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The Economy and Relationships
The credit crunch hits relationships and marriages. As job cuts surge, how do couples cope when a husband loses his job?
When Helen McGrath's husband Peter lost his job as a contracts manager in the construction industry, his initial feeling of shock meant that he didn't tell her for the first week.
“He thought he'd get something else and be able to tell me then as a fait accompli,” says McGrath, a part-time special needs worker from Finsbury Park, North London. “But he soon realised that it wasn't going to be easy. The impact now for him is of ‘failing', as he supports the family financially.”
Grae Hillary's partner, Jon Harris, found that work for his video production company dried up as companies tightened their belts and he is now keenly looking for any job at all. “He has days when he gets really down about it,” says Hillary, a PA. “It gets on top of him and is definitely affecting his self-esteem, not to mention our relationship.”
Across the UK, similar scenes are being played out as unemployment rises. More than 140,000 people lost their jobs in the three months to September, leading many experts to predict the total number of jobless to top out at the early-1990s figure of nearly three million by 2010. With thousands of jobs going in often male-dominated industries such as banking, accounting, property and IT, it's middle-class men who are feeling the effect of this “white-collar recession”.
The balance in a relationship shifts
Subsequently, many normal, hardworking couples and families are left facing a modern relationship hurdle. “Apart from the financial pressures this brings, it also brings a total shift in dynamics within relationships, with men feeling emasculated and unable to provide for their partners or family and lots of added pressure on women to bring the money in,” says Corinne Sweet, a psychologist. And however modern today's women are - living in a post-feminist world where women have always worked and been on an equal footing in partnerships - they may find it harder than expected to adapt to a new order in their relationships. Janice Hiller, a consultant clinical psychologist who specialises in couples therapy, says that our relationship structure is often far more gender-based than we realise. “Evolutionarily, we are evolved to have different roles. That's not just going to disappear.” she says. “We still have that ancient wiring.”
Sweet sees it as something that crops up when the chips are down. “In a crisis, we revert to stereotypes, and the credit crunch is a prime example of that. I've heard from many women who consider themselves feminists and free of the constraints of traditional gender set-ups, but who have been totally surprised by their reaction to finding a redundant male in the house.”
Naomi Hayward, a political researcher whose partner Matthew lost his alternative-healthcare practice, was eight weeks pregnant when he told her that the business had gone under. “I had never cast myself in a stay-at-home role, but suddenly I realised that I wanted my partner to be the provider and look after me. I never thought it mattered to me that my partner brought in the money. But when he was out of work, I realised that it did matter. I've started off being incredibly supportive, but I have my moments when I feel like shaking him. If it were me, I'd be applying for everything, but Matthew is living off his savings and seems to have lost all his drive. He's refusing to let me help him.”
Redundancy hits men particularly hard
“Men don't generally deal as well with unemployment as women,” says Steve Miller, a business coach who works with a range of blue-chip companies on their redundancy programmes. “A lot of anger comes with redundancy and men tend not to talk through their emotions as women do. Traditionally, the man 'provides' and for a man to lose his job, it's not just about money, it's loss of status, which can be a huge knock to his confidence.”
Sadly, the strain that comes as a result of dealing with unemployment and the negative emotions it brings pushes some couples to breaking point. Sandra Davis is the head of the family department at the legal firm Mishcon de Reya, which handled the divorce of the Princess of Wales and initially represented Heather Mills in the split from Paul McCartney. She says that they have “never been busier” and though she deals mainly with high net-worth individuals, the issues that affect these wealth-driven relationships are universal. “The trauma of losing status can cause huge problems. The power balance shifts and it is an emasculating situation,” she says.
Not only will a man be trying to deal with feeling that he's not living up to his “role”, but there's a real danger that the woman will become angry and resentful. “It can be incredibly frustrating for women if they're earning and still having to run the household while their partner is out of work,” says Hiller. Sweet adds: “Unfortunately this unspoken resentment can build to the point that it causes a complete relationship breakdown. The worst thing women can do is criticise and ridicule; it should be about being honest without being emasculating.”
Original Source -The Times Online
Authors -Becky Howard
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