Wednesday 15 July 2009
Love keep way through life
Happily for the fairy tales do not need to live where. Australian researchers together for a couple seems to have identified, and a lot more than just being in love. A couple of age, past relationships and even whether they smoke or not is that factors that influence their marriage is going to last, according to the Australian National University researchers to study the one. The study, "Is this love is entitled to do with," for 2007 to identify those factors associated with about 2,500 for couples - married or living together - who since 2001 has identified with a people who are divorced separately or compared.
It found that his wife than twice as likely to get divorced, as before they turn 25 who are married husband. Children, one fifth of a marriage or relationship with the impact of longevity, which is nine or more years old who is a husband before the wedding the couple have children - or the last one is a relationship or in a relationship with - the children's before marriage were born without joints as compared to only nine percent is different. The woman who the children more than their peers are more likely to want more than one divorce. Their relationship to play a role in a pair of parents, men and women in the study of whom 16 per cent of parents never separated himself or those whose parents experienced a 10 per cent compared to the divorce, marital separation from showing was not different
In addition, their partners are on the second or third marriage is 90 per cent more in their first marriage of both spouses is likely to be different. Not surprisingly, money is, to 16 per cent of respondents who indicated they were poor or with a role where the husband - wife - they were saying, with a healthy financial joint compared with only nine per cent the unemployed was. And couples where one partner, and not other, smoking is more likely to have a relationship that ends in failure. Not affect the separation important risk factor for many children and a married couple created to include age, employment status and wife's years in the number of pairs found was planned. The study jointly written by Professor Dr Rebecca Kippen and Bruce chapman was the Australian National University, Department of Family and Dr. Peng Yu, on behalf of the Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs
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