Yes it can depending on the individual's personalities. If one yells and screams constantly or is moody, then the other will become depressed and feel like they are walking on thin ice around their partner. No one wants to live like this, so it's fair to say there will be a show down sooner or later. Everyone, even the quietest of people will be backed into a corner one too many times and come out fighting. When someone calls you names or puts you down in other ways then it's human nature to fight back with some stinking words of your own. Fighting takes more energy than sitting down and trying to communicate to resolve your problems. If one of the partners is unwilling to try to resolve these problems then separation is a good idea, but not a divorce immediately. More women will seek psychological help than men. Some men feel seeing a psychologist as being weak in character or, they are simply afraid to face the truth and would rather blame their significant other.
Good luck Marcy
Can it work the other way though? If one partner is emotionally unavailable, controls the purse strings, makes put-downs quietly and just seems to enjoy pushing a somewhat emotionally needy partners buttons, can't that cause the emotionally needy partner to become equally abusive, creating a tit for tat atmosphere that just keeps escalating until the needy partner becomes hysterical, needing to argue the point, screaming and threatening to hurt herself? Is she just becoming abusive to defend herself, or has she possibly been abusive all along?
In general, it is viewed as a "lack of abuse". Both partners look out for one another, and don't put each other down. They live in "harmony", an ideal relationship with only optimism.
the relationship benefits both species who cooperate in it
yes
An "exclusive" relationship is when two partners are committed to each other and only each other.
"Long-term relationships with customers and other partners lead to success"
Domestic violence and emotional abuse are behaviors used by one person in a relationship to control the other. Partners may be married or not married; heterosexual, gay, or lesbian; living together, separated or dating.http://www.domesticviolence.org/definition/
NO.... because then it would NOT be a symbiotic relationship it would be a parasitic one
Depends on how traumatic the emotional abuse is.
A good relationships is one that has both partners highly respecting each other. The partners are helpful to one another and always do their best to make the other happy.
Business and trade partners. Also both are neighboring each other.
Presumably no. Both partners need to be understanding of what it means to have lupus and they need to be well-versed in managing the condition. In a mature relationship where both partners support each other, lupus would be a 'bump in the road' but would not derail the strong relationship.
It is where both partners benefit from the affair. In other words, both enjoy the time spent.