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The Case for Relationship Coaching
The Case for Relationship Coaching Dr. Dar Alternative to Counseling for Singles and Couples | Relationship Coach - Helping smart people find and create fulfilling relationships
We have developed a “need” to be happy and have a decreasing tolerance for delayed gratification. When we are in an unhappy relationship most of us attempt to improve it and eventually leave if it doesn’t get better. A generation or two ago, men and women dated, married, had families, and rarely divorced. Everyone seemed to know the rules and followed them. “Fulfillment” was not a priority and unhappiness was not cause for divorce…Then the rules changed; life and relationships became much more complex. We want to be happy, but we don’t know how. We are traveling to a vague destination without a map or compass, and are not aware of what is causing us to be off track.Get a grip on these facts:
- There are more single people today than ever in history – 82 million in the U.S., 40% of the adult population (28% in 1970)
- Over 25% of households are single occupant households (17% in 1970)
- 53% of households are married couples (70% in 1970)
- The marriage rate is decreasing, and is at its lowest in 30 years
- The divorce rate has remained stable since 1988
- While the exact divorce rate is a matter of debate, experts agree that somewhere between 40 and 60% of all marriages will end in divorce, and that for every marriage there is about one divorce
- Co-habitation is increasing and becoming the norm, whereas 40 years ago it was a rare occurrence
- The percentage of young adults who say that having a good marriage is extremely important to them is increasing (94% in one study)
- The majority of first-born children are now conceived by, or born to, unmarried parents
- Half of all children will spend some time in a single parent family
- Children who live in single parent families have a higher incidence of behavioral problems, likelihood of dropping out of school, drug or alcohol abuse, and divorcing later in life
- 43% of first marriages end within 15 years
- 39% of remarriages end within 10 years
- More than 85% of all adults marry at least once
- Second and third marriages have a higher incidence of failure
A summary of a 1999 study by David Popenoe and Barbara Dafoe Whitehead of the National Marriage Project of Rutgers University on “The State Of Our Unions: The Social Health Of Marriage in America” states:
“Key social indicators suggest a substantial weakening of the institution of marriage. Americans have become less likely to marry. When they do marry their marriages are less happy. And married couples face a high likelihood of divorce. Over the past four decades, marriage has declined as the first living together experience for couples and as a status of parenthood. Unmarried cohabitation and unwed births have grown enormously, and so has the percentage of children who grow up in fragile families.”
Sources:
U.S. Census Bureau www.census.gov
SmartMarriages www.smartmarriages.com
National Marriage Project marriage.rutgers.edu/state.html
American Association For Single People www.unmarriedamerica.com
Entire submission fully attributed to RCI
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