They are seen by many as business deals that have little to do
with love.
But arranged marriages are far more likely to lead to lasting
affection than marriages of passion, experts claim.
According to research, those in arranged marriages – or who have had
their partner chosen for them by a parent or matchmaker – tend to feel more in
love as time grows, whereas those in regular marriages feel less in love over
time.
And within ten years, the connection felt by those in arranged
marriages is said to be around twice as strong.
Relationship experts claim this is because arranged matches are
carefully considered, with thought going into whether potential partners’
families, interests and life goals are compatible.
This means they are more likely to commit for life – and to stick
together through rocky patches.
Those who marry for love, on the other hand, tend to be blinded by
passion and so overlook these crucial details.
When the going gets tough, they are more likely to view the
situation simply as a natural end to their romantic dream – a way of fate
telling them something is wrong with the relationship.
With soaring divorce rates and record numbers of single-parent
households in the West, researchers suggest it is time to rethink the Western
approach to love. Harvard academic Dr Robert Epstein has studied the subject of
arranged marriages for eight years, looking at the approaches taken in cultural
groups including Indian, Pakistani and Orthodox Jewish.
He has interviewed more than 100 couples in arranged marriages to
assess their strength of feeling and studied his findings against more than 30
years of research into love in Western and arranged marriages.
His work suggests that feelings of love in love matches begin to fade by as much as a half in 18 months, whereas the love in the arranged marriages tends to grow gradually, surpassing the love in the unarranged marriages at about the five-year mark.
Ten years on, the
affection felt by those in arranged marriages is typically twice as strong.
Dr Epstein believes
this is because Westerners leave their love lives to chance, or fate, often
confusing love with lust, whereas those in other cultures look for more than
just passion.
He said: ‘The idea is
we must not leave our love lives to chance. We plan our education, our careers
and our finances but we’re still uncomfortable with the idea that we should
plan our love lives. I do not advocate arranged marriages but I think a lot can
be learned from them.
‘In arranged
marriages, thought goes into the matching. In the West, physical attraction is
important. But people must be able to distinguish lust from love. Strong
physical attraction is very dangerous, it can be blinding.
‘In the West
marriages are easy to get out of. But in arranged marriages, the commitment is very
strong. They get married knowing they won’t leave, so when times are harder –
if they face injury or trauma – they don’t run away. It brings them closer.’
Francine Kaye,
relationship expert and author of The Divorce Doctor, added: ‘There is an awful
lot to be said for arranged marriages. They are determined to make it work.
‘I have seen in
arranged marriages in the Orthodox Jewish community that the parents very
carefully look at compatibility – it is not left to chance. They do their
homework on their characteristics, their values, morals and life goals.
‘It should be pointed
out that arranged marriages work because culturally marriage is seen
differently. We have a very romantic view of marriage. Theirs is more
pragmatic.
‘There is a downside
to arranged marriages though – no matter how pragmatic you are in choosing a
partner, there always needs to be chemistry.’
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