Friday, April 24, 2015

Experts Confirm That Ikea Will Put Your Relationship To The Ultimate Test


In a surprise to absolutely no one, Ikea, the furniture company that jokingly refers to certain products as "husband killers," is bad for relationships.

According to a recent report from the Wall Street Journal, relationship experts say that a trip to Ikea will lead to an argument. And, obviously, assembling Ikea furniture generally ensures a blow up.

As soon as you walk into Ikea, "The store literally becomes a map of a relationship nightmare," said clinical psychologist and professor Dr. Ramani Durvasula in the Wall Street Journal.

That's because underlying relationship issues bubble to the surface as couples attempt to choose furniture. “I’ve had couples go to the mat over a couch that neither of them even liked,” said marriage counselor and radio host Dr. Jane Greer to the WSJ. “Underneath, every discussion is really about how important am I to you?"

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After the torture of picking out furniture, things continue downhill at home when assembly time rolls around. Durvasula said she often "tasks couples with putting together a large piece of furniture at home and reporting back on how it went."

Ikea does have a solution for the assembly fights (although picking out the furniture you'll have to do on your own). The furniture company offers assembly services starting at $79 for all in-store purchases. Based on zip code and the "value of merchandise," customers -- and couples -- can pay a store member to help with sofa and mattress assembly, as well as wall mounting.

And even though Ikea won't comment on which products they refer to as "husband killers," Janice Simonsen, IKEA U.S. design spokesperson, told the Huffington Post that "a new living room storage series called REGISSÖR" is great for "easier furniture assembly."

For everything else, may the odds be ever in your favor.

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