‘Ur
dumped’ - research shows text a popular way of ending romances
SYDNEY
- Breaking up is supposed to be hard to do, but young
Australian couples have found an easy solution - send a text
message and move on.
Research
shows young romantics are increasingly using SMS text messages
to manage, and even end, their relationships.
Macquarie
University researcher Natalie Robinson studied the texting
habits of 100 young people aged 18-35 and found SMS messaging
increased when relationships were beginning or going through a
rocky period.
Robinson
said couples, fearing rejection, wanted to avoid direct contact
when their relationships were strained.
“People
used text messages to show their negative feelings rather than
talking face-to-face,” she said. “This might be because text
messages were less confrontational and more distant.”
The
clinical psychologist said she was surprised to find 15 percent
of participants had dumped a partner via text messages.
Robinson
said one of her friends had been ditched in a text message and
found it an unpleasant experience.
“She
was very angry because it was so impersonal and because they had
been together for a couple of years,” she said.
Overall,
women were more likely to send texts telling their partner how
they were feeling, while men were more comfortable with
practical texts such as “I’ll pick up dinner on the way
home”.
Robinson
said people often used texts to keep tabs on partners who were
out socialising with friends, creating the potential for
friction.
“The
receiver of this message may interpret this in a number of ways,
such as, “my partner cares about me and just wants to know
what I am doing’ or alternatively, “my partner is suspicious
and doesn’t trust me and wants to know what I am doing’,”
she said.
AFP
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