<p>Those soulful thoughts like "made for each other" or "she is my other half" may no longer intensify love but actually hurt your relationship.<br /><br /></p>.<p>According to an interesting research, people who think of relationships as perfect unity between soulmates have worse relationships than people who implicitly think of relationships as a journey of growing and working things out.<br /><br />To understand this, researchers asked: If two people were really made in heaven for each other, why should they have any conflicts?<br /><br />In one experiment, they asked people in long-term relationships to complete a knowledge quiz that included expressions related to either unity or journey, then recall either conflicts or celebrations with their partner and finally evaluate their relationship.<br /><br />As predicted, recalling conflicts leads people to feel less satisfied with their relationship - but only with the unity frame in mind and not with the journey frame in mind.<br /><br />Recalling celebrations makes people satisfied with their relationship regardless of how they think about it.<br /><br />"Apparently, different ways of talking and thinking about love relationship lead to different ways of evaluating it," said social psychologist Spike WS Lee from University of Toronto's Rotman School of Management.<br /><br />"Next time you and your partner have a conflict, remember that love is a journey. You will feel better and you will do better down the road,a researchers concluded in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology.</p>
<p>Those soulful thoughts like "made for each other" or "she is my other half" may no longer intensify love but actually hurt your relationship.<br /><br /></p>.<p>According to an interesting research, people who think of relationships as perfect unity between soulmates have worse relationships than people who implicitly think of relationships as a journey of growing and working things out.<br /><br />To understand this, researchers asked: If two people were really made in heaven for each other, why should they have any conflicts?<br /><br />In one experiment, they asked people in long-term relationships to complete a knowledge quiz that included expressions related to either unity or journey, then recall either conflicts or celebrations with their partner and finally evaluate their relationship.<br /><br />As predicted, recalling conflicts leads people to feel less satisfied with their relationship - but only with the unity frame in mind and not with the journey frame in mind.<br /><br />Recalling celebrations makes people satisfied with their relationship regardless of how they think about it.<br /><br />"Apparently, different ways of talking and thinking about love relationship lead to different ways of evaluating it," said social psychologist Spike WS Lee from University of Toronto's Rotman School of Management.<br /><br />"Next time you and your partner have a conflict, remember that love is a journey. You will feel better and you will do better down the road,a researchers concluded in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology.</p>