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Weekend Homework Assignment: Your Own Oral History Interview

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As we discussed on The Gottman Relationship Blog this week, an Oral History Interview can tell researchers a lot about the future success or failure of a relationship, based on the measurement of variables such as Disappointment in Marriage and Expression of Fondness/Affection. 

While Dr. Gottman’s 1992 study on divorce prediction was influential in a multitude of ways, there was one discovery in particular that has made a lasting impact on the way that we view relationships:

A couple’s scores on the “we-ness” dimension were greatly correlated with the function of their fondness and admiration system. 


After all, this makes sense: if you and your partner feel like a team, you are more likely to have a healthy approach to problem solving, and transitively less likely to experience disappointment in your marriage.

For couples in crisis, the best test to measure the strength in their fondness and admiration system is to focus on how they view their past. If your marriage is in deep trouble, you’re unlikely to elicit much praise from each other by asking about the current state of affairs. Talking about the happy events of the past, however, helps ma couples reconnect. If you revive fondness and admiration for each other, you are more likely to approach conflict resolution as a team, and the growth of your sense of “we-ness” as a couple will keep the two of you as connected as you felt when you first met!

Below is a questionnaire designed by Dr. Gottman to help you rediscover your fondness and admiration for each other. Completing this questionnaire will help you to remember the early years of your relationship - how and why you became a couple.

Note: Your marriage doesn’t have to be in deep trouble to benefit from this exercise. By focusing on your past, you can often remember and reconnect with your history of positive feelings!

You will need a few hours of uninterrupted time to complete this exercise. You can ask a close friend or relative to serve as interviewer or you can read the questions out loud and talk about them together. There are no right or wrong answers to these questions - they are merely meant to assist you in recalling the love and perspective on marriage you have had in the past.

The History of Your Relationship:

1.     Discuss how the two of you met and got together. Was there anything about your partner that made them stand out? What were your first impressions of each other?
2.    What do you remember most about your first date and the period of your new relationship? What stands out? How long did you know each other before you got married? What do you remember of this period? What were some of the highlights? What types of things did you do together? 
3.     Talk about how you decided to get married. Who proposed and in what manner? Was it a difficult decision? Were you in love? Talk about this time. 
4.     How well do you remember your wedding? Talk to each other about your memories. Did you have a honeymoon? What was your favorite part of the wedding or honeymoon? 
5.     Do you remember your first year of marriage? Were there any adjustments you needed to make as a couple? 
6.     What about the transition to parenthood? What was this period of your marriage like for the two of you? 
7.     Looking back over the years, what moments stand out as the happiest period in your relationship? When was a good time for you as a couple? Has this changed over the years? 
8.     Many relationships go through periods of ups and down. Would you say this is true of your marriage? Can you describe some of these low and high points? 
9.     Looking back over the years, what moments stand out as really hard times in your marriage? How did you get through these rough periods? Why do you think you stayed together? 
10.   Have you stopped doing things together than once gave you pleasure? Explore this idea together and discuss why you stopped.


Remember, this exercise is not meant to be a quick-fix, one-time solution to any problems in your relationship! Considering and discussing some questions in this exercise from time to time may be enough to salvage and strengthen your fondness and admiration for each other over time – to remind yourselves of the things you find wonderful about your partner, and to remember to cherish each other through the years.

Have a great weekend,
Ellie Lisitsa
TGI Staff

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