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Thursday, February 10, 2005
WRITER: Philip Lee Williams, 706/542-8501, phil@franklin.uga.edu
SOURCES: W. Keith Campbell, 706/542-1429, wkc@uga.edu
Craig
A. Foster, 719/333-4274, Craig.Foster@USAFA.af.mil
JULIET? CAN WE TALK? FORGET ROMEO. SECRET RELATIONSHIPS
GO SOUR QUICKLY, ACCORDING TO NEW STUDY BY PSYCHOLOGISTS
ATHENS, Ga. – Secret romantic relationships are hot, right?
Movies and television dramas are full of them, and they almost always
seem intense, the gateway to a new life filled with promise if not
outright ecstasy.
If you believe that, two psychologists who are about to publish research
on the subject have a word of advice for you on Valentine’s
Day: Get a life.
“We found virtually nothing good in the long-term about secret
romantic relationships,” said Dr. W. Keith Campbell of the University
of Georgia. “In the beginning, the secrecy may increase the
allure, but in every study we conducted it was ultimately detrimental
to a quality relationship.”
The research, which will be published in March in the journal Personal
Relationships, was co-authored by Dr. Craig Foster of the U. S. Air
Force Academy.
“Secret relationships seem fun and exciting to many people,
but the results of our research do not support that view,” said
Foster. “Individuals in secret romantic relationships consistently
report lower levels of relationship quality. These results are inconsistent
with a common belief that secret romances are fun and exciting. When
individuals think of secret romances, they probably imagine late-night
clandestine meetings where the potential for being caught enhances
the romantic experience; however, a realistic portrait of romantic
relationships reveals that maintaining secrecy is more frustrating
than fun.”
Research on secrecy in romantic relationships is surprisingly thin,
the authors say, and that “may be related to a belief that romantic
secrecy is a blithe topic that does not genuinely affect many individuals.” Considering
how many relationships are secret and the stress they put on friends
and family, not to mention to lovers, the lack of information may
seem, to many, downright odd.
There are many reasons for romantic secrecy, of course. The authors
cite as examples of relationships that may require secrecy ones that
are homosexual, interracial or inter-religious. Just as often, however,
secret workplace romances occur, and though they sometimes fade before
lasting damage, friends and family are often trapped in a web of divided
loyalties and deceit.
The authors based their conclusions on three studies, based on question-and-answer
surveys, with undergraduate students from the University of North
Carolina. In the first study, romantic secrecy predicted lower levels
of initial relationship quality and decreased relationship quality
over a two-week period. The second and third studies confirmed that
romantic secrecy’s allure rapidly degrades during the beginning
weeks of such a relationship.
“Most of those in the survey didn’t say they got involved
in a secret relationship because it looked like fun,” said Campbell. “The
main reason is that they didn’t want friends and family finding
out.”
If secret relationships can be shown to be unsatisfactory for most
people, then why are such relationships the backbone of soap operas,
many mainstreams movies and hundreds of books published each year?
It may be because it’s more about escape than about love, and
of course, since Romeo and Juliet (and really long before) the idea
of secret lovers has exerted a strong pull on the popular imagination.
“Members of secret relationships likely observe others sharing
their romantic relationship information with their friends, while
they must continually inhibit the desire to share their own experiences,” said
Foster. “In the case of severe romantic secrecy, relationship
members are required to lie about their activities and their relationship
status for weeks, months, or years. Members of stigmatized relationships,
such as homosexual or interracial relationships, may experience additional
frustration as the need for romantic secrecy is enforced by a greater
social problem.”
Campbell, author of the just-released When You Love a Man Who Loves
Himself (Sourcebooks Casablanca) is considered a national expert on
narcissism, and the new study, he says, points out there may be some
benefits to secrecy at the very earliest stages of a secret romantic
relationship. Such benefits, however, are currently unclear at best
and may well be the topic of another study on the subject.
Most people in secret relationships end up better off than Romeo
and Juliet, of course. Then again, living to regret it might actually
be worse—at least for a dramatist—than apparently blissful
sacrifice.
(Writers: The study, which will be published in Personal Relationships
12 in March, is available from Dr. Campbell. E-mail or call him for
a PDF file of the study.)
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