Friday, 01 January 2010

  • 5 Myths About Cohabitation

    By Sharon at SheWorships

    The other day I ran across some interesting research on cohabitation that reveals a funny discrepancy between our culture’s beliefs about family and the reality of American families: While countless studies indicate that cohabitation is undeniably detrimental to marriage, nearly half of Americans believe cohabitation is actually good for marriage and reduces the risk of divorce. (USA Today/Gallup Poll)

    To be honest I was not surprised by this disparity between belief and reality. I know a lot of people, including Christians, who moved in together for a myriad of “good” reasons. And like the statistics, very few of those relationships actually worked out. Either the relationship fell apart, or they got engaged but never set a wedding date and remained in an endless holding pattern. The few who did get married had some unusually tough first years of marriage.

    What is frustrating to me is the culture’s inexplicable naiveté on the subject. If you ever get bored one afternoon and feel like trolling the internet for studies on this topic, you will be SHOCKED by how many studies, secular and religious alike, have found that cohabitation is bad for people and bad for marriage. Yet our culture persists in it, blindly exalting cohabitation as the wisest and most progressive new development on the relationship scene.

    In the face of this worrying persistence, I put together the top 5 myths that our culture has about cohabitation, and what studies have told us about them:

    Myth #1: Cohabitation is a stepping stone to marriage.
    Moving in together has become a normal part of most relationships as they progress in seriousness. It is often considered the final step before marriage. However, a 2006 report by the journal Demography found that one-half of all cohabiting unions collapse within a year, and 90 percent within five years.

    Myth #2: Cohabitation reduces the risk of divorce.
    As I mentioned, 49% of Americans believe cohabitation reduces the risk of divorce, and an additional 13% thought that it made no difference either way. However, a study conducted by psychologist Scott Stanley at the University of Denver found that couples who cohabitate are twice as likely to get divorced as those who do not. Stanley also found that the following factors characterized couples who lived together before marriage:

    - More negative communication in marriage
    - Lower levels of marital satisfaction
    - Higher marital instability
    - Lower levels of male commitment to spouse
    - Greater likelihood of divorce

    A separate study by the Vanier Institute of the Family found that married couples who cohabited before marriage are less sexually exclusive both before and after marriage, and that newly married couples who had cohabited before marriage had much higher rates of domestic violence than those who had not lived together.

    Myth #3: Cohabitation is just like marriage.
    Though counter-intuitive, cohabitation is actually a lot more like being single than being married. According to a study done by Discovery Health, cohabitation does not reap the same benefits as marriage, which statistically averages better in physical health, wealth and emotional well-being. The study concluded that this difference was due to the fact that cohabitants tend not to be as committed as married couples, and they are more oriented toward their own personal autonomy and less to the well-being of their partner.

    Myth #4: Cohabitation is better than marriage.
    It has become more and more common for couples to live together or start families without ever tying the knot. Marriage is often seen as restrictive or out-dated. Others believe that marriage rings the death knell on a satisfying sex life. In response to these reasons, the Population Association of America conducted a study indicating that marriage offers dramatic emotional, financial and even health benefits over the single life and cohabitation. “Cohabitation has some but not all of the benefits of marriage,” said Linda Waite, the association’s president. Her studies show that married couples enjoy better health, more money and more satisfying sex.

    Myth #5: Cohabitation makes no difference on children.
    In the Gallup Poll study cited above, 47% of respondents felt that cohabitation made no difference to the children living in the home. 12% believed the effects would actually be positive. However, a study by the Vanier Institute found just the opposite. Due to the unstable nature of cohabitation, kids suffer the brunt of the instability, which wreaks havoc on their physical and psychological development. Anne-Marie Ambert, who oversaw the study on this matter, concluded, “Commitment and stability are at the core of children’s needs; yet, in a great proportion of cohabitations, these two requirements are absent.”

    These statistics are just the tip of the iceberg. Study after study reveals the same thing, and none of the studies I cited are Christian or religiously based. But while these questions challenge us with undeniable data, they don’t answer the key question of why? What is it about cohabitation that changes the very nature of marriage so dramatically?

    There is actually some debate on this. Some social scientists theorize that individuals who are less likely to value relational permanence will opt for cohabitation. However a lot of experts believe the act of cohabitation itself sabotages marriage. One study study published in the American Sociological Review found that periods of cohabitation led to more individualistic attitudes and values, which are contrary to healthy marital attitudes. Another study found “cohabiting experiences significantly increase young people’s acceptance of divorce” by persuading them that “intimate relationships are fragile and temporary in today’s world.”

    As the Vanier Institute concluded,

    There is some evidence to the effect that the experience of a less secure, committed, and even faithful cohabitation shapes subsequent marital behaviour (Dush et al., 2003). Some couples continue to live their marriage through the perspective of the insecurity, lack of pooling of resources, low commitment level, and even lack of fidelity of their prior cohabitation. Others simply learn to accept the temporary nature of relationships (Smock and Gupta, 2002). The result is a marriage which is at risk (Wu, 2000).

    In other words, cohabitation sews the seeds of a mindset that sabotage marriage. Because our society treats cohabitation and marriage as basic equivalents, naive to the reality that they are profoundly different, what results is couples who treat their marriage the way they did their cohabitation.

    All of that to say, if you’re thinking about moving in with a boyfriend or girlfriend DON’T DO IT!!! Whether you’re wanting to get more serious, wanting to test-run marriage before saying “I do,” or you’re simply motivated by financial reasons, the negatives far out-weigh the positives. And you are not the exception. The statistics show that you are most likely the rule.

    In a world where divorce is so rampant, why gamble?

    Even though Christians are sometimes seen as backwards or prudish for insisting on traditional marriage, studies like the ones I cited reveal that God-honoring marriage isn’t about legalism or cramping our freedom. God gave us direction for our own protection. He wanted to spare us the heartache and pain that comes with broken relationships. He gave us the resources to build up our marriages and families and make them strong, so use them! Seek to please and honor God in your dating relationship, not because you’re super religious but because you have a Father who loves you, and you know He always has the good of His children in mind.

    What do you think about this information? What are some of your thoughts and experiences?

Comments (202)

  • ShimmerBodyCream@xanga

    What part of the Bible says you can't cohabitate?

  • MissPixieGlitter@xanga

    i have a bone to pick with this post, but i'll get to it when i get home.

  • walkintotheseaaa@xanga

    Meh, I simply just disagree.  I've watched so many couples live together and have perfectly timely and wonderful marriages, and I'd have no problem living with my boyfriend.


    I think that we should just live our lives.  No one thing that is good for one person or couple is necessarily good for the next.

  • t_sheffield@xanga

    @ChevalierSeingal@datingish - Well....last time I checked marriage isn't all about sex....It plays a role....but I'm sure that if my husband had a 7 inch penis but had horrible character, I'd take a guy with a one inch penis who was my best friend, a gentle, loving, honest, and caring person before the 7 incher.


    Penis size doesn't make a marriage last.


    ...just some thoughts....

  • t_sheffield@xanga

    @walkintotheseaaa@xanga - I agree. I know people who have lived together and have had wonderful marriages as well......but I can't argue with the statistics...I can't make a personal judgement because I haven't known every single person who has cohabitated.


    Also, it's not about it being "evil"...it's about it being harmful.


    quit with the Evil card.

  • hundredsongsinhundreddays@xanga

    What about: e.g. the numerous studies which show that marriage is detrimental to women's psychological well-being?  Many other sociological studies also show that cohabitation is a temporary arrangement, and that many cohabitees eventually do marry, especially if they have children.  What about the number of marriages which do break down, despite the fact that people do not previously cohabit?


    In terms of individualism, there are sociologists (see Beck & Gersheim-Beck, for instance, who write about the individualization thesis) who argue that we now live in a post-modern world characterised by individualistic attitudes and therefore we view all relationships, not only cohabitation but also marital ones, for instance, from this lens.  


    I'll check out those studies too....

  • walkintotheseaaa@xanga

    @t_sheffield@xanga - Though not in this post, I have seen arguments that it is "evil."

  • GreekPhysique@xanga

    It makes sense. What's so exciting about marriage when you're already living together? 

  • ShimmerBodyCream@xanga
  • ShimmerBodyCream@xanga

    @GreekPhysique@xanga - I think the appeal is spending the rest of your life with someone you love... I could be wrong though. I mean, I guess you could always get married for money or a smokin hot bod.

  • RaVnR@xanga

    "Concurrence is not causation."

    Point being? Statistics don't tell us why cohabitation 'results' in more failed relationships. It's a complicated interplay of social, religious, socio-religious, personal, and psychological factors.

  • GreekPhysique@xanga

    @ShimmerBodyCream@xanga - Devil's Advocate time. Why would I want to spend 15K on a wedding when I could string along a girl with empty promises to live with me until she was old and ugly, and then dump her? :-p I'm tired of my nice female friends falling for cohabitation and pretending they are happy. I read their blogs. They're drooling for a ring and can't get one.

  • asrial86@xanga

    Studies are useless in this case, because you can't use a damn study to predict every possible outcome of every relationship.  I know for instance, that for myself, living with my boyfriend would be the stepping stone to our relationship being independent from our parents' support.  Then we'd move onto engagement, marriage, and children, like we've already discussed and know that we want.

    If you have people in a relationship who start off not wanting the same things out of life - that is where things go wrong.  You can't say that living together or waiting until marriage to live together is the answer. 

    Studies just cannot predict human behaviour and I'll ignore this one just like any other.

  • hundredsongsinhundreddays@xanga
    I just found this: 


    The study Seven years in the lives of British Families, based on data from the British Household Panel Survey, in which 10,000 adults were interviewed every year between 1991 and 1997, concluded that cohabitation is essentially a transitory arrangement: “Cohabiting unions last only a short time before being converted into marriage or dissolving: their median length is about two years.”  The study found that 60 per cent of cohabitations turned into marriage.

  • ShimmerBodyCream@xanga

    @GreekPhysique@xanga - Then good for her she didn't marry a lying, jerk wad that didn't love her. Unless he's rich. Then the dumb bitch missed out on half of his money and the diamond.


    If they aren't happy then they shouldn't be cohabitating if that's not what they want. If they want marriage instead they should get married.

  • asrial86@xanga

    @RaVnR@xanga - I agree, studies are sweeping assumptions/generalizations about the certain groups that were studied, which does not and absolutely cannot apply to all other relationships.

  • whitetrashpoet@xanga

    Well, I've seen many more couples divorce who didn't live together before marriage than those who did. If you master communication and commitment prior to marriage, it shouldn't matter if you've lived together or not.

    @RaVnR@xanga - I agree. There are plenty of studies that say WHY it happens...but I've never seen a single study say that living together actually causes divorce, etc. But everyone sure loves to spin it that way, huh? It's like the statistic that "50% of marriages end in divorce" - true, but only 23% of first marriages end in divorce. People can use statistics to prove whatever they want to prove. 

  • whitetrashpoet@xanga
  • scrambledmegsntoast@xanga

    People are going to do what they want to do. No study will stop them.

  • ChevalierSeingal@datingish
  • salvatruca_stalking_havok13@xanga

    Correlation does not imply causation. No, seriously. You can't claim that variable A and variable B correlate and then make up a reason for why they correlate which is exactly what your post is trying to do. Statistics show that those who cohabituate are more likely to get divorced; that must mean cohabitation causes divorce! Yea, no. Variables C-Z could be the reason why A and B occur. Or it could be none of that. Who knows until you design an experiment to prove it?

    By your line of reasoning, I could easily say that those in a traditional marriage are less likely to divorce because they are conservative and view divorce as wrong no matter ergo they will not divorce even if the relationship is horrible. But, like I said, correlation does not imply causation and I can't make up reasons for why relationships occur just to twist statistical data to my favor.


    @ShimmerBodyCream@xanga - It's probably in the invisible fine print that only real "Christians" can see. :P

  • ChevalierSeingal@datingish

    @t_sheffield@xanga - That all sounds warm and fuzzy but you just wait until you reach the age of 35-40 before you give me any of that horse crap!

    I am being serious, I certainly realize at the wise old age of 15 you know everything.

  • sarahflorida1085@xanga

    @GreekPhysique@xanga - your second comment can definitely fit the bill for a lot of ladies-sad as it is. 

  • hundredsongsinhundreddays@xanga

    [Quote]
    Myth #1: Cohabitation is a stepping stone to marriage.


    Moving in together has become a normal part of most relationships as
    they progress in seriousness. It is often considered the final step
    before marriage. However, a 2006 report by the journal Demography found that one-half of all cohabiting unions collapse within a year, and 90 percent within five years.
    [Unquote]

    This study tracks women only and uses data from before 2000.  But most importantly, you use the word 'collapse' where the study uses the word 'end'.  The difference is important, because the percentages include cohabitating unions that end in... marriage.

    My point is, that not only do you pick and chose unrelated data to support your position, you also deliberately change the conclusions (the use of the word 'collapse').

    If you had read that particular journal of Demography (no. 43) you would also have read another study based on data from sixteen European countries, which proves that there is no higher risk for dissolution of marriages for couples who cohabited before (Liefbroer/Dourleijn) expect in extreme cases:

    [Quote]
    Former cohabitants are found to have higher union dissolution risks
    than people who married without prior cohabitation only if cohabitation
    is a tiny minority or a large majority phenomenon. If cohabitation is
    practised by approximately half of the population, former cohabitants
    are found to have about the same union dissolution risks as people who
    married straightaway.
    [Unquote]
    (My italics)

  • ChevalierSeingal@datingish

    @t_sheffield@xanga - And why would you think you would have to make a choice. Why can't you have both. What's up with the low expectations???

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About the Author

  • sheworships
    • From: sheworships
    • Name: Sharon
    • About Me: Sharon Hodde Miller is a North Carolina girl, born and raised! She is originally from Charlotte, NC, and she received her undergraduate degree and Masters of Divinity from Duke University. Sharon has worked for Proverbs 31 Ministries where she was a contributing writer to the ministry’s daily devotions and radio broadcasts. She has written for Relevant Magazine’s online articles, Lifeway’s Collegiate Magazine, Ungrind Webzine, and she continues to write and minister to women all over the world about being a Christian woman in an ever-changing culture. Sharon currently lives in Durham, North Carolina with her husband, who is currently pursuing a Master of Divinity at Duke Divinity School. If you would like to contact her regarding a speaking or writing opportunity, if you have any questions, or would like to submit a blog topic, please e-mail her at sharon(at)sheworships(dot)com.
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