise Amy Dix Emily L Le Benjamin 17 September 2014 Can You Tell That I m in a Relationship Attachment and Relationship Visibility on Facebook Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 40 11 1466 1479 doi 10 1177 0146167214549944 PMID 25231798 S2CID 206445338 Kakabadse A Kakabadse N 2004 Intimacy International Survey of the Sex Lives of People at Work Basingstoke Palgrave a b c Hutchison ED 2018 Dimensions of Human Behavior The Changing Life Course SAGE Publications pp 254 255 ISBN 978 1544339351 Lowndes L 1996 How to Make Anyone Fall in Love with You London Element Giddens A 1990 The Consequences of Modernity Blackwell Publishers Ltd doi 10 1080 10532528 1993 10559885 Theiss JA 2003 Communication and the Emotional Cognitive and Relational Consequences of First Sexual Encounters in Heterosexual Dyads University of Wisconsin pp 9 56 70 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Vangelisti A L amp Perlman D 2006 The Cambridge Handbook of Personal Relationships Cambridge Cambridge University Press Lowe Sarah R Rhodes Jean E Scoglio Arielle A J 2012 Changes in Marital and Partner Relationships in the Aftermath of Hurricane Katrina Psychology of Women Quarterly 36 3 286 300 doi 10 1177 0361684311434307 PMC 3486647 PMID 23125478 Finkel Eli J Slotter Erica B 26 June 2013 A Brief Intervention to Promote Conflict Reappraisal Preserves Marital Quality Over Time PDF Psychological Science OnlineFirst 24 8 1595 1601 doi 10 1177 0956797612474938 PMID 23804960 S2CID 2254080 Fuller Dawn 17 August 2011 Long Term Intimate Partnerships Can Promote Unhealthy Habits UC News online Aug 18 2011 Retrieved 26 August 2011 Reczek Corinne 2012 The promotion of unhealthy habits in gay lesbian and straight intimate partnerships Social Science amp Medicine 75 6 1114 21 doi 10 1016 j socscimed 2012 04 019 PMC 5008030 PMID 22703888 Archived from the original on 2 September 2011 Retrieved 26 August 2011 Grubbs J B Wright P J Braden A L Wilt J A Kraus S W 20 February 2019 Internet pornography use and sexual motivation A systematic review and integration Annal of the International Communication Association 43 2 117 155 doi 10 1080 23808985 2019 1584045 S2CID 150764824 Newton James D A Halford W Kim Barlow Fiona K 26 September 2020 Intimacy in Dyadic Sexually Explicit Media Featuring Men Who Have Sex with Men The Journal of Sex Research 58 3 279 291 doi 10 1080 00224499 2020 1817837 PMID 32975464 S2CID 221918661 Costello Bob 2009 The Restorative Practices Handbook Pennsylvania International Institute for Restorative Practices pp 71 72 Sautter Jessica M Tippett Rebecca M Morgan S Philip 2010 The Social Demography of Internet Dating in the United States Social Science Quarterly 91 2 554 575 doi 10 1111 j 1540 6237 2010 00707 x Largest online dating service Guinness World Records Retrieved 14 December 2022 Dating App Revenue and Usage Statistics 2022 Business of Apps 26 November 2020 Retrieved 14 December 2022 a b Chin Kristi Edelstein Robin S Vernon Philip A January 2019 Attached to dating apps Attachment orientations and preferences for dating apps Mobile Media amp Communication 7 1 41 59 doi 10 1177 2050157918770696 ISSN 2050 1579 S2CID 150257644 Chan Lik Sam 1 July 2017 Who uses dating apps Exploring the relationships among trust sensation seeking smartphone use and the intent to use dating apps based on the Integrative Model Computers in Human Behavior 72 246 258 doi 10 1016 j chb 2017 02 053 ISSN 0747 5632 Landovitz Raphael J Tseng Chi Hong Weissman Matthew Haymer Michael Mendenhall Brett Rogers Kathryn Veniegas Rosemary Gorbach Pamina M Reback Cathy J Shoptaw Steven 1 August 2013 Epidemiology Sexual Risk Behavior and HIV Prevention Practices of Men who Have Sex with Men Using GRINDR in Los Angeles California Journal of Urban Health 90 4 729 739 doi 10 1007 s11524 012 9766 7 ISSN 1468 2869 PMC 3732683 PMID 22983721 Just Science Podcast Just Research of Dating Apps and Violent Sexual Assault Cases Office of Justice Programs Retrieved 14 December 2022 Lauckner Carolyn Truszczynski Natalia Lambert Danielle Kottamasu Varsha Meherally Saher Schipani McLaughlin Anne Marie Taylor Erica Hansen Nathan 3 July 2019 Catfishing cyberbullying and coercion An exploration of the risks associated with dating app use among rural sexual minority males Journal of Gay amp Lesbian Mental Health 23 3 289 306 doi 10 1080 19359705 2019 1587729 ISSN 1935 9705 S2CID 151292337 Holtzhausen Nicol Fitzgerald Keersten Thakur Ishaan Ashley Jack Rolfe Margaret Pit Sabrina Winona 4 March 2020 Swipe based dating applications use and its association with mental health outcomes a cross sectional study BMC Psychology 8 1 22 doi 10 1186 s40359 020 0373 1 ISSN 2050 7283 PMC 7055053 PMID 32127048 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Intimate relationships International Association for Relationship Research Process of Adaption in Intimate Relationships Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Intimate relationship amp oldid 1134398085, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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