Jealousy: A Common Issue In Relationships
Jealousy is a common topic when people discuss relationships, whether they are friends, family members, boyfriends, girlfriends, husbands, wives or lovers. Jealousy is an emotion involving fear, anxiety or apprehension about losing your loved one to someone else, or of being replaced in some way. Since this is a fear-based emotion, it can often bring up other negative emotions like anxiety, worry and anger. These can be counterproductive and damaging for relationships, or for your own physical and mental health.
How Jealousy Impacts Relationships
Jealousy can often make an individual feel angry, resentful, fearful, anxious or defensive. When someone is jealous in a relationship, he can become reactive, assume the worst, fail to notice how his partner shows him love and appreciation, and instead pay attention primarily to things that confirm his negative assumptions.
John Gottman, a leading couples researcher and therapist in the United States, has studied thousands of couples and has been able to predict which ones would stay together after watching them interact for just five minutes. Couples that expressed more negative emotions with one another, and who spent more time engaging in negative behaviors (like criticizing, getting defensive, verbally attacking, calling names) than positive behaviors (like praising, listening, showing affection, telling their partner why they appreciate them) usually did not have a happy ending.
Recognizing Jealousy
Romantic jealousy tends to be due to one (or both) partners' insecurities about themselves, often developed over time after past experiences of rejection or disappointment in relationships. Jealousy frequently leads to verbal confrontations, poor communication, misunderstanding, feeling mistrusted, and eventually, many couples break up because of it.
The key is recognizing when your past is impacting the present. Feelings of jealousy are natural, and they come up quite often in all types of meaningful relationships. Use moments of jealousy as an opportunity to learn why they are happening and also to to help stabilize your relationship.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Chief of Staff rolls out ‘Walk with Julius’ initiative to encourage healthy living, calls on corporate Ghana to join JoySports Invitational Tournament
58 minutes -
NSMQ 2025: St Peter’s SHS claims 4th Eastern Regional title after intense showdown with Okuapeman and Pope John’s
1 hour -
Tera Hodges confirmed as speaker for Africa’s Women’s Day Virtual Celebration 2025
1 hour -
Gospel artiste Terry Johnson releases soulful new single “Ohe yɛ naakpɛɛ”
2 hours -
Nearly 200 Ghanaian students stranded as gov’t owes University of Memphis $3.6m
2 hours -
At least 14 dead in South Korea floods and landslides
3 hours -
You’ve kept to the objective – Chief of Staff Julius Debrah hails MGL
4 hours -
Cape Coast hosts final leg of National Talent Identification Program for Para athletes
5 hours -
ESG and Boardroom Decisions: How Non-Financial Drivers Shape Financial Outcomes
6 hours -
Robust anti-laundering fight critical for regional stability – Veep
10 hours -
Car ploughs into crowd outside LA nightclub, injuring 30
10 hours -
GNAT President calls for parliamentary legislation to protect reinstated PTAs
13 hours -
NPP Abanga blames his NDC twin brother for his misfortune
14 hours -
NPP Abanga breaks ranks to shield NDC twin brother in ‘galamsey’ accusations
14 hours -
Saminu Abdul Rasheed smashes national record again with 9.84s sprint in Georgia
15 hours