Psychological Intimacy in the Lasting Relationships of Heterosexual and Same-Gender Couples
continued from
It is difficult to assess the validity of the data in the traditional
sense of that concept, since we were eliciting the personal perceptions and
evaluations of participants about the meaning of psychological intimacy in
their relationships at a particular point in time. The candor of
participants on highly personal matters, such as the
decline in sexual
relations because of
sexual dysfunctions, suggests that participants were
equally candid about other aspects of their relationships, such as
psychological intimacy. By interviewing partners separately and asking them
to talk about themselves, as well as their observations of their partners in
these relationships, we were able to compare responses to determine if there
were significant differences over common realities. For example, did both
partners assess the nature of conflict in their relationships similarly? Did
a participant, in commenting on an aspect of a partner's behavior, come
close to the partner's observations about the same factor? Correspondenc e
between partners was permitted in the study, which was illustrated in the
responses to conflict management styles, when participants were asked to
describe their style as well as the style of their partners. For example,
partners who described themselves as having an evasive style were viewed by
their partners in an equivalent way.
In a cross-sectional design in which participants are asked to report on
their life today and in the past, traditional measures of reliability are
inadequate. The meaning-of-life events and an individual's response to these
events will vary, and may even vary within the same person at different
points over the lifespan. While longitudinal designs may be superior in
contending with problems of validity and reliability, cross-sectional
designs that use interviews to uncover the meaning of behavior have the
strength of eliciting the richness in the experiences of human beings.
There is a shortfall in recoding the data from multiple categories into
dichotomous ones. This step built onto the earlier qualitative analysis by
offering a different lens through which to understand the data. To offset
the potential reductionistic effects of recoding, we have incorporated a
discussion of the qualitative data into the results. The integration of
qualitative and quantitative procedures was intended to enhance the theory
development objective of the research.
The use of an interdisciplinary team throughout the research process
enhanced the quality of the study. Issues of bias, misinterpretation, and
other matters that could affect the validity and reliability of the data
were discussed. One of the principal investigators read all 216 interview
transcripts and served as a second blind coder for each interview. Having
one researcher read and code every interview provided for continuity in the
operational definitions of variables. To insure that there was both a male
and a female perspective on the data, the second coder was a woman. As a
measure of inter-rater reliability, Cohen's kappa was used and ranged from
.79 to .93.
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The sample was selected purposively to include participants not often
included in other studies in lasting relationships; namely, people of color,
blue-collar participants, and same-gender couples. The goal was not to test
theory but to develop an understanding of a subject--psychological intimacy
among an older group of diverse partners in lasting relationships--that has
not received much attention by researchers. The sample fit with the goal of
this exploratory study.
SUMMARY
The study of psychological intimacy in human relationships is a highly
complex and dynamic process. Defining intimacy is a challenge, as is the
importance of specifying the operational parameters. We defined
psychological intimacy as the sense that participants had of their
relationships as a place in which they could share personal thoughts and
feelings about themselves and their relationships not expressed customarily
with others. In this definition, positive communication was a quintessential
component of psychological intimacy. We focused on cognitive themes about
the meaning of relationships to individual partners rather than on specific
interpersonal behaviors. The sample consisted of heterosexual and
same-gender couples in relationships that had lasted approximately 30 years.
A chi-square analysis of all research variables with the independent
variable revealed that social and demographic factors such as age, race,
education, income, and religion did not have significant relationships to
psychological intimacy in recent years. That finding is important to the
process of understanding factors that contribute to the quality of
psychological intimacy in committed relationships that last for many years.
It may also suggest that factors within relationships are more important
than are socioeconomic and demographic factors in shaping psychological
intimacy between partners in these relationships.
In the chi-square analysis, several factors were associated significantly
with reports of psychological intimacy in recent years, defined as the last
5 to 10 years of these relationships. They were the quality of
communication between partners, minimal relational conflict, conflict
management style of partners, couple decision-making, relational equity,
quality of sexual relations, importance of sexual relations, and physical
affection. These data are similar to findings reported in previous studies
that have explored psychological intimacy (Berscheid & Reis, 1998), although
those studies tended to focus on younger participants.
Phi coefficients were then computed to determine the strength of the
associations between the dependent variable and each of the independent
variables. Based on the substantial correlation between communication and
psychological intimacy ([phi] = .50), communication was not included as a
dependent variable in the theoretical models that were tested with logistic
regression. In this study, it is appropriate to consider psychological
intimacy as psychologically intimate communication.
Based on the statistically significant relationships of the above
variables with psychological intimacy, along with their identification in
previous research as important factors in shaping intimacy (Kurdek, 1998;
Swain, 1989; Howard, Blumenstein, & Swartz., 1986), two theoretical models
were constructed and tested with logistic regression analysis. The first
model included the sexual orientation of couples (heterosexual, lesbian, or
gay male) as an independent variable. The results pointed to five factors
predictive of psychological intimacy in these lasting relationships. They were minimal levels of relational conflict (B = -2.24, p =
.01), a confrontive conflict management style in the partners of
participants (B = 1.16, p = .01), a sense of equity about their
relationships (B = 1.29, p = .01), and expressions of physical affection
between partners (B = 1.63, p .01). The fifth factor was sexual orientation
of couples: more lesbians reported their relationships as psychologically
intimate i n recent years than did heterosexuals (B = 1.47, p = .05) and gay
males (B = 1.96, p = .03), a finding that resonated with the work of Kurdek,
who compared intimacy in heterosexual, lesbian, and gay male relationships
(1998).
To assess the significance of gender over sexual orientation on
reported psychological intimacy, gender was substituted for sexual
orientation in a second model. The four factors that
contributed significantly to psychological in the first model did not change
substantially in this second model, and the gender of participants had a
moderate effect on the results (B = .81, p = .08). That finding is
compatible with those of Parks and Floyd (1998), who argued that gender role
identification of males and females is not as powerful a factor in shaping
intimacy in friendship relationships as may be assumed.
CONCLUSIONS
This study focused selectively on a sample of 108 heterosexual and same-
gender partners in 216 relationships that had lasted an average of 30 years.
The results suggested that factors within relationships themselves had a
more powerful effect in shaping the meaning of
psychological intimacy than
did social and demographic factors. The data suggested that a sense of
psychological intimacy was nurtured when interpersonal conflict was kept to
minimal levels, when one's partner dealt with conflict in the relationship
by initiating face-to-face discussion of differences, when one had a feeling
that the relationship was fair, and when there were expressions of
affection
between partners through touching and hugging. Perhaps, a reason that these
relationships endured was that these factors nurtured a sense of
psychological intimacy that contributed to relational stability.
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