Chapter 7 - Interpersonal Relationships
Contact with other human beings is so
important that when you're deprived of it for long periods, depression sets in,
self-doubt surfaces, and you may find it difficult to manage even the basics of
daily life. Research shows clearly that the most important contributor to happiness-outranking
money, job, and sex-is a close relationship with one other person. The
desire for relationships is universal. Interpersonal relationships are
important to men and to women, to homosexuals and to heterosexuals, to the
young and to the old. Not surprisingly, this seems the principle motivation for
much of social media communication. This chapter looks at some of the
advantages and disadvantages of interpersonal relationships, the stages of
relationships, the varied types of relationships, theories that explain why we
enter and exit relationships, and the influence of culture, technology, and
work on our relationships.
Advantages and Disadvantages of
Interpersonal Relationships
A good way to begin the study of
interpersonal relationships.is to examine your own relationships (past,
present, or those you look forward to) by asking yourself what your
relationships do for you. What are the advantages and the disadvantages!
Visualize a 10-point scale on which 1 indicates that your relationship never
serves this function, 10 indicates that your relationship always serves this
function, and the numbers in between indicate levels between these extremes.
You may wish to do this twice-once for your face-to-face relationships and once
for your online relationships.
1. My relationships help to lessen my
loneliness.
2. My relationships help me gain in
self-knowledge and in self-esteem.
3. My relationships help enhance my physical
and emotional health.
4. My relationships maximize my pleasures and
minimize my pains.
5. My relationships help me to secure
stimulation (intellectual, physical, and emotional).
Let's elaborate just a bit on each of these
commonly accepted advantages of interpersonal communication:
1. One of the major benefits of relationships
is that they help to lessen loneliness. They make you feel that someone cares,
that someone likes you, that someone will protect you, that someone ultimately
will love you.
2. Through contact with others you learn
about yourself and see yourself from different perspectives and in different
roles, as a child or parent, as a coworker, as a manager, as a best friend. Healthy
interpersonal relationships help enhance self-esteem and self-worth.
Simply having a friend or romantic partner (at least most of the time) makes
you feel desirable and worthy.
3. Research consistently shows that
interpersonal relationships contribute significantly to physical and emotional
health and to personal happiness. Without close interpersonal relationships
you're more likely to become depressed-and this depression, in turn, contributes
significantly to physical illness. Isolation, in fact, contributes as
much to mortality as high blood pressure, high cholesterol, obesity, smoking,
or lack of physical exercise.
4. The most general function served by
interpersonal relationships, and the function that encompasses all the others,
is that of maximizing pleasure and minimizing pain.
Your good friends, for example, will make you
feel even better about your good fortune and less hurt when you're confronted
with hardships.
5. As plants are heliotropic and orient
themselves to light, humans are stimulotropic and orient themselves to sources
of stimulation. Human contact is one of the best ways to secure this
stimulation-intellectual, physical, and emotional. Even an imagined
relationship seems better than none.
Now, respond to these sentences as you did to
the above.
6. My relationships put uncomfortable
pres8ure on me to expose my vulnerabilities.
7. My relationships increase my obligations.
8. My relationships prevent me from
developing other relationships.
9. My relationships scare me because they may
be difficult to dissolve.
10. My relationships hurt me.
These statements
express what most people would consider disadvantages of interpersonal
relationships.
6. Close relationships put pressure on you to
reveal yourself and to expose your vulnerabilities. Although this is generally worthwhile
in the context of a supporting and caring relationship, it may backfire if the relationship
deteriorates and these weaknesses are used against you.
7. Close relationships increase your obligations
to other people, sometimes to a great extent your time is no longer entirely
your own. And although you enter relationships to spend more time with these
special people, you also incur time (and perhaps financial) obligations with
which you may not be happy.
8. Close relationships can lead you to
abandon other relationships. Sometimes the other relationship involves someone
you like, but your partner can't stand. More often, however, it's simply a
matter of time and energy; relationships take a lot of both and you have less
to give to these other and less intimate relationships.
9. The closer your relationships, the more
emotionally difficult they are to dissolve, a feeling which may be
uncomfortable for some people. If a relationship is deteriorating, you may feel
distress or depression. In some cultures, for example, religious pressures may prevent
married couples from separating. And if considerable money is involved,
dissolving a relationship can often mean giving up the fortune you've spent
your life accumulating.
10. And, of course, your partner may break
your heart. Your partner may leave you-against all your pleading and promises.
Your hurt will be in proportion to how much you care and need your partner. If
you care a great deal, you're likely to experience great hurt; if you care
less, the hurt will be less-it's one of little ironies.
The Stages of
Interpersonal Relationships
As
a preface to this discussion, realize that different cultures will view
relationships very differently. What is presented here is generally derived
from research conducted in the United
States,
and so, for example, the assumption made is that you voluntarily choose your
relationship partners-that you consciously choose to pursue certain
relationships and not others. In some cultures, however, your parents choose
your romantic partner for you. In some cases your husband or wife is chosen to
unite two families or to bring some financial advantage to your family or
village. In the United States, researchers study and textbook authors write
about dissolving relationships and how to survive relationship breakups. It's
generally assumed that you have the right to exit an undesirable relationship.
However, in some cultures you simply cannot dissolve a relationship once it has
been formed or once there are children. More important to such cultures may be
issues such as how to maintain a relationship that has problems, what to do to
survive in an unpleasant relationship, and how to repair a troubled
relationship. You and another person don't become intimate friends immediately
on meeting. Rather, you build an intimate relationship gradually, through a
series of steps or stages. The same is true of most relationships. The model in
Figure 7.1 (page 139) describes the six main stages in relationships: contact,
involvement, intimacy, deterioration, repair, and dissolution, each of which
has an early and a late phase. These stages describe relationships as they are;
they don't evaluate or prescribe how relationships should be. For a particular
relationship, you might wish to modify the basic model, hut as a general
description the stages seem fairly standard. They are also applicable generally
to face-to-face as well as to online relationships. As you read about these
stages, keep in mind that both partners may not perceive their relationship in
the same way; one person, for example, may see the relationship as having reached
the intimate stage and the other may not.
Social
network sites seem to recognize this stage nature of relationships by enabling
you to treat your online "friends" differently. For example, the
circles on Google- and the "friend’s lists" on Facebook enable you to
group people on the basis of the information that you want them to be able to
access. This makes it very easy to distinguish acquaintances from intimate
friends, for example, as well as family from friends from workplace colleagues.
CONTACT
At
the initial phase of the contact stage, there is some kind of perceptual
contact-you see, hear, and perhaps smell the person. From this you get
a physical picture: gender, approximate age, height, and so on. Or you might
browse a group of photos and profiles from an online dating site. After this
perception there is usually interactional contact, which is superficial and
relatively impersonal This is the stage at which you exchange basic information
that is preliminary to any more intense involvement (”Hello, my name is
Joe"); you initiate interaction ("May I join you?") and engage
in invitational communication ("May I buy you coffee?"). With online
relationships each of you will have read the other's profile and so will know
quite a lot about each other before you even begin to talk. According to some
researchers, it's at this stage-within the first four minutes of initial
interaction-that you decide whether you want to pursue the relationship. At the
contact stage, physical appearance is especially important, because it's the
characteristic most readily seen. Yet, through verbal and nonverbal behaviors,
personal qualities such as friendliness, warmth, openness, and dynamism are
also revealed. 'With online relations people may profile themselves as warm or
open or dynamic and, as a result, you may actually see the person's messages
confirming this labeling.
INVOLVEMENT
At
the involvement stage a sense of mutuality, of being connected, develops. Here
you experiment and try to learn more about the other person. At the initial
phase of involvement, a kind of testing goes on. You want to see whether your
initial judgment proves reasonable,
You
may ask questions: "Where do you work?" "What are you majoring
in?" If you want to get to know the person even better, you might continue
your involvement by intensifying your interaction and by beginning to reveal yourself,
though in a preliminary way. In a dating relationship, you might, for example,
use a variety of strategies to help you move to the next stage and perhaps to
intimacy, Here, you're committed to getting to know someone even better and so
you might follow that person on Twitter or read the postings, photos, and
causes, for example, on Facebook. And at this stage you continue your involvement
by intensifying your interaction; the texting becomes more frequent, the Facebook
postings become more complimentary and more frequent, and the photos exchanged
become increasingly more personal and revealing. For example, you might
increase contact with your partner; give your partner tokens of affection, such
as gifts, cards, or flowers; write affectionate messages on a person's Facebook
wall, increase your own personal attractiveness; do things that suggest
intensifying the relationship, such as flirting or making your partner jealous;
and become more physically intimate.
INTIMACY
The
contact and involvement stages make up relationship development-a movement
toward intimacy. At the intimacy stage you commit yourself still further to the
other person and establish a relationship in which this individual becomes your
best or closest friend, lover, or companion. Because intimacy is essentially an
emotional communication connection, it can occur in face-to-face and in online
relationships equally. You also come to share each other's social networks, a
practice followed by members of widely different cultures. This is seen most clearly
on social network sites where the site itself identifies people with whom you might
want to become "friends” based on mutual friends or interests. Both the
quantity and the quality of your interpersonal exchanges increase, and of course
you also talk more and in greater detail about the relationship. Not
surprisingly, your relationship satisfaction also increases with the move to
this stage. One research study defined intimacy as the feeling that you can be
honest and open when talking about yourself, sharing thoughts and feelings that
you don't reveal in other relationships.
The
intimacy stage usually divides itself into two phases. In the interpersonal
commitment phase, the two people commit themselves to each other in a
private way. In the social bonding phase, the commitment is made public-perhaps
to-family and friends, perhaps to the public at large, perhaps with a simple “married
to" on Facebook. Here you and your partner become a unit, an identifiable
pair.
DETERIORATION
The
relationship deterioration stage is characterized by a weakening of the bonds
between the friends or lovers. The first phase of deterioration is usually intrapersonal
dissatisfaction: You begin to experience personal dissatisfaction with
everyday interactions and begin to view the future with your partner more
negatively. If this dissatisfaction grows, you pass to the second phase, interpersonal
deterioration. You withdraw and grow further and further apart. You
share less of your free time. You exchange fewer messages. When you're
together, there are awkward silences, fewer disclosures, less physical contact,
and a lack of psychological closeness. Conflicts become more common and their
resolution more difficult. Relationship deterioration involves unique communication
patterns.
During
the deterioration stage you may, for example, increase withdrawal, communicate
less, respond to Facebook pokes and requests for "likes" less often;
texting becomes infrequent, and face-to-face meetings are fewer. In communication,
each person reduces his or her level of self-disclosure. These patterns are in
part a response to the deterioration; you communicate the way you do because
you feel that your relationship is in trouble. However, these patterns are also
causative: The communication patterns you use largely determine the fate of
your relationship.
REPAIR
At
this stage of a relationship, some partners may pause during deterioration and
try to seek repair. Others, however, may progress without stopping to dissolution.
At the first repair phase, intrapersonal repair, you analyze
what went wrong and consider ways of solving your relational difficulties. You
might at this stage consider changing your behaviors or perhaps changing your
expectations of your partner. You might also evaluate the rewards of your
relationship as it is now and the rewards to be gained if your relationship
ended. Should you decide that you want to repair your relationship, you might
move to the interpersonal repair phase-you might discuss with your partner
the problems in the relationship, the changes you want to see, and perhaps what
you'd be willing to do and what you'd want your partner to do. This
is the stage of negotiating new agreements and new behaviors. You and
your partner might try to repair your relationship by yourselves, or you might
seek the advice of friends, family, or relationship therapists. Fortunately,
social media sites offer considerable help in making relationship repair by
providing ready access to cards and virtual gifts, for example, to help you
express your desire to repair the relationship.
DISSOLUTION
Dissolution-the
last stage in the relationship model-involves cutting the bonds that tie you
together. In the beginning it usually takes the form of interpersonal
separation: If it's an online friendship, you might defriend or uncircle or
perhaps, most often, just cut off communication.
You
might move into your own apartments and begin to lead separate lives. If the
separation works better than the original relationship, you enter the phase of
social or public separation. Avoidance of each other and a return to a
"single" status are among the primary characteristics of the
dissolution of a relationship.
Interpersonal
Relationship Types
Each
relationship, whether friendship or love, for example, is unique. Yet there are
general types that research has identified- and these categories will offer
considerable insight into your own interpersonal relationships. Here we
consider friendship, love, family, work, and online-only relationships.
FRIENDSHIP
One
theory of friendship identifies three major types that we can easily see in our
own face-to-face and online relationships: (1) friendship of reciprocity, (2)
friendship of receptivity, and (3) friendship of association.
·
The friendship of reciprocity,
the ideal type, is characterized by loyalty, self-sacrifice, mutual affection,
and generosity. This type of friendship is based on equality, where each
individual shares equally in giving and receiving the benefits and rewards of
the relationship.
·
In the friendship of receptivity,
in contrast, there is an imbalance in giving and receiving; one person is the
primary giver and the other the primary receiver. This is a positive imbalance,
however, because each person gains something from the relationship.
The
different needs of both the person who receives affection and the person who
gives it are satisfied. This is the friendship that may develop between a
teacher and a student or between a doctor and a patient. In fact, a difference in status
is essential for the friendship of receptivity to develop.
·
The friendship of association
is transitory; it might be described as a friendly relationship rather than a
true friendship. Associative friendships are the kind you have with classmates,
neighbors, or coworkers. There is no great loyalty, no great trust, no great
giving or receiving. The association is cordial but not intense.
LOVE
Like
friendships, romantic partnerships come in different styles as well. Six
primary love styles have been identified:
Eros love seeks beauty and sensuality and focuses on
physical attractiveness, sometimes to the exclusion of qualities others might
consider more important and more lasting. The erotic lover has an idealized image
of beauty that is unattainable in reality. Consequently, the erotic lover often
feels unfulfilled.
Ludic love
seeks entertainment and excitement and sees love as fun, a game. To the ludic
lover, love is not to be taken too seriously; emotions are to be held in check
lest they get out of hand and make trouble. The ludic lover retains a partner
only so long as the partner is interesting and amusing. When the partner is no
longer interesting enough, it's time to change.
Storge love
is a peaceful and tranquil love. Like ludic love, storge lacks passion and intensity.
Storgic lovers set out not to find a lover but to establish a companionable relationship
with someone they know and with whom they can share interests and activities.
Storgic love is a gradual process of unfolding thoughts and feelings and is
sometimes difficult to distinguish from friendship.
Pragma love
is practical and traditional and seeks compatibility and a relationship in
which important needs and desires will be satisfied. The pragma lover is concerned
with the social qualifications of a potential mate even more than with personal
qualities; family and background are extremely important to the pragma lover,
who relies not so much on feelings as on logic.
Manic love
is an obsessive love that needs to give and receive constant attention and affection.
When attention and affection are not constant, or when an expression of increased
commitment is not returned, reactions such as depression, jealousy, and self-doubt
can lead to extreme lows.
Agapic love
is compassionate and selfless. The agapic lover loves both the stranger on the road
and the annoying neighbor. Jesus, Buddha and Gandhi practiced and preached this
unqualified spiritual love- a love that is offered without concern for personal
reward or gain and without any expectation that the love will be reciprocated.
Men
and women differ in the types of love they prefer. For example, men indicate a
preference for erotic and ludic love, whereas women indicate a preference for
manic, pragmatic, and storgic love. No difference was found for agapic love,
Women and men seem to experience love to a similar degree. However, women
indicate greater love than men do for their same-sex friends. This may reflect
a real difference between the sexes, or it may be a function of the greater
social restrictions on men. A man is not supposed to admit his love for another
man, but women are permitted to communicate their love for other women.
FAMILY RELATIONSHIPS
Families
are central to contemporary life. It will come as no surprise to note that
families come in various configurations and are undergoing major changes. Table
7.1 provides a few findings from the U.S. Census to illustrate some of the
major changes. The communication principles that apply to the traditional nuclear
family (i.e., the mother-father-child family) also apply to all family
configurations. In the discussion that follows, the term primary relationship
denotes the relationship between two principal parties-husband and wife,
husband-husband, wife-wife, lovers, or domestic partners, for example-and the term
family may denote a broader constellation that includes children, relatives,
and assorted significant others.
TABLE 7.1 - The American Family
Here
are several findings on the American family from the United States Census. For
each finding, indicate what you think the reasons for these changes might be
and the possible trends they indicate. In one sentence of not more than 140
characters, summarize the changes you see happening in the American family.
• The percentage of one-person households increased
from 25% in 1990 to 27% in 2010.
• The percentage of multigenerational households
increased from 14% in 1990 to 16% in 2010.
• The percentage of births by unmarried women
increased from 26% in 1990 to 41% in 2010.
• Fifty percent of women who marry did so at 24 in
1990; In 2010 50% married at 26.
• In 2000 (the first year the U.S. Census Bureau allowed
people to indicate more than one race), 1.6% indicated mixed race; in 2010 it was
2%.
• In 2005, 53% of men and 46% of women between the
ages of 18 and 24 lived with their parents; in 2011 59% of men and 50% of women
did.
• In 2000, 57% of all adults were married; in 2010,
51% were married.
• In 2000, the average size of the family was 2.62; in
2010, it was 2.59.
A
primary
relationship is a relationship between two people that the partners see
as their most important interpersonal relationship. An interesting typology of
primary relationships (based on more than 1,000 couples' responses to questions
concerning their degree of sharing, their space needs, their conflicts, and the
time they spend together) identifies three basic types: traditionals,
independents, and separates.
·
Traditional couples
share a basic belief system and philosophy of life. They see themselves as a
blending of two persons into a single couple rather than as two separate
individuals. They’re interdependent and believe that each individual's
independence must be sacrificed for the good of the relationship. In their
communications, traditionals are highly responsive to each other. They lean
toward each other, smile, talk a lot, interrupt each other, and finish each
other's sentences.
·
Independents
stress their individuality. The relationship is important, but never more important
than each person’s individual identity. Although independents spend a great deal
of Lime together, they don't ritualize it, for example, with schedules. Each
individual spends time with outside friends. The communication between
independents is responsive. They engage in conflict openly and without fear.
Their disclosures are quite extensive and include high-risk and negative
disclosures that are typically absent among traditionals.
·
Separates
live together, but they view their relationship more as a matter of convenience
than a result of their mutual love or closeness. They seem to have little
desire to be together and. in fact, usually are together only at ritual
occasions such as mealtime or holiday get-togethers. It's important to these
separates that each has his or her own physical as well as psychological space.
The most significant characteristic of this type is that each person sees
himself or herself as a separate individual and not as a part of a
"we."
Like
couples, families can also be classified in any number of ways-for example,
according to the number of people in the family, their affectional orientation,
the presence or absence of children or of extended family members. In a
communication-oriented typology, family types are looked at in terms of
conformity and conversation.
Conformity-orientation refers to the degree to which
family members express similar or dissimilar attitudes, values, and beliefs.
So, we can speak of high-conformity families as those who express highly
similar attitudes, beliefs, and values and try to avoid conflict, and low-conformity
families as those whose members express highly divergent attitudes, beliefs and
values and may frequently engage in conflict interactions. As you can
appreciate, families high in conformity are likely to be harmonious with
children who are expected to obey their parents, largely without question.
Families who are low in conformity are likely to be less harmonious with
children who are given greater freedom to say or do as they wish.
Conversation-orientation
refers
to the degree to which family members can speak their mind. A family
high on conversation orientation encourages members to discuss a variety of
issues and the voicing of members' opinions. A family low on conversation
orientation discourages discussion and the voicing of opinions.
With these two dimensions in mind, we
can identify four types of families:
•
Consensual
families: high in conversation
and high in conformity. These families encourage open communication and
agreement.
•
Protective
families: high in conformity and
low in conversation. These families stress agreement and strive to avoid
conflict but with little communication.
•
Pluralistic
families: low in conformity and
high in conversation. These family members are encouraged to express different
attitudes and points or view and to engage in open communication while being
supportive of each other.
•
Laissez-faire
families: low in confirmation and
low in conversation. These families avoid interaction and communication;
encourage privacy, and a "do what you want" attitude.
These
family types are simply descriptions and are not meant to be evaluation; no assumption
is made that one family type is better or more productive than another. What works
for some people will not work for others.
WORK RELATIONSHIPS
Workplace
relationships come in a variety of types. Here we'll consider just four: we'll
begin with the more positive relationships (networking, mentoring, and romance)
and conclude with the negative bullying,
Networking
Relationships
Networking
can be viewed as a process of using other people to help you solve your
problems, or at least to offer insights, that bear on any number of problems or
decisions you need to make. The most popular image that probably comes to mind
is networking for a possible job. But networking is much broader and would
include, for example, how to set up a blog, where to look for low-cost auto
insurance, how to find an affordable apartment, or how to politely refuse an
invitation to become a friend on Facebook. The great value of networking, of course,
is that it provides you with access to a wealth of specialized information. At
the same time, it often makes accessing that information a lot easier than if
you had to find it all by yourself. In networking it's often recommended that
you try to establish relationships that are mutually beneficial. After
all, much as others are useful sources of information for you, you're likely to
be a useful source of information for others. If you can provide others with
helpful information, it's more likely that they will provide helpful
information for you. In this way, a mutually satisfying and productive network
is established.
Mentoring
Relationships
Mentoring
is a partnership in which an experienced individual (the mentor) helps someone
who is less experienced (the protégé) learn how to achieve his or her goals.
Having a mentor, some organizational experts argue, is crucial for rising in a
hierarchy and for developing your skills. An accomplished teacher, for example,
might mentor a younger teacher who has newly arrived or who has never taught
before. The mentor guides the new person through the organizational maze,
teaches the strategies and techniques for success, and otherwise communicates
his or her accumulated knowledge and experience to the protégé. Not
surprisingly, mentoring is frequently conducted online. One great advantage of e-mentoring
is the flexibility it allows for communication. E-mail messages, for example, can
be sent and received at times that are convenient for the individuals involved.
Further, because the individuals may be separated geographically, it's possible
to have mentor-protégé relationships with people in foreign countries and in widely
differing cultures-relationships that would be impossible without online communication.
Still another advantage is that persons with disabilities (whether mentor or protégé)
who cannot easily travel can still enjoy and profit from e-mentoring relation
ships.
Social
networking sites, designed originally as places where people could make new friends
and stay in touch with old ones, are increasingly being used for both mentoring
and networking.
Some
sites are "by invitation only" and have been compared to gated communities
or exclusive country clubs.
These
sites seem designed not for friendships but solely for mentoring and networking.
For ex ample, Reuters Space is a private online community specifically for
hedge fund managers to network, and INmobile is designed for executives in the
wireless industry.
Workplace Romance
Opinions
vary widely concerning workplace romances. On the positive side, the work
environment seems a perfect place to meet a potential romantic partner. After
all, by virtue of the fact that you're working in the same office, you're
probably both interested in the same field, have similar training ambitions,
and spend considerable time together-all factors that foster the development of
a successful of interpersonal relationship. Another advantage is that office
romances can lead to greater work satisfaction. If you're romantically
attracted to another worker, it can make going to work, working together, and
even working added hours more enjoyable and satisfying. Office relationships,
however, may cause problems for management when, for example, a promotion is to
be made or relocation decisions are necessary. When an office romance goes bad
or when it's one-sided, it can be especially difficult. One obvious problem is
that it can be stressful for the former partners to see each other regularly
and to continue to work. Other workers may feel they have to take sides, being
supportive of one partner and the other, which can cause friction throughout
the organization. Another, perhaps more serious, issue is the potential for
charges of sexual harassment, especially if the romance between a supervisor
and a worker. The generally negative attitude of management (as well as
explicit policies, rules, regulations) toward workplace relationships and the
problems inherent in dealing normal stresses of both work and romance seem to
outweigh the positive benefits that may be derived from such relationships.
Therefore, workers are generally advised not to romance their colleagues.
Friendship seems the much safer course.
Bullying
Bullying,
especially prominent in the workplace (but also occurs in close relationships,
the playground, or even the family) consists of abusive acts repeatedly
committed by one person (or a group) against another. Bullying is behavior that has
become a pattern; it's repeated frequently rather than being
an isolated instance. On the playground, bullying often involves
physical abuse; in the workplace (at least in most civilized countries),
bullying is generally verbal. Bullying may take a variety of forms: gossiping
about other employees, making them the butt of jokes, treating them as
inferior-for example, frequently interrupting them or otherwise not giving
their ideas due attention-excluding someone from social functions, verbal
insults, name calling, negative facial expressions, sneering, avoiding eye
contact, excessive blaming, being supervised (watched, monitored) more closely
than others, being unnecessarily criticized, often with shouting and in public.
From an ethical point of view, bullying destroys a person's right to personal
dignity and a workplace free from intimidation and is therefore unethical. And
yet, bullying is not illegal in the United States, unless it involves
harassment based on a person's gender or race, for example. A special type of
bullying is cyberbullying, which can take place
through
any electronic communication system-Facebook, Twitter, e-mail, instant
messages, blog posts-and can take the form of sending threatening messages or
images, posting negative comments, revealing secrets, or lying about another
person. Among the reasons why cyberbullying is so important is that it can
occur at any time; the messages, photos, and videos can be distributed quickly
and widely; the bully can hide behind false names or anonymity; and
attacks-because the)' occur electronically-are often more cruel than those
made in face-to-face attacks.
ONLINE-ONLY
RELATIONSHIPS
In
addition to the friendships, romantic, family, and workplace relationships-which
will probably involve both face-to-face and online experiences-there is another
group of what might be called "online-only" relationships. These are
the relationships that exist between a Tweeter and a follower, a blogger and a
reader, a friend or contact on Facebook or LinkedIn, for example.
The
suggestions for more effective relationships are the same as are the
suggestions for more effective communication. In all of these relationships, it
is dialogue (rather than monologue) that is emphasized. Iin fact, the defining
characteristics of Web 2.0 is to move the online experience from monologue (for
example, reading newspapers online) to dialogue (where
commenting/reviewing/liking/+ ing) are essential parts of the communication
experience.
Tweeting
Unlike
other social network sites, people can follow you on Twitter whether you like
it or not. But, assuming that you want some kind of relationships between
yourself and those who follow you, consider these suggestions.
In all of these lists of
suggestions, the recommendations are generally applicable to all social
networks and yet some seem more logically placed with one medium rather than
another.
•
Leave-room for retweets (if you want retweets), Keep your tweet to 120
characters.
•
Avoid "fast following" tools. These will likely create problems for
you.
•
Tweet items of interest to yourself but also keep in mind your readers.
•
Treat criticism as the start of a dialogue rather than a personal attack.
•
Tweet in moderation. Not everything that happens deserves a tweet.
•
Tweet positively; avoid angry tweets.
•
Create a complete profile; revealing what you want and keeping hidden what you
don't want revealed.
•
Limit promotional materials; Twitter is personal.
•
Retweet if you wish to be retweeted.
Blogging
Although
many people view blogs as monologic, they are best viewed as dialogic. Their
great value is in creating dialogue and so a blog post-at least for the
traditional blog, is ideally one that provides information with a personal
slant for a specific audience that creates some measure of discussion. Assuming
that this is your aim or close to it, here are a few suggestions for making
this a more effective interaction.
•
Offer syndication. RSS feeds will generally help in spreading the word.
•
Be both informational and personal; blog posts are more personal in nature than
are articles or websites that are more purely informational.
•
He consistent in style and format. It will help brand your blog as unique-not
unlike McDonald's; readers will know what to expect.
•
Build your blog and your posts around a theme. Posts unrelated to the theme are
generally perceived as noise and are likely to lose you readers.
•
Reply to comments. Dialogue.
•
Track statistics so you can get insight into the posts that are read often and
those that aren't.
•
Create attractive titles and relevant identifying labels. Make it as easy as
possible for others to retrieve your materials.
Social Workplace
Networking
Perhaps
the social media that comes first to mind is Facebook, by far the largest of
the social networking sites. But, Google+ and Myspace serve similar purposes as
do numerous others. LinkedIn and Plaxo, on the other hand, serve mainly
business purposes-for example, getting a job or promotion, finding likely
candidates for a job, networking, or mentoring. Despite these differences, some
similar suggestions govern effective relationships and communication in these
types of sites.
·
Be careful of uploading photos that
will reflect on you negatively, especially with alcohol or drugs. Interesting
enough, one research student found that 85% of 225 profiles examined (average
age 19.9 years) make alcohol references.
·
Be positive about your current
position. Complaining about your job online for all to see is likely to make
management less positive toward you and also to lead prospective employers to see
you as a complainer and someone who would be critical of the new organization
as well.
·
Avoid revealing any negative work
habits or discussing inappropriate workplace behavior-even if (especially if) you
think it's funny.
·
Use the Friends List or the Googles
Circles to distinguish the people you want to see certain information and those
you wouldn't. But, remember, again, that anyone who receives your message can
post it to anyone, even those you’d rather not see it.
·
Give your social network profile
even more attention than you give to dressing up for a long-anticipated
face-to-face date. After all, a lot more people are going to see your online profile
than the way you dressed for a date.
·
Keep your posts (at least on
Facebook and Google+) personal and informative. Avoid promoting any commercial
enterprise.
·
Poke and tag in moderation. Learn
first the norms of the group with which you're communicating.
·
Avoid asking to be friends with
anyone you think may have difficulty with your seeing their more personal side.
Theories of Interpersonal
Communication and Relationships
Several
theories offer insight into why and how people develop and dissolve
relationships.
Here
we'll examine three such theories: attraction, relationship rules, and social
exchange and equity.
ATTRACTION THEORY
Attraction
theory holds that people form relationships on the basis of attraction. You are
no doubt drawn, or attracted, to some people and not attracted to others. In a
similar way, some people are attracted to you and some are not.
If you're like most people, you're
attracted to others on the basis of five major factors:
Physical
attractiveness and personality: It's
easily appreciated that people like physically attractive people more than they
like physically unattractive people. What isn't too obvious is that we also
feel a greater sense of familiarity with more attractive people than with less attractive
people; that is, we're more likely to think we've met a person before if that
person is attractive. Additionally, you probably tend to like people who have a
pleasant rather than an unpleasant personality, although people differ on what
is an attractive personality to them and what isn't The fact that different
people find different personality characteristics attractive, that there does
seem to be someone for everyone, may be a comforting thought.
Similarity: According to the principle of
similarity, if you could construct your male, it's likely that your mate would
look, act, and think very much like you. Generally,
people like those who are similar to them in nationality, race, abilities,
physical characteristics, intelligence, and attitudes. Sometimes people are
attracted to their opposites, in a pattern called complementarity: for
example, a dominant person might be attracted to someone who is more
submissive. Generally, however, people prefer those who are similar.
Proximity: If you look around at people you find
attractive, you will probably find that they are the people who live or work close
to you. People who become friends are the people who have had the greatest opportunity
to interact with each other.
Reinforcement: You're attracted to people who give
rewards or reinforcements, which can range from a simple compliment to an expensive
cruise. You're also attracted to people you reward. That is, you come to like people
for whom you do favors.
Reciprocity of
liking: You
tend to be attracted to people you think are attracted to you; you come to like
those who you think like you. We initiate potential friendships and romantic
relationships with people who we think like us, certainly not with those we
think dislike us. There is even evidence to show that people like
"likers"-people who like others generally-more than they like people
who don't express such liking.
RELATIONSHIP RULES
THEORY
You
can gain an interesting perspective on interpersonal relationships by looking
at them in terms of the rules that govern them. The general assumption of rules
theory is that relationships-friendship, love, family, and work-are held
together by adherence to certain rules. When those rules are broken, the
relationship may deteriorate and even dissolve. Relationship rules theory helps
to clarify several aspects of relationships. First, these rules help
you identify successful versus destructive relationship behavior. By looking at
the rules of a relationship, you can better identify the reasons a relationship
is in trouble (i.e., what rules were broken) and how it may be repaired (i.e.,
what rules need to be reinforced and honored). Second, if you know what the
rules are, you will be better able to master the social skills involved in
developing and maintaining relationships.
Friendship Rules
According
to friendship rules theory, maintaining a friendship depends on your knowing
the rules and having the ability to apply the appropriate interpersonal skills
that friendships require. Friendship rules include such behaviors as standing
up for your friend in his or her absence, sharing information and feelings
about successes, demonstrating emotional support for your friend, trusting and
offering to help your friend when in need, and trying to make your friend happy
when you're together. When these and other rules are followed, the friendship
is strong and mutually satisfying. When the rules are broken, the friendship
suffers and may die.
Romantic Rules
Romantic
relationships may also be viewed from a rules perspective. For example, one
research study identified some of the rules that romantic relationships
establish and follow. These rules keep the relationship together-or, when
broken, lead to deterioration and eventually dissolution.
The general assumption here is that
if people are in a close romantic relationship then they should follow these
rules:
•
acknowledge each other's individual identities and lives beyond the relationship,
•
express similar attitudes, beliefs, values, and interests.
•
enhance each other's self-worth and self-esteem.
•
be open, genuine, and authentic with each other.
•
remain loyal and faithful to each other.
•
have substantial shared time together.
•
reap rewards commensurate with their investments relative to the other party,
•
experience a mysterious and inexplicable "magic" in each other's
presence.
Family Rules
Family
communication research also points to the importance of rules in defining and
maintaining the family. Like the rules of friends and lovers, family rules tell
you which behaviors will be rewarded (and therefore what you should do) and
which will be punished (what you should not do), Rules also provide a kind of
structure that defines the family as a cohesive unit and that distinguishes it
from other similar families.
Family rules encompass three main
interpersonal communication issues:
·
What can you talk about? Can you
talk about the family finances? Grandpa's drinking? Your sister's lifestyle?
·
How can you talk about something?
Can you joke about your brother's disability! Can you address directly
questions of family history and family skeletons?
·
To whom can you talk? Can you talk
openly to extended family members such as cousins and aunts and uncles? Can you
talk to close neighbors about family health issues?
Workplace Rules
Rules
also govern your workplace relationships. These rules are usually a part of the
corporate culture that an employee would learn from observing other employees (especially
those who move lip the hierarchy) as well as from official memos on dress,
sexual harassment, and the like. Of course, each organization will have
different rules, so it's important to see what rules are operating in any given
situation.
These are among the rules that you
might find:
·
Work very hard.
·
Be cooperative in teams; the good
of the company comes first
·
Don't reveal company policies and
plans to workers at competing firms.
·
Don't form romantic relationships
with other workers.
·
Avoid even the hint of sexual
harassment.
SOCIAL EXCHANGE AND
EQUITY THEORY
Social
exchange theory claims that you develop relationships that will enable you to
maximize your profits - a theory based on an economic model
of profits and losses. And, although the theory was formulated before social
media, you'll see that it applies equally well to Facebook and Google+
relationships, for example. The theory begins with a simple-equation: Profits
=Rewards - Costs. Rewards are anything that you would incur costs to obtain.
Research has identified six types of rewards in a relationship: money, status,
love, information, goods, and services. For example, to get the reward of money
you might have to work rather than play. To earn (the status of) an A in an
interpersonal communication course, you might have to write a term paper or
study more than you want to. Costs are things that you normally try to avoid,
that-you consider unpleasant or difficult. Examples might include working
overtime, washing dishes and ironing clothes, watching your partner's favorite
television show that you find boring, or doing favors for those you dislike. Equity
theory uses the ideas of social exchange but goes a step farther and claims
that you develop and maintain relationships in which the ratio of your rewards
relative to your costs is approximately equal to your partner's. For
example, if you and a friend start a business and you put up two-thirds of the
money and your friend puts up one-third, equity would demand that you get
two-thirds of the profits and your friend get one-third. An equitable
relationship, then, is simply one in which each party derives rewards that are
proportional to their costs. If you contribute more to the relationship than
your partner, then equity requires that you should get greater rewards. If you
both work equally hard, then equity demands that you should get approximately
equal rewards. You also see the demand for equity in online relationships; if
you indicate "like" or "+ 1» to a friend's photos or posts, you
expect reciprocity; you expect equity. In fact social media have rather strict,
though "unwritten, equity expectations. Equity theory puts into clear
focus the sources of relational dissatisfaction seen very day. For example, in
a relationship both partners may have full-time jobs, but one partner may also
be expected to do the major share of the household chores. Thus, although both
may be deriving equal rewards-they have equally good cars, they live in the
same three-bedroom house, and so on-one partner is paying more of the costs.
According to equity theory, this partner will be dissatisfied. Equity theory
claims that-you will develop, maintain, and be satisfied with relationships
that are equitable. You will not develop, will be dissatisfied with, and will eventually
terminate relationships that are inequitable. The greater the inequity, the greater
the dissatisfaction, and the greater the likelihood that the relationship will
end.
A
parasitic relationship is one in which one member of the association
benefits while the other is harmed. A symbiotic
relationship is one of mutual
benefit or dependence. Parasocial
relationships are one-sided
relationships, where one person extends emotional energy, interest and time,
and the other party, the persona, is completely unaware of the other’s
existence. Parasocial relationships are most common with celebrities,
organizations (such as sports teams) or television stars. A mutual
relationship is one in which the people in it have
common interests/goals of the relationship.
Practice Quiz
1. The most general function served
by interpersonal relationships is __________.
A) maximizing pleasure and minimizing
pain
B)
helping you learn more about yourself
C)
making you healthier, both physically and emotionally
D)
enhancing your self-esteem
2. Which of the following
statements about interpersonal relationships is correct?
A)
Close relationships decrease your obligations to other people.
B)
The closer your relationships, the easier they are to dissolve.
C)
Close relationships decrease your duty for self-disclosure.
D) Close relationships can lead you to
abandon other relationships.
3. What is the first stage of a
relationship?
A)
repair
B) contact
C)
dissolution
D)
involvement
4. Which of the following
statements are you most likely to make to someone when you are in the
involvement stage of a relationship?
A)
“Hi, my name is Terry.”
B)
“Do you mind if I sit here?”
C) “Let’s have lunch! Do you like
pizza?”
D)
“Hey, are you new here?”
5. Which of the following BEST
illustrates the intrapersonal dissatisfaction stage of a relationship?
A) Ken has been hanging out with Randy
for a few weeks now, but in the past few days he’s really becoming annoyed with
Randy’s nasal laugh.
B)
Dixon and Mae used to send each other dozens of texts each day; now, though,
they send each other only two or three.
C)
Kelli notices a new guy in class is wearing a Taylor Swift t-shirt. Since Kelli
hates Taylor Swift’s music, she does not bother even approaching him to say hello
since she is sure she has nothing in common with him.
D)
After ten years of marriage and much intense discussion, Thalia and Maurice
have decided to get a divorce.
6. Ann and Matt have been married
for five years, but they’ve spent the past six months arguing much of the time.
To try to work things out, they’ve agreed to see a marriage counselor. It
appears that this relationship is in the __________ phase.
A)
intrapersonal repair
B)
interpersonal separation
C) interpersonal repair
D)
public separation
7. Richard and Kinsley are
co-workers. They eat lunch together most days and enjoy chatting with each
other, but they do not see each other away from work. When Richard takes a new
job, he does not stay in touch with Kinsley. Their relationship can probably
BEST be described as a __________.
A)
top-down relationship
B)
friendship of reciprocity
C)
social contact
D) friendship of association
8. Teenagers Bella and Edward are
in love. They constantly send each other notes and texts expressing their feelings
for one another. If Bella does not hear from Edward after a half-hour or so,
she becomes worried; if Edward sees Bella glance at another boy, he feels
jealous. It appears that these two are experiencing __________ love.
A)
agapic
B) manic
C)
ludic
D)
pragma
9. Men indicate a preference for
this type of love.
A) erotic and ludic
B)
storgic and manic
C)
pragmatic and storgic
D)
manic and agapic
10. Which of the following primary
relationships could BEST be described as separates?
A)
Karl and Chris value their relationship and spend a lot of time together. But
they also have their own individual friends and sometimes run in different
social circles. They strongly differ politically but are able to discuss their
differences in a mature way.
B)
Tien and Roger are both deeply committed to their relationship. They share most
of the same beliefs and love being together. For example, they would never
dream of going to a party without the other in tow.
C) Kim and Max live together but see
each other mostly at mealtimes. Their worldviews are completely different.
Though they both contribute to the household chores, they sleep in different
rooms and almost never spend any social time together.
D)
Lydia and Pat have been together so long they no longer see themselves as
individuals—they see themselves as a blending of two into one. They know each
other so well they often finish each other’s sentences.
11. Dinnertime at the Anderson
house is a lively affair. Family members openly discuss their ideas and their
views about current issues. Though they sometimes disagree with one another,
every family member feels secure enough to express his or her views. It appears
that the Andersons are a __________ family.
A)
consensual
B)
protective
C)
laissez-faire
D) pluralistic
12. Francesca has just been hired
as an editor at a publishing company. Ari has worked as an editor for five
years. He spends some time with Francesca to “show her the ropes” of the
publishing industry. This would appear to be a __________ relationship.
A)
networking
B) mentoring
C)
impersonal
D)
protective
13. Mohammad has made an expensive
mistake at work and his boss, Tate, becomes so angry that he calls Mohammad a
“fool.” Until this incident, Tate has always been cordial to Mohammad. Going
forward, Tate never again speaks to Mohammad this way. Why would it be
incorrect to characterize Tate’s behavior as bullying?
A) Tate’s insulting comment was an
isolated incident.
B)
Tate is the boss, so he can speak to Mohammad however he wants.
C)
Mohammad made a costly error; Tate was justified in being angry.
D)
The remark did not focus on Mohammad’s gender or race, so by definition it is
not bullying.
14. Jeff is a new Twitter user.
Which of the following would be a good piece of advice for him?
A)
Always use your entire allotment of 140 characters if you can.
B)
Tweet about absolutely everything that interests you.
C) Retweet if you wish to be retweeted.
D)
Use “fast following” tools to simplify the experience.
15. Geoff and Jordan have been
dating for two years now. They both have red hair and slender builds; they both
love camping and hiking; and they are both politically conservative. Their
relationship seems to confirm the principle of __________.
A) similarity
B)
physical attractiveness
C)
politeness
D)
reciprocity of liking
16. Which of the following
situations is an example of the principle of proximity?
A)
Jorge thinks Qian is the most beautiful woman he has ever seen; he immediately
begins trying to find a way to make friends with her.
B)
Connie is intrigued with Asher because he seems to be everything she is not: he
is outgoing rather than shy; loves sports more than books and music; and enjoys
cooking, while she hates being in the kitchen.
C) After working together in the same
office for three years, Martina and Dean began dating.
D)
Because D’Juan never misses an opportunity to compliment Precious about her
intelligence, beauty, and strength, she has begun to like D’Juan very much.
17. Which of these situations appears
to violate the commonly accepted relationship rules?
A)
Lexie and Emilio try to eat dinner together every night, and they try to get a
babysitter at least twice a month so they can have some time together without
the kids.
B)
Harmony thinks Nyla’s shirt clashes with her slacks, and is not afraid to tell
her so (politely, of course).
C)
Mark asks Brooke for a date but Brooke courteously refuses; after all, she is
engaged to marry Yao in just a few months.
D) Betty insists on going with Lars
everywhere he goes, even if it is an event she has no interest in.
18. You would likely be in
violation of workplace rules if you __________.
A)
worked overtime when asked to do so
B) told a competitor about happenings
in your office
C)
did not socialize with your co-workers after hours
D)
reported a suspected case of sexual harassment
19. __________ theory claims that
you develop relationships that will enable you to maximize
your profits.
A) Social exchange
B)
Objectivist
C)
Socio-economic
D)
Mentoring
20. In some cultures, your parents
choose your romantic partner for you.
A) True
B)
False
21. Lincoln has unfriended Julianna
on Facebook. It appears that their relationship has entered the repair phase.
A)
True
B) False
22. A difference in status is
essential for the friendship of receptivity to develop.
A) True
B)
False
23. Conformity-orientation refers
to the degree to which family members express similar or dissimilar attitudes,
values, and beliefs.
A) True
B)
False
24. The general assumption of rules
theory is that each relationship is different and develops its own unique set
of rules.
A)
True
B) False
25. Research shows that this is the
most important contributor to human happiness.
A)
a satisfying job
B) a close interpersonal relationship
C)
an advanced degree
D)
plenty of money
26. Marci was so involved in her favorite television
program that she actually grieved when one of the characters on the show was
“killed off.” It appears that Marci had a(n) __________ relationship with this
character.
A)
parasitic
B)
symbiotic
C) parasocial
D)
mutual
27. Which of the following statements about
interpersonal relationships is false?
A)
Close relationships put pressure on you to self-disclose.
B) Close relationships decrease your
obligations to other people.
C)
The closer your relationships, the more emotionally difficult they are to
dissolve.
D)
Healthy interpersonal relationships can enhance your own self-esteem.
28. In which of the following scenarios is perceptual
contact being made?
A) Rafe looks over photos of potential
matches on an online dating site.
B)
Jill approaches a good-looking stranger at the bar and offers to buy them both
a drink.
C)
Flynn asks Veronica where she would like to go for dinner.
D)
Ms. Morgan tells Vito to finish his report by noon.
29. You decide to follow a classmate on Twitter. You
are likely in the __________ stage of your relationship with that person.
A)
contact
B) involvement
C)
deterioration
D)
repair
30. After dating your partner for a while, you change
your Facebook status from Single to In a Relationship. It appears that you have
entered the __________ phase of your relationship.
A)
interpersonal commitment
B)
involvement
C)
interactional contact
D) social bonding
31. Which of the following is a clue that Roy and
Cindy’s relationship has entered the deterioration phase?
A)
They decide to talk to their pastor about their relationship problems.
B) They do not send each other as many
texts and e-mails as they did when they began their relationship.
C)
Cindy moves out of their apartment and back into her parent’s home.
D)
They share more and more of their private thoughts and feelings with each
other.
32. The last stage in the relationship model is
__________.
A)
repair
B)
lateral communication
C) dissolution
D)
feedback
33. In the friendship of __________, each individual
shares equally in giving and receiving the benefits and rewards of the
relationship.
A)
receptivity
B)
association
C) reciprocity
D)
symbiosis
34. Braelyn is most interested in dating the
best-looking guys she can find. That is her number one–some say her
only—criterion for a partner. It appears that Braelyn is most interested in
pursuing __________ love.
A)
ludic
B)
storge
C)
pragma
D) eros
35. Love that is compassionate and selfless, offered
without concern for personal reward or gain, is called __________ love.
A) agapic
B)
reciprocal
C)
unrequited
D)
manic
36. Which of the following statements accurately
reflects changes in the modern American family?
A)
The size of the American family is growing dramatically.
B) Fewer adults are married today than
a decade ago.
C)
The number of one-person households is declining.
D)
There are fewer mixed race families today than in decades past.
37. A__________ relationship is a relationship between
two people that the partners see as their most important interpersonal
relationship.
A) primary
B)
lateral
C)
traditional
D)
love
38. Members of the Diaz family like to tell one
another about their day and about what is on their mind. Mostly, family members
see eye-to-eye on things. They tend to avoid talking about issues they have
found to cause arguments or disagreements. The Diaz family could probably be
BEST described as a __________ family.
A)
protective
B)
pluralistic
C) consensual
D)
laissez-faire
39. Noah is on the autism spectrum. Some of his
classmates have created a web site about Noah with unflattering pictures and
insulting comments about him and his behavior. They always make sure to e-mail
Noah every time they post a new insult. Noah is the victim of __________.
A)
flaming
B) cyberbullying
C)
trolling
D)
spamming
40. Yu Song enjoys blogging, but he could have more
effective interactions if he would __________.
A)
blog about lots of different topics instead of sticking to just one theme
B)
stop including so much personal information in his posts
C)
stop replying to readers who leave comments
D) track statistics
41. Based on research, it is likely that when Moses
sees an attractive woman in the bookstore, he __________.
A)
will turn away and not look at her again
B) may get the feeling that he has met
her before
C)
may conclude that she has a unattractive personality
D)
will form an initial dislike of her
42. Which traditional saying is a good paraphrase of
the concept of complementarity?
A)
“Birds of a feather flock together.”
B)
“You can draw more flies with honey than with vinegar.”
C) “Opposites attract.”
D)
“Don’t look a gift horse in the mouth.”
43. If you do this, you are breaking a well-understood
friendship rule.
A) remaining silent when others
criticize your friend
B)
sharing personal information about yourself with your friend
C)
doing things you know will please your friend
D)
offering to help your friend in a time of need
44. Which of the following would be considered a cost
of having a relationship?
A)
spending a relaxing evening with your friend on the couch watching your
favorite movie
B)
reassuring your friend that she looks good in that new dress
C) driving your friend to the airport
at 5:00 on Saturday morning
D)
getting a hug from your friend after not seeing him for a long time
45. Isolation contributes as much to mortality as high
blood pressure, high cholesterol, obesity, and smoking.
A) True
B)
False
46. In some cultures you simply cannot dissolve a
relationship once it has been formed or once there are children.
A) True
B)
False
47. The repair stage of a relationship always follows
the deterioration phase.
A)
True
B) False
48. Men indicate greater love than women do for their
same-sex friends.
A)
True
B) False
49. In networking, it is often recommended that you
try to establish relationships that are mutually beneficial.
A) True
B)
False
50. Mrs. Baxter really enjoys it when her young
next-door neighbor, James, drops in for a chat. Mrs. Baxter does not get out
much anymore, and James’s visits help her feel that someone cares about her.
What benefit is Mrs. Baxter deriving from her relationship with James?
A) It helps to lessen her loneliness.
B)
It eases the financial burdens she feels.
C)
It provides her with a romantic partner.
D)
It reduces the amount of time she spends on daily chores.
Chapter Quiz
1. Pat and Chris
announce at a dinner with friends that they have decided to have a commitment
ceremony. Pat’s and Chris’s announcement indicates a:
A) act of interpersonal commitment.
B) testing strategy.
C) act
of social bonding.
D) All of the above.
2. “I love you” or “I
want to marry you” are statements that would likely be said at which stage of
relational development?
A) contact
B) involvement
C)
intimacy
D) deterioration
3. All of the
following are types of friendships identified in the book EXCEPT friendship of
A) reciprocity.
B) association.
C)
childhood.
D) receptivity.
4. All of the
following statements describe traditional couples EXCEPT that they:
A) share a basic belief system and
philosophy.
B) see themselves as a blending of two
persons into a single couple rather than as two separate individuals.
C) are interdependent and believe that each
individual’s independence must be sacrificed for the good of the relationship.
D) are
interdependent and believe that each individual’s independence must not be
sacrificed for the good of the relationship.
5. Relationship rules
theory helps people to:
A) maintain a strong bond with one another.
B) find common ground in establishing relationships.
C)
clarify several aspects of relationships.
D) determine when they should terminate the
relationship.
6. In romantic
relationships, there are eight rules that can keep the relationship
together—or, when broken, lead to deterioration and eventually dissolution.
Which of the following is not one of them?
A) Acknowledge each other’s individual
identities and lives beyond the relationship.
B) Be open, genuine, and authentic with each
other.
C) Remain loyal and faithful to each other.
D) Do
not have substantial shared time together.
7. The theory that
uses the ideas of social exchange but goes a step farther and claims that you
develop and maintain relationships in which the ratio of rewards relative to
your costs is approximately equal to your partner’s is called __________
theory.
A)
equity
B) intimate
C) relationship
D) social penetration
8. Families that are
high in conversation and high in conformity are called __________ families.
A)
consensual
B) protective.
C) pluralistic
D) laissez-faire
9. Families that are
high in conformity and low in conversation are called __________ families.
A) consensual
B)
protective
C) pluralistic
D) laissez-faire
10. One advantage of
online relationships is that they reduce the importance of physical characteristics.
A)
True
B) False
11. On
their second date, Colby and Mac spend a considerable amount of time talking
about their pasts, revealing their likes and dislikes, and exploring their
compatibilities. Colby’s and Mac’s interactions are indicative of which stage
of relationships development?
A) contact
B)
involvement
C) intimacy
D) dissolution
12. The contact stage
does not involve interactional and perceptual processes.
A) True
B)
False
13. During the
involvement stage, your text messaging and Facebook interactions may intensify.
A)
True
B) False
14. Manic love is a
peaceful and tranquil love.
A) True
B)
False
15. Some partners may
pause during deterioration and try to seek repair, while others may progress
without stopping to dissolution.
A) True
B) False
16. Conformity-orientation
refers to the degree to which family members can speak their minds.
A) True
B)
False
17. Agapic love is
compassionate and selfless.
A)
True
B) False
18. According to
rules theory, romantic partners should acknowledge each other’s individual
identities and lives beyond the relationship.
A)
True
B) False
19. Bullying is a
behavior that has become a pattern.
A)
True
B) False
20. According to the
principle of similarity, if you could construct your mate, it’s likely that
your mate would look, act, and think very much like you.
A)
True
B) False
21. If
Simon wants to manage his relationships on Facebook effectively, he will
__________.
A)
upload every funny picture of his friends that
he can get his hands on
B)
send friend requests to everyone he knows, no
matter how distant the acquaintance
C)
poke and tag his friends all day long
D)
use the
Friends List to distinguish the people he wants to see certain information
22. Conversation-orientation refers to the
degree to which family members can speak their mind.
A)
True
B)
False
23. Family rules are usually unconcerned with
__________.
A)
what family members can talk about
B)
how family members can talk about something
C)
to whom family members can talk
D)
how
long family members can talk
24. Healthy interpersonal relationships help
enhance self-esteem and self-worth.
A)
True
B)
False
25. The intrapersonal repair phase is the
stage of negotiating new agreements and behaviors.
A)
True
B)
False
26. These families stress agreement and strive
to avoid conflict, but with little communication.
A)
laissez-faire
B)
pluralistic
C)
protective
D)
consensual
27. If Amaya is a pragma lover, she will
likely __________.
A)
try to find the best-looking available partner
she can get
B)
be extremely jealous and expect her partners to
“spoil” her and lavish her with attention
C)
be very
concerned with a potential partner’s occupation, salary, and social status
D)
want to be “friends first” before taking a
relationship to a more passionate level
28. Kay and Zane used to hold hands all the time,
send messages to each other continually, and spend almost all their free time
together. In the past few weeks, though, they are spending less time together
and rarely hold hands or kiss. It appears that their relationship has reached
the __________ phase.
A)
public separation
B)
interpersonal
deterioration
C)
interactional dissolution
D)
intrapersonal dissatisfaction
29. Which of the following is one way the
American family has been changing in recent decades?
A)
Women
are marrying later than in previous years.
B)
The percentage of one-person households has
been in sharp decline.
C)
The average size of the family has been
increasing rapidly.
D)
Fewer unmarried women are having children.
30. The relationship __________ stage is
characterized by a weakening of the bonds between friends or lovers.
A)
repair
B)
dissolution
C)
deterioration
D)
feedforward
31. Makenzie contends that online
relationships cannot truly be “intimate.” What is the correct response to
Makenzie?
A)
You
tell her she is incorrect because intimacy is essentially an emotional/communication
connection.
B)
You agree with her because intimacy relies on
both verbal and nonverbal communication.
C)
You explain that she is incorrect because
perceptual contact is possible online as well as face-to-face
D)
You agree with her because intimate
relationships, by their nature, involve physical contact.
32. A friendship of receptivity is undesirable
because one person is giving and the other is taking.
A)
True
B)
False
33. Which two relationship stages constitute
relationship development?
A)
contact and intimacy
B)
involvement and intimacy
C)
contact
and involvement
D)
intimacy and deterioration
34. Bob and Teresa are deeply in love, but
they also spend plenty of time pursuing their own interests. Bob loves to play
bridge; Teresa is an avid hiker and camper. Of course, they also enjoy each
other’s company a great deal; many evenings find them together at dinner,
watching TV, or simply sharing their thoughts. How would Bob and Teresa BEST be
characterized?
A)
independents
B)
separates
C)
traditional couple
D)
loners
35. Antonio knows that his chronic lateness really
bothers Keegan. They have had several arguments lately about this issue.
Antonio decides he will make an effort to be on time, in order to please
Keegan. Antonio’s behavior is characteristic of the __________ phase.
A)
intrapersonal
repair
B)
interpersonal separation
C)
interpersonal repair
D)
intrapersonal dissatisfaction
36. One advantage of online relationships is
that they reduce the importance of physical characteristics.
A)
True
B)
False
37. Jon has just met Dallas at a sports bar.
“Hey, did you go to school around here?” he asks Dallas. This is an example of
__________.
A)
interactional
contact
B)
peripheral involvement
C)
perceptual contact
D)
intentional involvement
38. In the friendship of __________, there is
an imbalance in giving and receiving.
A)
receptivity
B)
association
C)
reciprocity
D)
mutuality
39. Research shows that interpersonal
relationships __________.
A)
have no impact on one’s physical health
B)
put
pressure on you to self-disclose
C)
tend to free up your time, allowing you to
pursue still more relationships
D)
are usually not difficult to dissolve
40. Barney dates lots of women. It seems that
he has a new girlfriend every couple of weeks. He has a lot of fun, but he
never really lets himself get too emotionally involved with any of his
partners. Barney seems to be practicing __________ love.
A)
pragma
B)
agapic
C)
manic
D)
ludic
41. Babette always makes a point of saying
something nice about Walter. She compliments him on his new tie, notices when
he loses a couple of pounds, and tells him the cookies he brought in for break
time were delicious. Because of the principle of __________, Walter is really
starting to like Babette.
A)
reinforcement
B)
similarity
C)
physical attractiveness
D)
complementarity
42. What is the general attitude of most
companies toward office romances?
A)
Management usually encourages workplace
romances because they can lead to greater work satisfaction among employees.
B)
Management
generally discourages office romances because they can disrupt the work environment.
C)
Management usually takes a neutral stance
toward office romances, reasoning that adults can make their own decisions
about their private lives.
D)
Virtually every company in the United States
explicitly forbids workplace romances; they are almost always grounds for
dismissal.
43. Rick is trying to learn how to reupholster
his car. He begins asking everyone he knows if they can point him to some good
information sources, or if they have any first-hand knowledge of how to do
this. Rick is engaging in __________.
A)
tutoring
B)
networking
C)
mentoring
D)
brainstorming
44. How is storge love similar to ludic love?
A)
both are obsessive and jealous
B)
both
lack passion and intensity
C)
both focus almost exclusively on physical
attractiveness
D)
both are preferred by men and disliked by
women
45. Both Reed and Amanda work full-time jobs,
but it seems that Amanda does almost all the housework. In the evenings, Amanda
cooks, cleans, and does laundry while Reed watches TV or reads. According to
__________ theory, Amanda is probably very dissatisfied with this relationship.
A)
top-down
B)
social exchange
C)
equity
D)
consensus
4 comments:
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