Spousal Facilitation and Hindrance of Goal Pursuit as Predictors of Personal Well-Being and Marital Satisfaction over Time

While successful goal pursuit is associated with well-being for individuals, new work has begun exploring the role of goals in satisfaction with romantic relationships. The present work examines the effects of spousal involvement in goal pursuit on personal and marital outcomes. One hundred twenty m...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Avivi, Yael
Format: Others
Published: Scholarly Repository 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarlyrepository.miami.edu/oa_dissertations/279
id ndltd-UMIAMI-oai-scholarlyrepository.miami.edu-oa_dissertations-1278
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UMIAMI-oai-scholarlyrepository.miami.edu-oa_dissertations-12782011-12-13T15:39:09Z Spousal Facilitation and Hindrance of Goal Pursuit as Predictors of Personal Well-Being and Marital Satisfaction over Time Avivi, Yael While successful goal pursuit is associated with well-being for individuals, new work has begun exploring the role of goals in satisfaction with romantic relationships. The present work examines the effects of spousal involvement in goal pursuit on personal and marital outcomes. One hundred twenty married couples completed measures of perceived spousal facilitation (i.e., perceiving one's spouse as being encouraging and helpful) and hindrance (i.e., perceiving one's spouse as hindering) of goals, individual well-being, and marital satisfaction over 3 points in time, starting as newlyweds. Mediation analyses tested various models in which enhanced goal progress mediates the influence of perceived spousal facilitation and hindrance of goals on personal and marital outcomes. Results showed some support for the idea that spousal involvement in goal pursuit can be related to concurrent as well as later personal and marital outcomes. Specifically, perceiving one's spouse as facilitating and hindering one's goals predicted personal and marital outcomes in both cross-sectional and longitudinal models, depending on whether the goals represented personal or relationship-focused aspirations. Furthermore, reports of goal progress mediated both within-individual and cross-partner effects in some longitudinal models. Findings from this study offer implications for further understanding the role of a spouse in goal pursuit and in personal as well as marital outcomes over time. 2009-07-20 text application/pdf http://scholarlyrepository.miami.edu/oa_dissertations/279 Open Access Dissertations Scholarly Repository Romantic Relationship Marriage Goals
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Romantic Relationship
Marriage
Goals
spellingShingle Romantic Relationship
Marriage
Goals
Avivi, Yael
Spousal Facilitation and Hindrance of Goal Pursuit as Predictors of Personal Well-Being and Marital Satisfaction over Time
description While successful goal pursuit is associated with well-being for individuals, new work has begun exploring the role of goals in satisfaction with romantic relationships. The present work examines the effects of spousal involvement in goal pursuit on personal and marital outcomes. One hundred twenty married couples completed measures of perceived spousal facilitation (i.e., perceiving one's spouse as being encouraging and helpful) and hindrance (i.e., perceiving one's spouse as hindering) of goals, individual well-being, and marital satisfaction over 3 points in time, starting as newlyweds. Mediation analyses tested various models in which enhanced goal progress mediates the influence of perceived spousal facilitation and hindrance of goals on personal and marital outcomes. Results showed some support for the idea that spousal involvement in goal pursuit can be related to concurrent as well as later personal and marital outcomes. Specifically, perceiving one's spouse as facilitating and hindering one's goals predicted personal and marital outcomes in both cross-sectional and longitudinal models, depending on whether the goals represented personal or relationship-focused aspirations. Furthermore, reports of goal progress mediated both within-individual and cross-partner effects in some longitudinal models. Findings from this study offer implications for further understanding the role of a spouse in goal pursuit and in personal as well as marital outcomes over time.
author Avivi, Yael
author_facet Avivi, Yael
author_sort Avivi, Yael
title Spousal Facilitation and Hindrance of Goal Pursuit as Predictors of Personal Well-Being and Marital Satisfaction over Time
title_short Spousal Facilitation and Hindrance of Goal Pursuit as Predictors of Personal Well-Being and Marital Satisfaction over Time
title_full Spousal Facilitation and Hindrance of Goal Pursuit as Predictors of Personal Well-Being and Marital Satisfaction over Time
title_fullStr Spousal Facilitation and Hindrance of Goal Pursuit as Predictors of Personal Well-Being and Marital Satisfaction over Time
title_full_unstemmed Spousal Facilitation and Hindrance of Goal Pursuit as Predictors of Personal Well-Being and Marital Satisfaction over Time
title_sort spousal facilitation and hindrance of goal pursuit as predictors of personal well-being and marital satisfaction over time
publisher Scholarly Repository
publishDate 2009
url http://scholarlyrepository.miami.edu/oa_dissertations/279
work_keys_str_mv AT aviviyael spousalfacilitationandhindranceofgoalpursuitaspredictorsofpersonalwellbeingandmaritalsatisfactionovertime
_version_ 1716389547180294144