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1 .This is Scientific American 60-Second Mind, I'm Christie Nicholson. Got a minute?
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2 .Keeping a marriage together takes effort and care.
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3 .And maybe even watching classic romance movies, like The Way We Were or Husbands and Wives.
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4 .And this is because of the conversations such movies can start.
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5 .That's the finding from a study in the Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology.
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6 .Psychologists found that encouraging couples to watch romance flicks and then discuss them cut the divorce rate in half.
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7 .The researchers divided 174 newlywed couples into three programs: active listening, where one spouse listens and then paraphrases back what they heard;
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8 .or compassion training, doing random acts of kindness for your partner; or watching a movie a week for a month.
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9 .The movie-viewing couples discussed each film after watching it, guided by questions about the characters.
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10 .Questions like: "Were they able to open up and tell each other how they really felt, or did they tend to just snap at each other with anger?"
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11 .All three programs worked very well, dropping the divorce rate after three years to 11 percent, versus 24 percent for couples who did no therapy.
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12 .But the movie program is much more accessible and cheaper than counseling.
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13 .The researchers note the magic is not really in the movies,
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14 .but rather the time that couples take to think about behavior.
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15 .But hey, maybe sitting together in the dark helped too.
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16 .Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American 60-Second Mind. I'm Christie Nicholson.
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