Research Shows that One Night Stands Can Lead to More

Who among us hasn’t dreamed of true love, of finding that one special person to share their life with?  Sometimes, however, we get bogged down in the Disney princess mentality and miss the opportunities that exist right under our noses.  And sometimes, friends with benefits, casual dating with occasional (and non-monogamous sex), and the odd hookup are just easier.

But according to recent research out of the University of Iowa led by sociologist Anthony Paik, these informal relationships aren’t necessarily a bad thing … even in terms of finding your one true love (if you believe in such a thing, of course).

From The University of Iowa News Services:

Couples who became sexually involved as friends or acquaintances and were open to a serious relationship ended up just as happy as those who dated and waited.

“We didn’t see much evidence that relationships were lower quality because they started off as hookups,” said Paik, an assistant professor in the UI College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. “The study suggests that rewarding relationships are possible for those who delay sex. But it’s also possible for true love to emerge if things start off with a more ‘Sex and the City’ approach, when people spot each other across the room, become sexually involved and then build a relationship.”

You know, part of me is really pretty excited about this even while my brain is screaming, “That’s freaking rudimentary!”

What this research is basically saying, after all, is that those willing to invest the time and energy and desire into making a relationship successful are more likely to be successful at the great long-term relationship game.  Therefore, it doesn’t matter as much if a couple start out as friends …

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Stephen King Addressing the Intricacies of Marriage Head On in New Novella

Stephen King, who I firmly believe will go down in history as one of America’s greatest writers [Ed. Note: AGREED AGREED AGREED] despite being frequently dismissed as a dime-a-dozen horror book author, has tackled the area of marriage—and the complexities found within—in many of his writings.

His new collection, Full Dark, No Stars (due to be released in November) features a novella entitled “A Good Marriage” which, based on the excerpt available online, takes a long, hard look at the intricacies of matrimony.

From Suite 101:

Since the story is by Stephen King, the question repeatedly asked in the story becomes increasingly creepier.

“How’s your marriage?” The question is asked Stephen King style; a voice that is neither the narrator or the author as much as the horrified conscience of the story. King frequently employs the omniscient voice to inject terror in his works; A distant hint comes to the character, almost through the character.

The answer to this quintessential question is no doubt horrifying when explored by the fictitious Darcy Anderson in the tantalizing excerpt released by Simon & Schuster. King sets this up as he always does, though, in the little details that we can all relate to.

There is also a sense of doomed normalcy in Stephen King’s newest short story. In “Lisey’s Story,” King writes what could be a summary of his work, “No one loves a clown at midnight.” “A Good Marriage” has a lot of hints of ill-timed normalcy; Darcy’s secret from her husband is that “she sometimes (mostly on rainy days or on those nights when the insomnia was on her) gobbled Butterfingers or Baby Ruths, for instance, eating the candybars even after she no longer wanted them, even after she felt sick to her stomach.” Even a simple indulgence carries weight for Darcy, both literally and figuratively.

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