By KAREN NIKOS/UC Davis News Service
Adolescents who have positive relationships with their
parents tend to have stable and satisfying relationships in their early
adult marriages as well as romantic relationships, a UC Davis study has
found.Researchers, who began studying 265 individuals in the
1990s, found that nurturing parents contributed to the future success of
their children's young adult romantic relationships.
"Our results indicate that when parenting behaviors are high in warmth and supportiveness, high in levels of child monitoring and positive child management and low in levels of harsh and inconsistent discipline in adolescence, early adult children are more likely to endorse the belief that marriage requires emotional investment," researchers said. "In turn, these emotional investments were associated with more positive romantic relationship interactions with a partner."
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"Our results indicate that when parenting behaviors are high in warmth and supportiveness, high in levels of child monitoring and positive child management and low in levels of harsh and inconsistent discipline in adolescence, early adult children are more likely to endorse the belief that marriage requires emotional investment," researchers said. "In turn, these emotional investments were associated with more positive romantic relationship interactions with a partner."
READ MORE AT DAILYDEMOCRAT.COM
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