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Feminist Marriage vs. Traditional Marriage: A case for Choice

 

By Dr. Richard Driscoll 


In traditional marriages, while husbands and wives might bicker, argue, scold, turn aloof or sullen, and show all manner of arrogance and contempt, men and women somehow managed to resolve conflict, shove it aside or bury it, and to get on with a life together (or bail out). It might seem miraculous today that even a few solid relationships could have existed with no government intervention.

In what we might call feminist marriages, which are becoming the norm, either spouse (meaning the woman) is now more than welcome to make accusations against her mate, charging violence, sexual assault, and now bad manners, and all without requiring a shred of objective evidence.


Men could accuse women, of course, but seldom do. Human nature is chivalrous, and we sympathize when men mistreat women but we expect men to take care of themselves. Is it any wonder that the marriage arrangement is falling apart?


I suggest a solution which should be acceptable to everyone (joke). Since we have two forms of marriages, we should provide a choice, and issue two forms of marriage certificates. Those who choose a traditional marriage are expected to work it out together or to get out of it, and assault provisions would apply only to intentional injury (which is assault by any reasonable standard). In contrast, a feminist marriage would allow either spouse (meaning the woman) to bring charges based on anything and everything, and have the alleged perpetrator and former husband removed from the house and handed over to the courts.

Traditionalists should approve, as the arrangement maintains the fundamentals of marriage. Feminists should be pleased (but might not be) to see their programs set into law and fully implemented among those who choose to partake.


A little choice can go a long way. Anyone want to bet how many red-blooded American men and women would choose a feminist marriage?

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Dr. Richard Driscoll graduated from the University of Colorado in 1974, and is in private practice in Knoxville Tennessee.  He specializes in marriage and family therapy, conflict resolution, gender qualities, and spiritual experiences.  Driscoll has recently published "Opposites as Equals" with Nancy Ann Davis.  The authors identify innate differences between men and women, explore their origins, and suggest ways to resolve conflict and join together for our mutual benefit.  Driscoll and Nancy Ann Davis are in practice together, are married, and have three grown children. Richard Driscoll offers free consultation on ways to rise above chivalry and focus instead on benefits to family and community.  Dr. Driscoll is also a pioneer in anxiety reduction, and has published four anxiety reduction training including "Personal Shielding to Deflect Hostility" and "Tame Test Anxiety." His website: theOppositeSex.info and email: drD[SpamBuster]@theOppositeSex.info (remove [SpamBuster] to send e-mail)



 


Sensitive Cave Man

By Dr. Richard Driscoll

"Why do women want to talk about a problem, on and on, while men want fix it as quickly as possible and be done with it? "Sensitive Cave Men" offers a comic sketch and an answer to this commonplace question."

To watch the video: http://drsd2.blogspot.com/2009/12/sensitive-cave-man.html


Arguments

By Richard Driscoll, Ph.D.

Insistence

While we might expect men to be more forceful than women in marital arguments, the research shows just the opposite, surprising our expectations.

Women tend to be more insistent, according to various researchers including John Gottman1 at the University of Washington. Women argue more forcefully in almost twice as many marriages as men.

In the most lopsided arguments where only one argues and the other remains silent, by a ratio of 6 to 1, it is the woman who continues to argue and the man who remains silent. So in these most severe arguments, we see an almost complete separation between men and women.

Overwhelmed and confused

Men are typically more stressed and confused in arguments with women and remain bitter for longer afterward, while women are more comfortable amid verbal jousts, recover from them more quickly, in our ready for another round. Generally, it is fair to say that men are more intimidated in confrontations with women than the other way around.

Men are not blindfolded and gagged in arguments with women — it just seems that way.

Origins

Insistence has been a viable tactic for women, to test the strength of a commitment, while a reluctance to offend has been a more viable for men, who must rely on women to transport their genes into the next generation.

Suggestions

Marriages are better when men and women participate about equally. Amid our typical arguments, we offer a few obvious suggestions for men and for women:

To better resolve conflict, you must learn to be more comfortable with it. Recognize that it is normal for women to be more easily upset and irritated than men, but that women also get over it faster. Do not interpret it as a great catastrophe when your mate is bothered about something. Stay involved, and try to talk it out.

You might realize that men are more vulnerable in conflict than they appear and slower to recover from it. Be careful to accurately gauge how much stress your accusations inflict, and make allowances.

Implications

If men were ordinarily more forceful in marital squabbles, then an increase in female power would promote equality. But since women are ordinarily more forceful, as observations indicate, the same solution pushes us farther apart. Men withdraw in the face of female accusation, leaving marriages emotionally barren and inhospitable. The challenge is to strike a proper balance, so that men and women can participate together and gain the best from each other.

1J. Gottman and R. Levenson, "The Social Psychophysiology of Marriage." In P. Noller and M. Fitzpatric (eds.), Perspectives on Marital Interaction (Clevedon, Avon, England: Multilingual Matters, 1988), 182–202.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Dr. Richard Driscoll graduated from the University of Colorado in 1974, and is in private practice in Knoxville Tennessee.  He specializes in marriage and family therapy, conflict resolution, gender qualities, and spiritual experiences.  Driscoll has recently published "Opposites as Equals" with Nancy Ann Davis.  The authors identify innate differences between men and women, explore their origins, and suggest ways to resolve conflict and join together for our mutual benefit.  Driscoll and Nancy Ann Davis are in practice together, are married, and have three grown children. Richard Driscoll offers free consultation on ways to rise above chivalry and focus instead on benefits to family and community.  Dr. Driscoll is also a pioneer in anxiety reduction, and has published four anxiety reduction training including "Personal Shielding to Deflect Hostility" and "Tame Test Anxiety." His website: theOppositeSex.info and email: drD[SpamBuster]@theOppositeSex.info (remove [SpamBuster] to send e-mail)


 



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