Supportive Relationships Linked to Willingness to Pursue Opportunities-Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences - Carnegie Mellon University

Authored by cmu.edu and submitted by shilorea
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Supportive Relationships Linked to Willingness to Pursue Opportunities

Research on how our social lives affects decision-making has usually focused on negative factors like stress and adversity. Less attention, however, has been paid to the reverse: What makes people more likely to give themselves the chance to succeed?

That’s the question Carnegie Mellon University psychologists recently posed. Published in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, they discovered that people with supportive spouses were more likely to take on potentially rewarding challenges and that those who accepted the challenges experienced more personal growth, happiness, psychological well-being and better relationship functioning months later.

“We found support for the idea that the choices people make at these specific decision points—such as pursuing a work opportunity or seeking out new friends—matter a lot for their long-term well-being,” said Brooke Feeney, lead author of the study and professor of psychology in CMU’s Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences.

The researchers brought 163 married couples into the lab and gave one member of each couple a choice: either solve a simple puzzle, or they were given an opportunity to compete for a prize by giving a speech. The researchers then recorded the couples’ interactions as they decided whether to take on the challenge.

Participants with more encouraging partners were substantially more likely to decide to compete for the prize, while those with partners who discouraged them or expressed a lack of confidence more often chose the simple puzzle. Six months later, those who pursued the more challenging task reported having more personal growth, happiness, psychological well-being, and better relationships than those who didn’t.

So what can one do to encourage a partner to embrace life opportunities? The researchers found that the most supportive partners expressed enthusiasm about the opportunity, reassured their partners, and talked about the potential benefits of taking on the challenge.

“Significant others can help you thrive through embracing life opportunities,” said Feeney. “Or they can hinder your ability to thrive by making it less likely that you’ll pursue opportunities for growth.”

CMU’s Meredith Van Vleet and Brittany Jakubiak also contributed to the study, as did Colgate University’s Jennifer Tomlinson. The National Institutes of Health funded this research.

nfbell on August 12nd, 2017 at 01:21 UTC »

TL;DR: Good spouses=good relationship

CasuConsuIto on August 12nd, 2017 at 00:43 UTC »

I can see this. When my husband was let go, I supported him on. $14/hr temp job for a few months. I used tax returns to help with bills until he got serious about looking for employment. It wasn't easy because he refused to go for his unemployment benefits for a month.

I supported him through 2 jobs where he was there for a week and one day for the second (he left both because they weren't what they said they'd be).

After those bombs, I supported his career change. He's now happily in IT making great money. I love that man and I'd do anything for him

scales484 on August 11st, 2017 at 23:25 UTC »

You mean... People being supportive leads other people to try and succeed at things? Revelatory