Relationship experts say that a study in the Journal of Communications
has shown that absence might truly make the heart grow fonder and that
couples who participate in a healthy long-distance relationship can have
more meaningful interactions than couples who see each other daily.
Grace Buchele of Huffington Postlists the 6 benefits of being in a long
distance relationship:
1.
The knowledge that if you survive the distance, your relationship can
survive anything. Once upon a time, boy met girl, they fell in love,
and lived happily ever after in the same house for the next three
generations. That was then. This is now. Between study abroad, job
transfers, the "two body problem," and a million other reasons for
couples to live in different cities, long distance relationships are
becoming a viable alternative to breaking up. According to a study done
by Cornell University (see a longer article on the Huffington Post
here), between a quarter and one half of college students are currently
in a long distance relationship. I believe that. However, as anyone in
college can tell you, most of these relationships do not last. Between
late-night "study sessions," parties, and "break-vember" (the nickname
many college students give the first November of their freshman year --
most high school sweethearts call it quits around this time), successful
long distance relationships are few and far between. And I'm sure that
means a lot of things, but to most of my friends in long distance
relationships, it means that if they can survive the distance, they can
survive anything.
2.
You don't have to be presentable all the time -- you can have off days.
No one can judge you for having off days because the love of your life
lives halfway across the world. It's like a "get out of jail free" card
for social interactions.
3.
Long distance relationships are a lesson in effective communication.
Early in my married life, I realized I could spend months living with
someone without having a "real" conversation. If Ryosuke and I didn't
specifically set aside time to have a heart-to-heart, we could go days,
weeks, or even months without talking about how he really felt when I
put my feet up on his chair during dinner (hint, he didn't like it).n
Dr. Crystal Jiang, of the department of communication at the City
University in Hong Kong, claims, "Long-distance couples try harder than
geographically close couples in communicating affection and intimacy,
and their efforts do pay back." (You can read her full transcript here.)
A similar study by Cornell University revealed that while couples in a
"normal" relationship tend to have more daily interactions than couples
in a long-distance relationship, the couples who had hundreds of miles
in between them tend to have longer, more meaningful conversations. The
university told 63 heterosexual couples, half of which were a long
distance relationship, to keep a communication diary and spend the next
couple weeks completing questionnaires about their relationships. The
distance between the couples varied between 40 and 4,000 miles. Those in
a long distance relationship reported feeling a stronger bond than
couples who lived in the same city. They also claimed to feel their
partners shared more of their thoughts, feelings, and emotions.
4.
For it to work, both parties must be equally committed. Long distance
relationships do not work if both people are not equally committed. And
the advice I give all new couples: if you are not 100 percent committed
to making it work, don't even try. If you're not committed, the hours of
Skype and long flights just don't seem worth it.
5.
They force you to be independent in your relationship. We all know those
people who lose themselves in a relationship. They become an extension
of their significant other and, to be honest, lose that special "spark"
that made you want to be friends with them in the first place. Couples
in long distance relationships rarely have that problem -- because it is
difficult to live vicariously through your significant other when you
don't share a zip code. Living apart from your significant other or
spouse is a great way to preserve the essence of who you are even though
you are in a relationship. You have your own friends, jobs, and social
life. This is especially critical for younger couples (high school and
college age) who haven't yet cemented their independence in the "real
world."
6.
You get really good at planning.Remember when I said that long distance
relationships require communication? A lot of that communication comes
in the form of elaborate planning, and not just visits, but long-term
plans. And if practice makes perfect, most long distance couples have
gotten the complications of planning down to an art.
7.
The relationship is more than physical.You can't have a "friends with
benefits" long distance relationship. Long distance relationships are
more like "friends without benefits." However, as painful as celibacy
may be (and believe me, it can get hard -- no pun intended), you rarely
have to worry that your significant other is only putting up with you
for sex. By definition, long distance relationships are anything but
physical. Really, just read any of the comments from love-struck long
distancers on this post. Or this post. Or this post. They throw around
words like "soulmate," "other half," "meant to be together" and "love of
my life" like nobody's business.
8.
Both parties get plenty of "me" time.When we lived apart, I could get my
"me" time whenever I needed... but now that we live together, I have to
send my husband on errands to get my "me" time.
9.
It is full of exotic travel and adventure.Every time my significant
other came into town, I got to do all the touristy things that locals
skip over. Our days were filled with beer factory tours, Tokyo
Disneyland, hiking a mountain, taking rowboats out on the lake for a
romantic lunch and exploring the city. We would see each other twice a
month -- but it was more than "seeing each other." Each weekend visit
was like a mini-vacation. Now, happily married in a small apartment, we
miss those days when we had an excuse to pack up and leave for the
weekend.

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