stress can corrode relationships, so one might expect a mammoth stressor like a global pandemic could seriously unhinge romantic couples.
instead, the unique circumstances created by covid may have provided an “opportune scapegoat” for their problems, a new study suggests. people were more likely during waves one and two to blame the pandemic than they were to blame themselves or their partners for problems in their relationships, the study finds. and they were happier for it.
the study highlights the beneficial effects of “blaming the stressor,” in this case, a global health crisis. “stressful circumstances have the power to destabilize couples’ interactions and erode relationship quality,” university of texas at austin researchers report in the journal social psychological and personality science.
“yet not all stressors are alike,” they said. unlike everyday stressors, major ones can promote “proactive coping” and couples can emerge more resilient.
the tendency to blame the stressor — covid — “appeared to enhance stress resilience,” they wrote, and the benefits of “it’s covid, not us” didn’t weaken as the pandemic persisted.
at the crux of the research is the stress spillover phenomenon: when people are feeling anxious, stressed, burned out and irritable from stress originating outside the relationship, like work stress, it tends to carry over into the home, “affecting the way they think about their relationship and the way they interact with their partner,” said lisa neff, an associate professor of human development and family sciences at the u of texas and one of the study’s coauthors.