San Antonio Express-News

To boost relationsh­ip, blame COVID

- By Hannah Williamson FOR THE EXPRESS- NEWS Hannah Williamson is an assistant professor of human developmen­t and family sciences at the University of Texas at Austin.

The next time your partner rolls their eyes at you across the dinner table or snaps at you when you ask if they remembered to take out the trash, blame the pandemic for the behavior. It just might help your relationsh­ip.

I study the role of stress in relationsh­ips, so when the COVID-19 pandemic hit, I wanted to know what effect it was having on relationsh­ips. What I found and reported in recently published research really surprised me. The COVID-19 pandemic has had the unexpected positive outcome of helping people acknowledg­e the effect that stress can have on their partner and be more forgiving of it.

Despite sheltering in place together while confrontin­g the stress and chaos of the early days of the pandemic, people say that overall happiness with their partner did not suffer. Couples who were happy with their relationsh­ip before the pandemic stayed that way, and couples who were unhappy, unfortunat­ely, stayed that way, too.

But relationsh­ips didn’t just stay the same — one aspect of couples’ relationsh­ips actually seems to have been improved by the pandemic.

The way people think about and explain their partner’s behavior is what researcher­s call “attributio­ns.” For example, if your partner snapped when asked about taking out the trash, was it because they are a selfish jerk, or because they had a stressful day?

Past research has shown that it is better for your relationsh­ip if you blame an external circumstan­ce for your partner’s negative behavior. This, of course, doesn’t mean accepting abusive behavior, but it means letting go of small transgress­ions instead of escalating them. My research found that people were more likely to do this during the pandemic than they were before. They significan­tly increased the healthy, external attributio­ns they made for their partner’s less-than-ideal behaviors. In other words, they seemed to be blaming the pandemic.

The fact that stressors we experience outside of our relationsh­ip can “spill over” and cause us to behave badly is difficult for couples to recognize in their day-to-day lives.

It makes sense that the pandemic is so enormous and omnipresen­t that its effects could not be ignored. Past research has found that moderately severe stressors (compared with very minor or very severe stressors) are the most dangerous for relationsh­ips because they are big enough to affect us, but small enough that their spillover effects may not be recognized.

As we approach the end of 2020, the changes brought about by the pandemic are no longer new and scary. Adjusting to the “new normal” may mean that we fall into the “moderate stress” danger zone — our partners are still stressed and still sometimes treat us rudely, but we’re no longer recognizin­g their stress. That means that this hard-won lesson about stress spillover may be in danger of disappeari­ng.

No one can be the perfect partner at all times. There is certainly no shortage of stressors out there right now, especially with the holidays coming. As we try to move on with our lives, don’t let this unexpected positive lesson from the pandemic be forgotten. When your partner gives you the cold shoulder, assume it is because of stress. It will be better for your relationsh­ip, and these days, it’s probably true.

 ?? Gregorio Borgia / Associated Press ?? Often, it’s difficult for couples to realize outside stressors can “spill over” and cause trouble within the relationsh­ip.
Gregorio Borgia / Associated Press Often, it’s difficult for couples to realize outside stressors can “spill over” and cause trouble within the relationsh­ip.
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