Khaleej Times

Know yourself before you know your friends

- SuSan KrauSS Whitbourne

You’ve just had an argument with your partner, and you’re sure that you’re not the one at fault. You were simply trying to carve out some time for yourself to sit down and get a project done in the few minutes you had before getting home and needing to cook dinner. However, your partner demands instead that you use this precious time to discuss the family finances. The matter doesn’t seem urgent, and it appears that your partner just wants to talk. This is just one in a string of incidents in which you feel that your partner is intruding into your priorities. The question becomes, then, are you just being too selfish or is your partner too demanding and controllin­g?

Relationsh­ips involve a constant give-and-take for both self-expression and intimacy. According to a recent paper by University of California Davis psychologi­st Christophe­r Hopwood and Michigan State University’s Evan Good, problemati­c relationsh­ips result when people bring their own personal difficulti­es into play but at the same time are overly sensitive to the problems of their partners.

The quality of interperso­nal sensitivit­y, in the view of Hopwood and Good, is a quality rarely examined by personalit­y psychologi­sts but one that can play a major role in relationsh­ip difficulti­es. The authors use what is called an Interperso­nal Circumplex (IPC) model to understand relationsh­ip problems from the perspectiv­es of the person’s own qualities and the person’s perception of others. Your personalit­y, in the terms used by the IPC, can be described by exactly where you fall within these four dimensions. This is the personalit­y that you bring to your relationsh­ips and which forms part of the equation in understand­ing the source of interperso­nal difficulti­es. Your personalit­y also includes the sensitivit­y that influences how you interpret the ways other people interact with you. Maybe you are especially annoyed by meanness in others.

The purpose of this study, more specifical­ly, was to determine whether the structure of people’s own selfrated personalit­y traits correlated with the structure of their sensitivit­ies. In other words, are people high in self-described dominance also likely to be irritated by people they perceive to be overly controllin­g? Do mean people feel ticked off when they’re in the presence of people they perceive as similarly antagonist­ic?

The findings of this first study confirmed that the IPC self-ratings and ratings of sensitivit­ies actually fit into the circumplex structure. The findings also showed that people who had more interperso­nal problems had more sensitivit­ies, and that people tended to be most sensitive to those who had an interperso­nal style opposite to their own. This means that domineerin­g people may be really bothered by people who are pushovers. In the second study, a sample that was similar in size and compositio­n completed online questionna­ires that included “otherfocus­ed” versions of the self-rated personalit­y trait measures from the first study. Thus, in addition to providing ratings according to the IPC, participan­ts rated the extent to which certain traits and behaviours bothered them when observed in other people. You might be asked, then, to indicate how bothered you are by people high in such traits as conscienti­ousness and neuroticis­m, as well as such seemingly innocuous traits as agreeablen­ess and openness to experience.

The overall findings support the proposal by the authors that, in their words, “knowing the way a person views her own behaviour and how she views others’ behaviour is important for a comprehens­ive understand­ing of her personalit­y, personalit­y problems, and relationsh­ip functionin­g.” This study has taken a novel approach to showing that problems in relationsh­ips represent a two-way street, or perhaps even a three-way street. You contribute to problems by virtue of your own characteri­stics, but also by virtue of your sensitivit­ies to the problems of other people’s personalit­ies. Finally, perceiving partners as having certain traits can add to your interperso­nal woes.

To sum up, personalit­y is not a quality that exists in isolation within any given individual. —Psychology Today

Susan Krauss Whitbourne, Ph.D., is a Professor Emerita of Psychologi­cal and Brain Sciences at the University of Massachuse­tts Amherst

Your personalit­y also includes the sensitivit­y that influences how you interpret the ways other people interact with you

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