Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Lack of sleep can escalate bickering

- TARA PARKER-POPE

It started as a simple conversati­on about a child’s birthday party. But it quickly escalated into a full-blown marital rift. She accused him of neglecting the family. He said she was yelling.

“Whatever,” she said. “Go. Go.”

“Go where?” he replied. “I don’t know,” she told him. “I don’t want to talk to you anymore.”

The bickering parents were among 43 couples taking part in an Ohio State University study exploring how marital interactio­ns influence a person’s health. Every couple in the study — just like couples in the real world — had experience­d some form of routine marital conflict. Hot-button topics included managing money, spending time together as a family or an in-law intruding on the relationsh­ip.

But while marital spats were universal among the couples, how they handled them was not. Some couples argued constructi­vely and even with kindness, while others — like the couple fighting about the birthday party — were hostile and negative.

What made the difference? The hostile couples were most likely to be those who were not getting much sleep.

“When people have slept less, it’s a little like looking at the world through dark glasses,” said Janice Kiecolt-Glaser, a longtime

relationsh­ip scientist and director of the Ohio State Institute for Behavioral Medicine Research. “Their moods are poorer. We’re grumpier. Lack of sleep hurts the relationsh­ip.”

The men and women in the study had been married from 3 to 27 years. They reported varying amounts of sleep — anywhere from 3 ½ to 9 hours a night.

Each couple made two visits to the lab, where the partners were prodded to talk about the problems that caused the most conflict in their relationsh­ip. Then the researcher­s analyzed videos of their exchanges using well-establishe­d scoring techniques to assess positive and negative interactio­ns and hostile and constructi­ve responses.

After all the data were analyzed, a clear pattern emerged.

Couples were more likely to be hostile — such as the couple fighting about the child’s birthday party — when both partners were functionin­g on less than 7 hours of sleep.

Notably, the couples with more than 7 hours of sleep still argued with each other, but the tone of their conflict was different. Consider this couple discussing concerns about spending and budget

challenges.

“Do you want to try taking over the budget?”

“I can’t. I don’t want to.” “I understand.” “You’re just being too accepting. You can tell me I’m crazy.” “You’re not crazy.” Although the couple had indicated they regularly argued about money problems, getting adequate sleep seemed to give them the patience to approach conflict in a constructi­ve way.

“It’s not the fact that the couples were disagreein­g,” Kiecolt-Glaser said. “It’s the lack of sleep and the way in which they disagreed.”

She continued: “The better functionin­g couples could do it with humor and kindness but clearly still disagree. The poorer functionin­g couples could get pretty nasty.”

FOR WORSE

The notion that better sleep makes a better marriage is not entirely new. A large body of research suggests that sleep-deprived people are more unpleasant and even hostile in their social interactio­ns than those who get adequate sleep. People tend to use more negative words when they are sleep deprived than on days when they have had a full night’s sleep.

A 2010 study found that men were more likely to fight with their wives after a night

of disturbed sleep. In a 2014 study, couples who reported poor sleep during a two-week period reported more daily marital conflict than those who got better sleep.

But the Ohio State study went a step further to measure how marital discord combined with sleep deprivatio­n can become toxic to a person’s health. Each partner in the study also gave blood samples, before and after the fight with their spouse. The samples were to measure markers of inflammati­on, which has been linked with heart disease, cancer and other health problems.

The study found that when married partners got less sleep, not only were they more likely to have hostile conflicts, but they also had higher levels of inflammato­ry proteins in their blood after those conflicts. In short, marital discord is more toxic to your body when you have not gotten enough sleep.

“Lack of sleep not only hurts the relationsh­ip,” said Kiecolt-Glaser, the senior author on the study, which was published in May in the journal Psychoneur­oendocrino­logy. “It makes relationsh­ip conflict harder on the body.”

FOR BETTER

There was some good news from the study. When one partner got more rest, it was possible to mitigate the effect of

sleep deprivatio­n on the other partner. Couples with one rested partner were less likely to engage in hostile exchanges than when both partners were sleep deprived.

“Sleep and conflict worked together to increase inflammati­on, but both partners’ sleep mattered,” said Stephanie Wilson, the study’s lead author and a postdoctor­al fellow at Ohio State. “When one person was rested, it protected the couple from being more nasty to each other.”

Sleep problems in a relationsh­ip are not uncommon. The National Sleep Foundation found that nearly 25 percent of couples sleep in separate beds. Other research shows that having a bed partner affects how much and how well a person sleeps. And when one relationsh­ip partner does not sleep well, the partner is more likely to report poor health and well-being.

The recent study examined only heterosexu­al married couples, but Wilson thinks the findings likely also are relevant to cohabiting couples and gay and lesbian partners. “These are universal relationsh­ip processes,” Wilson said.

“Just knowing these effects can happen can help people keep in mind the importance of getting a good night’s sleep and treading carefully with conflict.”

 ?? The New York Times/KIM MURTON ??
The New York Times/KIM MURTON

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