New rules for a good marriage
Surprising new marriage rules to help you get closer
- or even fall in love again:
by Sarah Mahoney
By the time we reach our 15th wedding anniversaries, most of us know
how to handle the ups and downs of marriage. Sure, the wedding china may
have a few chips, and perhaps we’ve had one too many spats about who
forgot to bring home the milk.
But we’ve also learned to negotiate holidays with the in-laws,
wrangle tantrum-throwing kids, and talk each other through blown
transmissions and career crossroads.

In for a new set of material challenges |
Now, instead of having our accomplishment acknowledged, it looks like
we’re in for a whole new set of marital challenges.
Friends, family, movies, and talk show hosts warn us of midlife
marriage dangers like husbands ditching their wives for younger women or
empty-nest syndrome catapulting couples into divorce court. If getting
the kids into college didn’t force us apart, it seems, then a
20-something blond will.
Well, maybe not. At last count, America’s divorce rate had fallen to
36 percent, its lowest level since 1970. That’s because, on the whole,
most of us like being married, and so do our spouses.
And while there are certain challenges inherent in waking up next to
the same guy for 5,379 mornings in a row, many so-called “inevitable”
marriage pitfalls are really just unexamined old wives’ tales.
On closer inspection, two facts become clear: There’s only a trace of
truth in each fable - but there’s also the potential to retool them to
make your relationship even closer. Here are five of the most enduring
myths, plus new rules to replace them.
Myth: Never go to bed angry. If you don’t hash through every
conflict right away, it’ll lead to resentment and ultimately blowups.
As marriage folklore goes, the idea that it’s imperative to settle
every disagreement before day’s end is pretty well entrenched. (After
all, that’s the way some people read that “Do not let the sun go down on
your wrath” line from the Bible, as well as how others interpret the
pop-psychology dictum “voicing grievances clears the air.”) And many of
us have accepted the premise that if we don’t address disputes at once,
all that unresolved conflict just festers inside us and we’ll wake up
angrier each day, until someone finally explodes over an uncapped tube
of toothpaste.
Ideally, of course, we would all be able to truly forgive every
slight and make up before bedtime. But guess what? No one is that
perfect. And, in reality, most spouses don’t solve problems well when
they’re mad.
In fact, “the idea that it’s helpful for couples to air their
grievances in the heat of the moment is probably one of the most
dangerous marriage myths out there,” says John Gottman, Ph.D., professor
emeritus of psychology at the University of Washington and author of The
Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work.
“Often, nothing gets resolved - the partners just get more and more
furious.” When people are overwhelmed by emotions like anger, they
experience what psychologists call “flooding,” a physiological response
that leaves their hearts pounding and their concentration shot, to say
nothing of their ability to resolve arguments fairly or amicably.
New rule: Sleep on it. Conflicts are best dealt with when you
have calmed down and are well rested.
Rather than stay up to debate the disagreement du jour, Gottman
suggests that couples set aside a moment every night to focus on what’s
good about their marriage. Then, “no matter what - if you’re angry, if
he’s angry, or if you’re both exhausted - kiss good night for six
seconds,” he advises.
“Sure, sometimes you’ll be so mad or tired that the kiss will last
for six nanoseconds. But it will remind you of your enduring affection,
and besides - long kisses often lead to something even better than
conversation.”
That’s not to say that conflicts don’t have to be dealt with. To make
sure disputes don’t get swept under the bedsheets, Gottman recommends
having a standing, short “State of Our Union” meeting each week (just
not at bedtime). “Take turns telling each other something about your
marriage or your partner that you appreciated that week, and then
afterward each of you gets to bring up one issue.”
Myth: One day the two of you will just realize you’ve grown
apart and fallen out of love.
The fable is that some couples just drift apart as their
personalities change or their interests diverge. But experts say if you
look closely at most happy twosomes, you’ll be amazed at how little they
actually have in common. She could spend every spare hour crafting, and
he might be the world’s most ardent sports fan.
Yet they’ve discovered ways to be themselves and together at the same
time: That means sometimes she knits on the sofa to keep him company
while he watches the Reds battle the Mets. In fact, experts say, shared
interests or even similar temperaments are no assurance of marital
longevity.
“If these factors were truly important,” Gottman says, “couples who
meet through matchmaking services, which frequently try to pair singles
according to hundreds of points of compatibility, would have a better
chance of staying married than those who meet randomly. They don’t.”
New rule: * A marriage doesn’t run on feelings - it thrives
because both spouses work hard on it.*
“We need to give long-term partners credit for their marriages,” says
Diane Sollee, M.S.W., director of smartmarriages.com. “These couples
have probably worked their way through hundreds of disagreements,
illnesses, financial problems, kids’ issues, maybe even an affair. They
survive because they understand that they are a team, and they work to
find ways to come together, whether in a crisis or in good times.”
The truth is, we all change constantly, and that’s a blessing. “If
you sprayed fixative on people during their wedding ceremony,” says
Sollee, “life would just be too boring.” But make sure you and your
husband are checking in regularly with each other, and that all the
little marital compromises and negotiations are making you both feel
happy and involved in each other’s evolving lives. That way, you can
grow together, rather than apart, and, if anything, feel more in love
than ever.
Myth: When the kids leave home, there will be nothing left to
keep your marriage together.
Most parents have pangs of sadness when the kids are finally gone,
moments when the house seems impossibly quiet or they catch themselves
having a lengthy chat with the cat. And some couples really do struggle
- but many renew their commitment to each other.
“With the kids out of the house, marriages can bloom - when there is
a sense of shared purpose,” Gottman says. That communion can sometimes
get pushed aside in the daily round of raising a family and making a
living.
“Some couples may have let that feeling of togetherness die,” he
explains. “Then it’s not the kids’ leaving the nest that somehow makes
their marriages seem empty. They’ve already been empty a long time, and
when the children leave home, the couple finally notices.”
But for many husbands and wives, “marital satisfaction actually goes
up once the kids are gone,” says James Bray, Ph.D., a psychologist at
Baylor College of Medicine in Houston.
After an adjustment period of six to 12 months, spouses often realize
that they have more leisure time, more money, and more freedom to
reengage with each other. And without children in the house, there’s
often less cause for conflicts.
New rule: Your marriage can flourish in that new freedom.*
When your kids move out, keep your life full and your relationship
central. Compile lists of what you and your husband can do now that you
couldn’t before, suggests Bray, whether it’s travelling to Tahiti or
having sex on the sofa.
“Celebrate! You’ve succeeded in raising independent adults,” he says,
“and now you have the opportunity to decide what to do next. Will you
get more involved in town politics? Learn to tango? Go out to dinner
more often?” Whatever it is, make sure it’s something you both enjoy as
you rediscover each other.
Myth: Every guy has a midlife crisis - any day, your spouse
will drive off in a new red sports car.
It’s true that men sometimes do crazy things when they reach a
certain age. You may feel like snickering at some of their attempts to
regain their lost youth, like the balding executive who gets a
spanking-new Harley - or a much younger girlfriend. Such drastic changes
are fortunately far from commonplace outside the soaps, but
psychologists say that most of us will go through a period of midlife
reevaluation.
New rule: It’s not a crisis - and it’s not just for men.
Actually, this period of reexamination is a healthy part of
development. As people move into their 40s, 50s, and beyond, their
perspectives shift. Careers may plateau or take off in unexpected new
directions.
The first serious health problem may come along, or a parent may die
and spur you to rethink your priorities. All of these are natural,
inevitable transitions, and the best approach to dealing with them is to
learn what you can and follow where they lead you.
Fortunately, most people do: A recent poll by volunteermatch.org
found that more than half of those over 55 are looking forward to
starting new chapters in their lives. More and more the phrase “midlife
crisis” is being swapped for “reinvention”; all across America, you can
hear men and women talking about their second acts. But rarely do they
mean a full-scale life overhaul.
More often they’re contemplating ways to make more time for what they
already love. Men who have done a little woodworking take on a deck
redesign; women who have always wanted more time to get in shape sign up
for their first triathlon.
Not only are these course corrections good for us as individuals,
they also seem to invigorate our relationships. People in their 40s and
50s feel they have more control over their work, their finances, and
their marriages, reports a multi-university study. Some crisis, huh?
Instead of worrying about his issues, focus on whether you’re ripe for
reinvention yourself.
Rediscover your priorities, and above all, don’t feel you’re being
selfish by pursuing your passion: What’s good for you is good for your
marriage, too. |