Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Couple Who Works Out Together, Loses Weight Together

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 May, 2018 01:05 PM
    Turns out, while many couples like to do certain things together, working out together is the whole new definition of beneficial.
     
     
    According to a study conducted by the Taylor & Francis Group, couples who are trying to lose weight could be putting their relationship under strain by using unsuitable strategies to achieve their weight loss goals.
     
     
    Interpersonal communication expert, Rene Dailey, investigated how individuals interpret their partner's approaches to help weight loss, aiming to provide more tailored recommendations for couples looking to support each other's weight loss goals.
     
     
    Analysing the online survey responses of 389 individuals, all of whom were actively trying to lose weight and living with their romantic partner, Dailey identified four different 'relational environments' in which couples lose weight.
     
     
    These ranged from 'synchronised', where both partners share a positive attitude towards weight loss and act as a team to pursue their weight loss goals, to 'lone battlers', characterised by low team effort, and higher relationship strain.
     
     
    Lone battlers are less likely to discuss weight loss as a couple.
     
     
     
     
    The study classed those somewhere in between as either 'contentious cooperatives', when approaching weight loss sometimes causes conflict, or 'autonomous', where individuals receive only sporadic encouragement from their partner, without undue interference.
     
     
    The three most common weight loss strategies couples use are encouragement (giving praise and reassurance), influence (pushing their partner to do better and make healthier choices), and coercion (making the other feel guilty by withdrawing affection).
     
     
    However, unless partners align these approaches with their specific relational environment, couples risk alienation and unnecessary tension. The study discovered that 'synchronised' partners, who framed weight loss as a shared goal, were far more receptive to all three strategies, including coercion.
     
     
    The negative emotions associated with this strategy, such as guilt, were more likely to be interpreted positively in this environment as a concern for their partner's health, rather than as manipulative or controlling. This could lead to positive effects for both weight loss and the couple's relationship.
     
     
     
     
    Dailey commented, "Relational partners co-create an environment in which people lose weight. Partner behaviours that support the weight loss can be viewed differently depending on the environment. For example, a person who wants to focus on a diet but their partner focuses on exercise might see the partner's suggestion of going for a walk as intrusive and unhelpful. By contrast, a person who feels they and their partner are on the same page about how to lose weight could welcome the suggestion".
     
     
    "These findings suggest that couples might benefit from negotiating the best relational environment and desired support strategies from their partners, to facilitate their progress more effectively. Ultimately, this would help them to better balance their weight loss goals with the maintenance of their relationship", concluded Dailey.
     
     
     
     
    The study appears in the journal Health Communication.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    B.C. Village Points To Ongoing Harassment After Mayor Receives Phone Threats

    B.C. Village Points To Ongoing Harassment After Mayor Receives Phone Threats
    MCBRIDE, B.C. — A small community in British Columbia's central Interior says it plans to press charges once police identify an anonymous caller who allegedly threatened the mayor.

    B.C. Village Points To Ongoing Harassment After Mayor Receives Phone Threats

    30 Percent Of Women In India Now Regularly Watch Porn

    30 Percent Of Women In India Now Regularly Watch Porn
    When it comes to watching porn online, women are slowly bridging the gap in India with as much as 30 percent of women in India now regularly visiting porn websites

    30 Percent Of Women In India Now Regularly Watch Porn

    Study On Vancouver High School Students Reveals Bullies Have High Self-Esteem, Low Depression Rates

    Study On Vancouver High School Students Reveals Bullies Have High Self-Esteem, Low Depression Rates
    Researchers at Simon Fraser University surveyed a group of Vancouver high school students and got the results which oppose earlier assumptions about bullies.

    Study On Vancouver High School Students Reveals Bullies Have High Self-Esteem, Low Depression Rates

    Prone To Cheating? Blame Your Hormones

    Prone To Cheating? Blame Your Hormones
    People with higher levels of the reproductive hormone testosterone and the stress hormone cortisol are more likely to repeatedly engage in cheating and other unethical behaviour, a new study suggests.

    Prone To Cheating? Blame Your Hormones

    Grandparents' Love Can Make Kids Fat

    Grandparents' Love Can Make Kids Fat
    Grandparents are often extremely fond of their grandchildren but a study says that affection from grandparents may lead to childhood obesity.

    Grandparents' Love Can Make Kids Fat

    Who’s Calling The Shots in Surrey?

    Who’s Calling The Shots in Surrey?
    An alarming number of shootings has officials, politicians and residents alike, pleading for the violence to stop before more lives are lost. While there may not be any easy solutions to ending the current criminal activity, it’s evident that something needs to change before the city feels safe once again.

    Who’s Calling The Shots in Surrey?