A phenomenological exploration of relationship effort in emerging adult cyclical dating relationships

Doctor of Philosophy === Family Studies and Human Services === Jared R. Anderson === Cyclical romantic relationships—those characterized by breaking up and getting back together or having on/off periods—are a frequent phenomenon in the emerging adult population. These dating relationships maintain s...

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Main Author: Knapp, Darin J.
Language:en_US
Published: Kansas State University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2097/32567
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spelling ndltd-KSU-oai-krex.k-state.edu-2097-325672016-06-03T15:43:47Z A phenomenological exploration of relationship effort in emerging adult cyclical dating relationships Knapp, Darin J. Cyclical relationships Relationship effort Relationship maintenance Emerging adulthood Relationship churning Doctor of Philosophy Family Studies and Human Services Jared R. Anderson Cyclical romantic relationships—those characterized by breaking up and getting back together or having on/off periods—are a frequent phenomenon in the emerging adult population. These dating relationships maintain some distinctions from other more stable relationships, including the ways that partners strive to sustain relationship health. The purpose of this phenomenological qualitative inquiry was to increase in-depth understanding of how emerging adult dating partners’ relationship effort affects relationship transitions within cyclical dating relationships. Ten heterosexual emerging adult couples (10 men, 10 women) currently in cyclical dating relationships were interviewed about their experiences with relationship effort and maintenance. Participant interviews were analyzed according to the Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) method. Specific themes emerged from the data, focusing on how perceived individual effort in the relationship, perceived partner effort in the relationship, and specific maintenance behaviors couples used to sustain relational health affected couple decisions about relationship transitioning. Implications regarding relationship education and clinical intervention among cyclical emerging adult couples are discussed. Future research could focus on continued expansion of understanding when in relationship history cyclical patterns begin, and how partners navigate transitions when both perceive reduced relationship effort. 2016-04-21T17:05:43Z 2016-04-21T17:05:43Z 2016 May Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2097/32567 en_US Kansas State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Cyclical relationships
Relationship effort
Relationship maintenance
Emerging adulthood
Relationship churning
spellingShingle Cyclical relationships
Relationship effort
Relationship maintenance
Emerging adulthood
Relationship churning
Knapp, Darin J.
A phenomenological exploration of relationship effort in emerging adult cyclical dating relationships
description Doctor of Philosophy === Family Studies and Human Services === Jared R. Anderson === Cyclical romantic relationships—those characterized by breaking up and getting back together or having on/off periods—are a frequent phenomenon in the emerging adult population. These dating relationships maintain some distinctions from other more stable relationships, including the ways that partners strive to sustain relationship health. The purpose of this phenomenological qualitative inquiry was to increase in-depth understanding of how emerging adult dating partners’ relationship effort affects relationship transitions within cyclical dating relationships. Ten heterosexual emerging adult couples (10 men, 10 women) currently in cyclical dating relationships were interviewed about their experiences with relationship effort and maintenance. Participant interviews were analyzed according to the Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) method. Specific themes emerged from the data, focusing on how perceived individual effort in the relationship, perceived partner effort in the relationship, and specific maintenance behaviors couples used to sustain relational health affected couple decisions about relationship transitioning. Implications regarding relationship education and clinical intervention among cyclical emerging adult couples are discussed. Future research could focus on continued expansion of understanding when in relationship history cyclical patterns begin, and how partners navigate transitions when both perceive reduced relationship effort.
author Knapp, Darin J.
author_facet Knapp, Darin J.
author_sort Knapp, Darin J.
title A phenomenological exploration of relationship effort in emerging adult cyclical dating relationships
title_short A phenomenological exploration of relationship effort in emerging adult cyclical dating relationships
title_full A phenomenological exploration of relationship effort in emerging adult cyclical dating relationships
title_fullStr A phenomenological exploration of relationship effort in emerging adult cyclical dating relationships
title_full_unstemmed A phenomenological exploration of relationship effort in emerging adult cyclical dating relationships
title_sort phenomenological exploration of relationship effort in emerging adult cyclical dating relationships
publisher Kansas State University
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2097/32567
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