English
Noun
cronies
- Plural of crony
expert-subject
Psychology In
the contexts of
sociology and of
popular
culture, the concept of interpersonal
relationships involves
social associations,
connections, or
affiliations between two or
more people. Such persons may
interact overtly, covertly,
face-to-face; or may remain effectively unknown to each other (as
in a virtual community whose members maintain anonymity and do not
socialize outside of a
chat-room).
Analyzing interpersonal relationships
Sometimes an observer can detect explicit
interactions that define an interpersonal relationship — such as
body-language
or
dialogue.
Erving
Goffman and his followers see any public appearance as a
ritual built from a
"ceremonial idiom".
On the other hand, implicit interactions include
standing in a
shopping-line
or in an
emergency-room.
Human interactions often mix the explicit and
implicit interaction modes.
An interpersonal interaction can constitute a
social
transaction
of the form "you scratch my back, I'll scratch yours". Some
transactions facilitate further interaction between the
participants and some act as Interpersonal
violence consists of action,
interaction and transaction — without necessarily terminating the
relationship.
Context has great importance in meaningfully
describing any particular interaction between people.
Meaning itself can
result from interpersonal interactions, most significantly in the
developmental
stage of life when one interacts with peers, parents and
teachers.
Socialization
transmits
culture.
Culture — in the light of
social
constructionism — forms how people construct their world and
the relationships in it.
Analysts of interpersonal relationships (namely,
any functioning humans) may view a relationship as focused (such as
the
sales-oriented
relationship between a sales assistant and a customer) or as
unfocused (as between passengers on a bus). People traveling to a
football-match share a relationship — whether they support the same
team or opposing teams. The significance of the relationship may
not become apparent until they cheer or boo. In each case culture
will tend to define the forms of both accepted and unacceptable
interactions.
Interpersonal relationships vary in their degree
of
self-disclosure,
feedback,
power
and
respect — to name
but a few aspects. They vary in the extent to which culture and
language define or
construct them. They vary in the degree to which people can
question, challenge or change relationships of relevance to
themselves; and that degree of
changeability itself can
demonstrate
power-differentials
in a variety of interpersonal relationships and settings.
Relationships vary in the degree to which both
intimacy and
sharing occur — implying the
discovery or establishment of
common ground over time. They may or may not center around
things shared in common.
The concept of relationship
Interpersonal relationships as
a category may have escaped public attention until the late 20th
century:
The term "relationship", as applied to personal
life, came into general use only twenty or thirty years ago, as did
the idea that there is a need for "intimacy" or "commitment" in
personal life."
If valid, this view raises questions as to what
has changed — and how — to bring about the result where
interpersonal relationships receive so much attention — both in
academia and in popular lore.
Teens and parents go through a stage where
relationships are lost or broken up by the changes kids go through
as they mature into adults.
Over 90% of all failed relationships result from
a lack of honest communication and awareness.
Interpersonal relationships and other fields of study
The
study of
relationships beyond the
merely personal involves fields such as
mathematics,
sociology,
psychology and
anthropology, to name but a
few. Every branch of
science — to some extent —
studies relationship and occurs in the context of interpersonal
relationships. (Interpersonal relationships form and maintain the
culture of science and its
paradigms, and often prove more
influential than evidence which may contradict a theory.)
Game theory,
a branch of
applied
mathematics and
economics, studies two-person
interactions in
decision-making.
Game theory can stand distinct from the "games people play" of
transactional
analysis, which may relate to
relationship
therapy.
The meaning of a particular relationship depends
on the
definition of the situation. The work of the sociologist
Erving
Goffman — particularly in his book
The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life — suggests the degree
to which one manages presentation of the self in every
interaction.
This points to the ultimate source of
interpersonal relationship in
intrapersonal
communication. What lies within each person and how each person
communicates internally provides the source of
meaning, of
self-definition
and of self-presentation in interpersonal relationships.
Martin Buber
has written eloquently on this aspect of
dialogue — with oneself and
with an Other.
Possible stages in the course of interpersonal
relationships
1) Contact:
- a) Perceptual: noticing how parties look at each other and
their body-language.
- b) Interactional cues: nodding, maintaining eye-contact,
etc.
- c) Invitational: encouraging the potential relationship (for
example, suggesting a later meeting involving some social
lubricant such as coffee)
- d) Avoidance strategies: if one person discloses and the other
does not: minimal response, lack of eye-contact, etc.
2) Involvement:
- a) Feelers: hints or questions (for example: asking about
family)
- b) Intensifying strategies: furthering the
relationship (for example meeting an old friend, bringing the other
to meet family, becoming more affectionate, etc.)
- c) Public: parties seen in public together often (if in a
romantic relationship, may involve holding hands)
3)
Intimacy: parties
very close; may have exchanged some sort of personal belonging or
something that represents further
commitment.
(For example, a
promise ring
in a romantic relationship or a
friendship-necklace
identifying two people as
best
friends)
4) Deterioration: things start to fall apart. In
a romantic relationship, typically after approximately six months,
people move out of the so-called "honeymoon stage",
NRE,
or
limerence and start
to notice flaws. The way they address this determines the fate of
the relationship (see
relationship
counseling).
Types of interpersonal relationships
Examples of categories of personal relationships
may include:
- kinship
relationships (including family relationships) involve
relating to someone else:
- genetically (consanguinity, as for
example in fatherhood, motherhood)
- through marriage
(affinity, as for
example as a father-in-law, mother-in-law, uncle by marriage, aunt
by marriage)
- formalized intimate
relationships or long-term
relationships recognized by law and formalized through public
ceremony (for example,
the relationships of marriage and of civil union)
- non-formalized intimate
relationships or long-term
relationships such as loving relationships or romantic
relationships with or without living
together; with the "other person" often called lover, boyfriend or girlfriend (as distinct from
just a male or female friend), or "significant
other". If the partners live together, the relationship may
resemble marriage, with the parties possibly called "husband" and "wife". (Scottish common law can
regard such couples as such after a time. Long-term relationships
in other countries can become known as common-law
marriages, although they may have no special status in law. The
term mistress may refer in a somewhat old-fashioned way to a female
lover of an already married or unmarried man. A mistress may have
the status of an "official mistress" (in French maîtresse
en titre); as exemplified by the career of Madame
de Pompadour.
- soulmates,
individuals intimately drawn to one another through a favorable
"meeting of
minds" and who find mutual acceptance and/or understanding with
one another. Soulmates may feel themselves bonded together for a
lifetime; and hence may become sexual
partners — but not necessarily.
- casual
relationships, sexual relationships extending beyond "one-night
stands" that exclusively consist of sexual
behavior; one can label the participants as "friends
with benefits" when limited to considering sexual
intercourse, or regard them as sexual
partners in a wider sense.
- Platonic
love, an affectionate relationship into which the sexual
element does not enter, especially in cases where one might easily
assume otherwise.
- friendship, which
consists of mutual love,
trust, respect, and (often unconditional) acceptance; and usually
implies the discovery or establishment of common ground between the
individuals involved; see also internet
friendship and pen-pal.
- brotherhood and
sisterhood:
individuals united in a common cause or having a common interest,
which may involve formal membership in a club, organization, association,
society, lodge,
fraternity or sorority. This type of interpersonal relationship
relates to the comradeship/camaraderie of
fellow soldiers in
peace or war.
- partners or co-workers in a profession, business, or a common
workplace. Compare team.
- participation in a community, for example, a
community
of interest or practice.
- association, simply knowing someone by introduction or knowing
someone by interaction.
Factors in establishing and maintaining
relationships
The discovery or establishment of common ground
between individuals provides a fundamental component for enduring
interpersonal relationships. Loss of common ground, which may
happen over time, may tend to end interpersonal
relationships.
An observer of relationships can consider the
motivation of each participant in the relationship. Does X love Y —
or simply love what Y does for X? And vice versa.
In a longitudinal research study, psychotherapist
Emily Kensington asked one hundred
couples, “What do you love most
about one another?" Answers indicating little depth generally
correlated with the relationship experiencing "negative" outcomes.
According to hearts-and-kisses.com, replies such "Because she's
pretty" or "he's fun" emerge as negative predictors, indicating
surface attraction. Relationships can evolve from the meeting of
facile needs to a stable, committed companionship, and couples that
can identify their attraction to positive partner-qualities such as
compassion,
intelligence, and an
ability and willingness to
communicate
effectively have "better" outcomes.
Self-aware
couples have a greater ability to recognize areas for potential
growth,
and to develop a plan to work on their relationship jointly.
Each
relationship-type
demands essential skills, and without these skills more "advanced"
relationships cannot develop.
Systemic
coaching advocates a hierarchy of relationships, from
friendship to global order. Expertise in each relationship-type (in
this hierarchy) requires the skills of all previous
relationship-types. (For example partnership requires
friendship and
teamwork skills).
Interpersonal relationships through
consanguinity and
affinity can persist despite
the absence of love, affection, or common ground. With such
relationships within
prohibited degrees, sexual
intimacy becomes the
taboo
of
incest.
Legal sanction reinforces and regularizes
marriages and
civil unions
as perceived "
respectable"
building-blocks of
society. In the
United
States of America, for example, the de-criminalization of
homosexual sexual
relations in the Supreme Court decision,
Lawrence
v. Texas (
2003) facilitated the
"mainstreaming" of gay
long-term
relationships, and broached the possibility of the legalization
of
same-sex
marriages in that country.
Intimate
relationships often (but not always) involve an implicit or
explicit agreement on
monogamy — an agreement that
the partners will not have
sex
with any third party. The extent to which society and partners may
accept
physical
intimacy with other people varies. For example, a husband may
react more favorably to his wife demonstrating physical affection
with a female friend than to a similar demonstration with a male
friend (see also
jealousy).
Friendship may
involves some degree of
transitivity: one may
become a friend of an existing friend's friend. However, if two
people have a sexual relationship with the same person, they may
become
competitors
rather than friends. Accordingly, sexual behavior with the sexual
partner of a friend may damage the friendship. See
love
triangle.
Sexual
relations between two friends may alter that relationship:
either by "taking it to the next level" or by severing it.
Sexual
partners may also class as
friends: the sexual
relationship may either enhance or depreciate the friendship.
The rise of
popular
psychology has led to an explosion of concern about one's
interpersonal relationships (often simply called: "relationships").
Intimate
relationships receive particular attention in this context, but
sociology recognises
many other interpersonal links of greater or less duration and/or
significance.
One need not always regard relationships as
necessarily healthy. Unhealthy examples include
abusive
relationships and
codependence.
Theories concerning interpersonal relationships
Social
psychology and related spheres propose several approaches to
the study and fostering of interpersonal relationships, among
them:
- trust,
as trust between parties can become
mutual. This may lead to enduring relationships.
- social
exchange theory, which interprets relationships in terms of
exchanged benefits. People will regard relationships in the light
of the rewards of the relationship, as well as rewards they may
potentially receive in alternate relationships.
- systemic
coaching, which analyzes relationships as expressions of a
perceived human need to give and receive love. Transferences,
entanglements and substitution can complicate relationships.
Systemic coaching claims to offer solutions for many difficulties
in relationships.
- equity
theory, which stems from a criticism of social
exchange theory. Proponents argue that people care about more
than just maximizing rewards: they also allegedly want fairness and
equity in their relationships.
- relational
dialectics, which regards relationships not as static entities,
but as continuing processes, forever changing. This approach sees
constant tension in the negotiation of three main issues: autonomy vs. connection, novelty vs.
predictability, and openness
vs. closedness.
- attachment
styles, which analyze relationships in yet another way.
Proponents of attachment styles argue that styles developed in
childhood continue influential throughout adulthood, influencing
the roles people adopt in relationships.
Bibliography
References
cronies in Danish: Mellemmenneskelige
forhold
cronies in German: Zwischenmenschliche
Beziehung
cronies in French: Relation humaine
cronies in Dutch: Relatie (personen)
cronies in Portuguese: Diplomacia
interpessoal
cronies in Russian: Личностные социальные
отношения
cronies in Finnish: Ihmissuhde
cronies in Tagalog: Pakikipag-ugnayan sa ibang
tao
cronies in Chinese: 人际关系