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Men and women have physical and non-physical differences, including emotional and psychological traits. The cause of these differences is debated, but understanding them is important for effective communication in relationships. While not all individuals fit gender stereotypes, society generally accepts certain characteristics as gender-specific. Overcoming the debate and peacefully coexisting is key.
Men and women have very specific physical attributes that determine their gender. Even beyond the obvious physical attributes that make them different, traits like body size and strength typically contrast between the genders. However, there are also non-physical differences that have been extensively studied and hotly debated. Emotional and psychological differences, such as education, competitiveness, academic ability, and communication skills, are all non-physical attributes that are widely accepted as differences between men and women.
Many people believe that the non-physical differences between men and women are the result of nurture, not nature. Some experts believe that individuals are taught to display typical gender characteristics by society’s example. Still others believe they display different emotional and psychological characteristics due to their physical differences.
As John Gray, Ph.D. points out in his best-selling book, Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus, communication strategies and educational skills and needs differ between men and women. Men are straightforward and women are more complicated, emotionally speaking. Therefore, people need to understand these differences in order to communicate effectively with each other in a relationship. Whether you personally approach non-physical differences with the philosophy of nurture or with the belief that they are the result of nature, it seems apparent that men and women have many different emotional and psychological characteristics. While not all women are polite and affectionate, and not all men are emotionally detached or unable to communicate effectively, it seems that certain characteristics appear more frequently in one gender or another.
Non-physical differences vary in degree from person to person. It might be safer to define such characteristics as a personality difference between people, rather than between genders. However, society generally accepts that men are more competitive than women, that women are more nurturing than men, and that they communicate very differently. Whether or not you believe in these differences is not as important as whether you can overcome the debate about their existence and peacefully share your world with the opposite sex.
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