Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Make Up After Fight: Men Want Sex, But Women Want Quality Time, Tears

Darpan News Desk, 07 Jul, 2017 01:31 PM
    When it comes to making up after a row, it turns out, men and women value different methods.
     
     
    If a man wants to make up with his girlfriend after an argument, he should dedicate quality time and shed a few tears while asking for forgiveness. However, these are not the best ways for a woman to make up with her boyfriend; men consider a kind gesture or receiving sexual favours as the best form of apology.
     
     
    This was revealed in a study led by T. Joel Wade of Bucknell University in the US. Overall, it was found that showing emotional commitment is the best way of reconciling a conflict between romantic partners, but that there are systematic differences in how men and women prefer this to be put into practice.
     
     
    The study was done in two parts. Participants were first asked via an online questionnaire to nominate specific actions that men and women engage in to reconcile with their partners after a fight.
     
     
    These were then grouped by the researchers into 21 categories of possible reconciliation behaviours. The options given by the participants in Study 1 were then given to an additional group of men and women to ascertain which methods were preferred (most effective).
     
     
     
    It was found that men, compared to women, rated a partner doing nice gestures and giving sex/sexual favours as more effective. According to Wade, these findings are consistent with previous studies that showed that men prefer a partner who is sexually accessible.
     
     
    "Women may thereby use sexual favours as a way to reconcile with their male partner," said Wade. "Doing so may communicate to their male partner that they are still sexually accessible and as such do not want to end the relationship."
     
     
    It was further found that women held it in high regard when a partner spent time with them after a conflict, apologized and even cried to show their remorse.
     
     
    "Women may rate spending time together more highly because this behavior signals a partner's willingness to invest effort and limited resources (e.g. time) into their romantic pair-bond," explained Wade. "Such actions by a man may signal the likelihood of a potentially high parental investment which women prefer."
     
     
    Women also rated crying and apologizing as more effective methods of resolving conflict than men did. According to Wade this might be because women view male partners who do so as being in touch with their emotions, without being feminine. Tears are seen as an honest signal of grief about a rocky relationship.
     
     
     
     
    The findings are published in Springer's journal Evolutionary Psychological Science.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Switching Off: Enough With The Idiot Box, Go Outside And Play

    Switching Off: Enough With The Idiot Box, Go Outside And Play
    Canadian parents urged to keep infants away from digital screens

    Switching Off: Enough With The Idiot Box, Go Outside And Play

    A Wealthier India Sees Alarming Rise In Adolescent Diabetes

    A Wealthier India Sees Alarming Rise In Adolescent Diabetes
    More than two decades of rapid economic growth has changed Indians' lifestyles. People eat out more often, and prefer Western-style junk food such as burgers and pizza over traditional lentil and vegetable meals.

    A Wealthier India Sees Alarming Rise In Adolescent Diabetes

    Don't Let Swimsuit Anxiety Suck The Fun Out Of Summer

    Don't Let Swimsuit Anxiety Suck The Fun Out Of Summer
    Not everybody frets over their beach bodies, celebrating instead. For others, it's a struggle, one that Heidi Wicker in suburban Dallas knows well

    Don't Let Swimsuit Anxiety Suck The Fun Out Of Summer

    Excessive Facebook Use Makes You Sad, Unhealthy

    People Who Access The Social Network More Often Are Not As Happy And Healthy

    Excessive Facebook Use Makes You Sad, Unhealthy

    8,000 walkers in Vancouver joined the World Partnership Walk across Canada

    8,000 walkers in Vancouver joined the World Partnership Walk across Canada
    They raised more than $2 million to help end global poverty

    8,000 walkers in Vancouver joined the World Partnership Walk across Canada

    I See What You Don't See: Turns Out, We Only See What We've Learned To See

    I See What You Don't See: Turns Out, We Only See What We've Learned To See
    A recent Kyoto University study showed that an ability to perceive differences between similar images depends on the cultural background of the viewer.

    I See What You Don't See: Turns Out, We Only See What We've Learned To See