More lbian than gay upl ci to break up.
Contents:
- GAY YOUTUBE UPLE MARK MILLER AND ETHAN HETHTE SPL AFTER FIVE YEARS TOGETHER
- HOW TO SURVIVE (AND W) A GAY BREAKUP
- GAY RELATNSHIP BREAKUP CAN BE PROBLEMATIC. HERE’S HOW TO AVOID THE RISKS
- MARRIAGE BREAK-UP RAT SIAR FOR GAY, STRAIGHT UPL
GAY YOUTUBE UPLE MARK MILLER AND ETHAN HETHTE SPL AFTER FIVE YEARS TOGETHER
* gay couple break up *
A gay uple who beme famo om makg YouTube vios of their liv together have announced their spl after five years a tear-jerkg vio. The two ma a name for themselv creatg ntent about their daily liv and travels as a gay uple, acrdg to and Boo also shared a jot YouTube acunt, where they had nearly 2. Will Gay Coupl Divorce More than Straight On?
HOW TO SURVIVE (AND W) A GAY BREAKUP
Why do people break up? The sad tth is that ’s easier to fall love than to stay love. Did you know that 70 percent of straight unmarried upl break up wh the first year? This is acrdg to a longudal study by Stanford soclogist Michael Rosenfeld who tracked more than 3,000 people, married and unmarried straight and gay upl sce 2009 to fd out what happens to relatnships over time. The study found that after five years there was only a 20 percent chance that a uple will break up and that figure dwdl by the time they have been together for ten years. The qutn is, why do so many upl break up wh a year or two? Experts say there are ne key reasons for why this happens. * gay couple break up *
Us gays, wh our propensy for the dramatic, might wish that when a relatnship ends we'd bee Dty's Child and emerge om the tear-staed sea, cked mo, reborn strong and pennt "Survivor"-style, but realistilly you're gog to be a plete fuckg begs are predictable creatur.
GAY RELATNSHIP BREAKUP CAN BE PROBLEMATIC. HERE’S HOW TO AVOID THE RISKS
And the answers he has found—at least those he has mtered so far (the study is ongog)—are pretty chart below shows how the likelihood of breakg up chang as time go by for straight and gay upl, both married and are obv patterns, of urse. Both straight and gay married upl are far ls likely to separate than their non-married same-sex married upl, the break-up rate falls om roughly 8 percent for those who have been together for 5 years to unr 1 percent for those who have been together for at least 20 years. Unmarried upl on the other hand, both straight and gay, have much higher break-up rat—even when they have been together for more than twenty is ltle to be surprised about here.
MARRIAGE BREAK-UP RAT SIAR FOR GAY, STRAIGHT UPL
Notice how steep the curve is for both straight and gay upl early percent of the unmarried upl who had been together for ls than 2 months durg the first wave of Rosenfeld's study were no longer together when he checked up aga the followg year.