2018
DOI: 10.1007/s10591-018-9479-5
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A Word to the Wise: Age Matters When Considering Mindfulness in Romantic Relationships

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Cited by 15 publications
(5 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
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“…Interestingly, the age of participants had a relatively high feature importance, where younger participants self-reported higher quality scores with respect to their relationships. Some longitudinal evidence may support this conclusion, such as an increase in unpleasant aspects in the relationship over time ( Birditt et al, 2009 ), where correlations between younger age and higher relationship satisfaction have been reported previously, albeit at small effect sizes ( Lenger et al, 2019 ). Both longitudinal and cross-sectional studies would be of value to follow up on this finding.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 56%
“…Interestingly, the age of participants had a relatively high feature importance, where younger participants self-reported higher quality scores with respect to their relationships. Some longitudinal evidence may support this conclusion, such as an increase in unpleasant aspects in the relationship over time ( Birditt et al, 2009 ), where correlations between younger age and higher relationship satisfaction have been reported previously, albeit at small effect sizes ( Lenger et al, 2019 ). Both longitudinal and cross-sectional studies would be of value to follow up on this finding.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 56%
“…However, this finding was obtained using a sample of college students in a romantic relationship who were about 20 years old, on average, and about 40% of these participants reported being in their current romantic relationship for 1 year or less. Mindfulness may play a more central role in committed relationships (Karremans et al., ) and in the relationship quality of individuals who are older in age (Lenger, Gordon, & Nguyen, ). It is important to note, therefore, that the average age of participants in the present study was over 35, nearly three quarters of the couples in the present study reported being married, and the average relationship length of these couples was almost 11 years.…”
Section: Trait Mindfulness Relationship Mindfulness and Relational mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Couples who are more mindful have the tendency to show lower levels of negative emotions, higher levels of being able to tolerate distress and communicate their emotions and perceive their partner more positively after a conflict. In a study, mindfulness was found to be more common among older individuals and in long-term relationships compared to younger individuals and in early stage relationships (Lenger et al, 2019). High levels of mindfulness seemed to reduce the risk of relationship breakups for individuals with high levels of attachment anxiety (Saavedra et al, 2010) as they no longer see potential threatening relationship events as threatening.…”
Section: Positive Mindset In Building Positive Relationshipmentioning
confidence: 98%