L o v e , S e x & H e a l t h
Do Gay Couples Have An Edge?
By Michael D. Lemonick
January 19, 2004
Health
Sallyanne Monti, 42, and Mickey Neill, 52, began seeing a couples
therapist soon after their relationship began six years ago, and
they have been in counseling on and off ever since. They have
gone to hash out the kinds of problems that plague many couples:
guilt, anxiety, miscommunication and dealing with teenage kids.
But Monti and Neill are both women, and while gay and
heterosexual couples have plenty of issues in common, there are
big differences as well. Gay couples have to cope daily with
homophobia, says Robert-Jay Green, a psychologist in San
Francisco. An even bigger problem is a lack of clarity about
commitment. "In research samples, the average length of
same-sex-couple relationships tends to be about six years," says
Green, "compared to around 18 for heterosexuals."
One reason is that there is usually less social gluemarriage,
family expectations, childrenholding gay couples together.
"There's really no one rooting for them to stick it out through
the tough times the way there is for straight couples," says
Green. "There's no ceremony that invokes traditions of what it
means to be a couple. It produces tremendous insecurity."
That is beginning to change as commitment ceremonies become
common and families become more accepting (Monti's four children
adore Neill). In some ways, gay couples have an advantage, says
John Gottman, who counsels both straight and gay couples at his
institute in Seattle. Because there is no gender divide between
them, "gay partners discuss problems more positively, with more
humor and affection than heterosexuals."
Sometimes, however, having similar perspectives can be more of a
curse than a blessing, says psychologist Michael Hendricks, who
practices at the Washington Psychological Center in Washington:
"Expectations about compatibility can be too high."
Reported by Sonja Steptoe/Los Angeles
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