YOUR genes won’t lead you to the altar, but they might summon you to the
divorce courts. A new study of twins suggests that genetic make-up has a strong
influence on whether or not your marriage will last—though not whether
you’ll get married in the first place.
Beth Jerskey, Michael Lyons and their colleagues at Boston University in
Massachusetts compared marriage and divorce rates in identical and non-identical
male twins. They gleaned their data from a registry of male twins who served in
the US military during the Vietnam war. In interviews in 1987—intended to
diagnose mental disorders—some 8000 of these twins stated whether they had
ever married, whether they were still in their first marriage, and if not, how
their first marriage ended.
Sure enough, identical twins—who share the same genes—were more
likely to follow the same patterns of divorce than non-identical twins, who
share roughly half their genes like ordinary siblings. This suggests there’s a
significant genetic influence on divorce.
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But there was no difference between identical and non-identical twins when it
came to whether or not they got married in the first place, suggesting this is
entirely determined by your environment. “That surprises me,” says Lyons. “So
many traits—even very complex social ones—have a detectable genetic
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Lyons’s hunch is that environment swamps any genetic influence on marriage
because people are generally young when they tie the knot, and their decision
rests heavily on the success or failure of their parents’ marriage. But once
you’re in a marriage, other factors kick in.
He thinks the genetic influence on divorce is related to factors such as drug
abuse, depression and alcoholism, which have a genetic component. The team found
that twins who were pathological gamblers, for instance, were 2.8 times more
likely to get divorced than the norm for the day. “Almost any kind of
psychopathology is going to make staying married harder,” says Lyons.
He thinks this kind of study is important because it helps reveal the roots
of behaviour patterns. “It’s not ‘hold the presses’, let’s talk to marriage
councillors,” says Lyons. “But I think this helps us to better understand human
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