Effective Communication

Working Towards a Better World Through Better Communication Skills, Interpersonal Relationships and Personal Growth

  • Home
  • About Hodu.com
  • Meet Azriel

Why I Don’t Like the Word ‘Partner’ in Connection With Relationships

Posted by Azriel Winnett in February 14th 2007    under: interpersonal relationships, marriage    Tags: marriage, relationships  
No Comment

Yes, you’ve read correctly. I don’t like it.

The word “partner” is used very widely by people writing about relationships, including many of our own site contributors. And it’s perfectly understandable. After all, what better term do we have at our disposal to describe your opposite number in an intimate relationship? While dictionary definitions may differ, its simple meaning is one who shares or participates with you in a certain enterprise or activity. So it seems quite appropriate.

Yet, the word makes me uncomfortable. I’ll tell you why.

I touched on one reason in one of my early articles on the Web. I don’t think an ideal marriage
relationship is a “partnership” in the same sense that we talk about business partnership, for example. When we think of a partnership, we usually think about a contract between two parties. A 50-50 sharing of responsibilities, or the like.

Yet marriage, as I explained is no business arrangement – or it shouldn’t be. As I explained, if your mind is going to work along the lines of:

“You have needs and I have needs. Maybe, if I satisfy yours, you will satisfy mine. You wash the dishes and I’ll pay the rent. Sundays to Tuesdays I’ll take out the garbage, and for the remainder of the week you will. Other duties will be divided by mutual consent. For every suit I buy, you can buy two pairs of shoes…”

…you’re not very likely to end up with a happy marriage.

OK, now I can hear you say: “Hey Azriel, who’s talking about marriage? You can have an intimate relationship between a man and a woman without them necessarily being actually married. That’s why these relationship writers talk about your partner instead of your husband, wife or spouse. It’s a term that includes everybody.”

Aha, a good point! But, you know, that’s exactly my point. You see, I don’t really believe there can be an authentic, long-lasting, really happy, relationship of this type outside formal marriage. That, in a nutshell, is the second – and more important – reason why I shy away from the use of the term “partner” in the context of relationships.

We know that the number of couples “living together” has risen very dramatically over the past few decades. Often, the rationale is that by “trying each other out” before tying the knot, they can see how “compatible” they are. Strangely, some of these people seem to be motivated, at least in part, to take this “precaution” by the rising divorce rate.

This is quite ironic,for studies have shown conclusively that “living together” does not increase the chances of marital success. Quite the contrary, the likelihood of a durable and lasting union is diminished by this arrangement. If living together were a test of marital compatibility, the statistics should show that couples who have lived together first should have stronger marriages.

But the opposite is the case. Even though the myth persists!

What’s the problem? What’s lacking in the temporary arrangement, when a couple “shack up” together knowing that if things don’t work out as planned… well, no big deal. It may be a little painful for a day or two, but it’s just a question of packing one’s bags, walking out the door, shaking off the dust and getting on with one’s life.

In marriage, it’s not quite so simple. And that’s a jolly good thing.

If there’s one key word here, that word is commitment. Making a commitment right from Day One.

You see, a newly married couple will make a deliberate effort to accommodate each other and please each other, because they expect to be together for life. In other words, their goal is not to test compatibility, but to build it!

The word spouse , somehow, is not a particularly attractive one. But, where necessary, I would prefer it to partner anytime.

Digg It  Add To Delicious  Stumble This  Add to Technorati Favourite

No Comment

Recent Post

  • Hey, Mr Public Speaker! When Will You Get to the Point?
  • Charismatic Leaders Are Not Necessarily the Most Competent
  • Disagreements At Work Need Not Lead to Conflict
  • How Body Language Can Trigger Empathy
  • Beware the Blank Stare: Signs Your Message Isn’t Getting Through
  • How Corporate Internal Communicators Can Impact Customer Relations
  • Emotional Intensity in Others: Can You Recognize the Warning Signs?
  • Most Visited Articles on Hodu Com: September, October 2008
  • When Angry or Upset, Watch Out! Don’t Fall Victim to the Spiral Effect!
  • Mom and Dad! Don’t Let Your “Little Lawyers” Tie You Up in Knots!
Leave Your Comments Below

Please Note: All comments will be hand modified by our authors so any unsuitable comments will be removed and you comments will be appreared after approved

« Finding the Good in Others Really Pays Off
Public Speaking: No Substitute For Eye Contact »
Azriel Winnett is the creator of Hodu.com - Your Gateway to Better Communication Skills

Subscribe to Feeds

To receive new posts by email, enter your address here:


Preview | Powered by FeedBlitz

Tags

Add new tag body language business conversation skills customer relations e-books education emotional maturity ethics etiquette family management marketing marriage meetings online publishing parenting personal development public relations public speaking relationships social skills society teams telemarketing workplace writing

Recent Posts

    • Hey, Mr Public Speaker! When Will You Get to the Point?
    • Charismatic Leaders Are Not Necessarily the Most Competent
    • Disagreements At Work Need Not Lead to Conflict
    • How Body Language Can Trigger Empathy
    • Beware the Blank Stare: Signs Your Message Isn’t Getting Through
    • How Corporate Internal Communicators Can Impact Customer Relations
    • Emotional Intensity in Others: Can You Recognize the Warning Signs?

Pages

    • About Hodu.com
    • Meet Azriel

Categories

    • Business and Management
    • business communication
    • business ethics
    • conversation skills
    • customer service
    • education
    • emotional maturity
    • family life
    • interpersonal relationships
    • marketing
    • marriage
    • most popular articles
    • parenting
    • Self Help and Motivational
    • speaking skills
    • the workplace
    • Uncategorized
    • Writing and Speaking
    • writing skills
©2006-2009 Effective Communication
Valid XHTML   Valid CSS   WordPress 2.8.6 | Beyond2010 designed by VA4Business