Marriage and Pride
©Tom
Moon, MFT, 2008
Now that
same-sex marriage is legal in a second state, and couples by the
hundreds are getting married every day all over California, it might
be a good time to summarize briefly what the research shows about
the viability of gay relationships. Skepticism about our relationships
still abounds among both gays and straights. This is an area where
unexamined homophobia remains potent. We still hear that gay relationships
never last, or can’t work, because we’re all too immature,
impulsive, self-centered, or self-destructive, to manage them. As conservative
moralist William Bennett wrote “It is important to say publicly
what most of us believe privately, namely that marriage between a man
and a woman is in every way to be preferred to the marriage of two
men or two women.” Really? What does the data actually show?
In two
studies published earlier this year by the American Psychological
Association, the notion that committed same-sex relationships are “atypical,
psychologically immature, or malevolent contexts of development was
not supported by our findings,” wrote lead author Glenn I. Roisman,
PhD. “Compared with married [straight] individuals, committed
gay males and lesbians were not less satisfied with their relationships… Same-sex
couples were found to be just as committed in their romantic relationships
as heterosexual couples.” In fact, “some evidence emerged
that the lesbian couples were especially effective at resolving conflict.” and “Same
sex couples reported more positive feelings toward their partners and
less conflict than heterosexual married couples.”
One of the most respected experts on marriage in America is Dr. John
Gottman, author of The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work. I
often recommend this book to struggling gay couples, even though it
was written for a straight audience, because its advice is practical
and solidly grounded in research. Gottman recently concluded an in-depth,
12-year study of same-sex relationships. Some of his findings: 1) Overall
relationship satisfaction is about the same across all couple types
(straight, gay, lesbian); 2) Both gay and lesbian couples are more
upbeat in the face of conflict and use more affection and humor when
they bring up a disagreement; 3) Gay and lesbian couples use fewer
controlling, hostile emotional tactics in conflicts than straight couples;
4) Gay and lesbian couples, on the whole, are better at calming down
and soothing one another after a conflict. It seems that our relationships
not only aren’t second-rate, but that we may actually have a
few things to teach straight people about managing them.
But do
our marriages last? Don’t we always break up after six
months or so? Darren Spedale, a law and business student at Stanford
University, who studied divorce rates in Denmark in 1996-97, seven
years after same-sex registered partnerships were legalized there,
found that 17 percent of gay partnerships ended in divorce compared
with 46 percent of straight relationships. “Same-sex couples
who enter into marriage-type relationships have obviously given it
much more thought” he commented. “A lot of them, in general,
have had longer relationships previous to tying the knot.”
A frequent
challenge to the legitimacy of gay relationships, leveled primarily
at gay men, is that we’re all too sex-obsessed to keep
monogamous commitments. There are several ways to respond to this criticism.
First of all, more gay men are monogamous than many people, including
many gay men, believe. In an Advocate sex survey in the ‘90’s
of over thirteen hundred gay men, for instance 52% reported that in
their current or last relationship they had been monogamous, and 77
percent said that they preferred monogamous relationships to open relationships.
A second
response is that people who live in glass houses shouldn’t
throw stones. Contrary to the mythology of the “family values” crowd,
non-monogamy is not exactly a gay male preserve. Among straights, an
estimated 50% of husbands and 30-40% of wives have affairs, and 90%
of first marriage divorces involve one or both partners having an affair.
Moreover, it is primarily straight men, single and married, who keep
the multi-billion dollar sex worker industry in business.
A 1994 study comparing gay and straight relationships found that neither
monogamy nor non-monogamy was related to relationship satisfaction
for gay men. What was important was adherence to whatever
agreement the couple made about the issue. In other words, honesty was
the value that mattered. Maybe, then, the real difference between gay
and straight couples on the monogamy question isn’t that straights
are and gays aren’t, but that when gay couples aren’t monogamous
they are more likely to act on the basis of explicit agreements and
honest communication. This is surely a more mature and honorable way
to live than the Elliot Spitzer-style of official monogamy combined
with secret cheating.
We have
no need to be on the defensive about our relationships, and the marriage
movement is an outward manifestation of the fact that more and more
of us know it. The legal battles may go on for years, but I believe
that what makes us unstoppable in the long run is that our self-perceptions
have changed so radically. In exercising our right to marry, we aren’t merely “assimilating”; we are
affirming our human dignity as mature adults who value – and
practice – loyalty, commitment, care, and love.