Times Colonist

Egalitaria­n couples do it better: study

Duos who divide child-care and chores evenly have happier sex life

- HEIDI STEVENS

Couples can be forgiven for not knowing whether to give chores the side-eye or the come-hither.

A new study says that dividing them evenly — particular­ly child-care responsibi­lities — leads to a better sex life and allaround happier marriage.

Still, a big, splashy New York Times magazine piece last year warned us that divvying up household duties is a sex-life killer. What gives? I called Daniel Carlson, the author of the more recent study, to ask him.

Carlson, an assistant professor of sociology at Georgia State University, studied data from a 2006 marital and relationsh­ip survey involving 487 heterosexu­al couples, all of whom had children. In the relationsh­ips in which women did most or all (at least 60 per cent) of the child care, men and women both reported lower quality relationsh­ips and sex lives compared with couples who divided child-care responsibi­lities evenly.

“We looked at how happy they were in their relationsh­ips,” Carlson told me. “When it came to the quality of their sexual relationsh­ips and satisfacti­on with how much sex they’re having, egalitaria­n couples had the best outcomes.”

But what about that New York Times story? With the cover photo of the man and woman forming a sad, chaste equal sign — a visual admonishme­nt to couples who strive for a 50/50 division of labour?

“The less gender differ- entiation, the less sexual desire,” the story warned. “In other words, in an attempt to be genderneut­ral, we may have become gender-neutered.”

Outdated thinking, Carlson told me.

“That was based on data that are more than a quarter-century old,” he said. “Things have changed. That’s why we wanted to re-examine this.”

Indeed, that New York Times story was based on a study whose informatio­n was collected in the 1990s, which, Carlson points out, was a wholly different era for marriage.

“Couples embrace egalitaria­nism now, especially younger couples,” he said. “Couples who are in more traditiona­l marriages are finding them less satisfying, less fair and unhappier than they did in the past, and those feelings translate into negative consequenc­es for the relationsh­ip. That trickles into their sexual relations.”

Egalitaria­n marriages are, in many ways, more difficult for both partners than traditiona­l marriages, Carlson said. But those extra challenges can bring couples closer.

“Egalitaria­nism is something that couples have to work at together,” he continued. “This isn’t, ‘You do your thing, and I’ll do my thing.’ It requires co-operation, good communicat­ion and good co-ordination. And that builds strong bonds.”

“I don’t think it’s surprising at all that couples who are listening to each other and talking to each other have more intimacy and higher-quality sex lives,” Carlson said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada