Things no one tells you about marriage
The surprising, enlightening, and sometimes hard truths we all
face after we walk down the aisle - and how they teach us about what
love really means
by Ylonda Gault Caviness
“... And they lived happily ever after.” You’re smart. You know life
is no storybook. But admit it: Somewhere deep in your subconscious lurk
romantic visions of Cinderella, or maybe Julia Roberts.
The images may be sketchy and a little outdated, but you can still
make out the silhouette of the bride and Prince Charming riding off into
the sunset.

Marriage - not for the faint of heart |
In real life, sometimes your Disney fairy tale ends up feeling more
like a Wes Craven horror flick - and you’re the chick who keeps falling
down and screaming for her life. I’ve been there.
Let’s face it, marriage is not for the faint of heart. You want to
believe your pure love for each other will pull you through. And it
does. But it ain’t always pretty.
That may sound grim. But here’s a secret: Sometimes it’s the least
romantic parts of marriage that have the most to teach you about
yourself, your partner, and the nature of love. Read on for some simple
truths that will unlock the surprising treasures and pleasures in your
imperfect, unstorybook, real-life love.
You will look at the person lying next to you and wonder, Is this it?
Forever?
When you get married, you think that as long as you pick the right
guy - your soul mate - you’ll be happy together until death do you part.
Then you wake up one day and realize that no matter how great he is,
he doesn’t make you happy every moment of every day. In fact, some days
you might wonder why you were in such a hurry to get married in the
first place. You think to yourself, This is so not what I signed up for.
Actually, it is. You just didn’t realize it the day you and your guy
were cramming wedding cake into each other’s faces, clinking champagne
glasses, and dancing the Electric Slide.
Back then you had no idea that “for better and for worse” doesn’t
kick in only when life hands you a tragedy. Your relationship mettle is,
in fact, most tested on a daily basis, when the utter sameness of
day-in/day-out togetherness can sometimes make you want to run for the
hills.
That’s when the disappointment sneaks in, and maybe even a palpable
sense of loneliness and grief. It’s not him. It’s just you, letting go
of that sugarcoated fantasy of marriage that danced in your eyes the day
you and your beloved posed in all those soft-focus wedding photos.
You’re learning that marriage isn’t a destination; it’s a journey
filled with equal parts excitement and tedium.
Waking up from a good dream to face the harsh morning daylight may
not seem like a reason to celebrate. But trust me, it is. Because once
you let go of all the hokey stories of eternal bliss, you find that the
reality of marriage is far richer and more rewarding than you ever could
have guessed. Hard, yes. Frustrating, yes. But full of its own powerful,
quiet enchantments just the same, and that’s better than any fairy tale.
You’ll work harder than you ever imagined.
Early on, when people say, “Marriage takes work,” you assume “work”
means being patient when he forgets to put down the toilet seat. In your
naivet, you think that you will struggle to accommodate some annoying
habit, like persistent knuckle cracking or flatulence.
If only it were that easy. Human beings, you may have noticed, are
not simple creatures. Your man has mysterious, unplumbed depths - and
from where he sits, you’re pretty complicated, too. You have to learn
each other the same way that you once learned earth science or world
geography. And getting married doesn’t mean you’re done - it just means
you’ve advanced to graduate-level studies.
That’s because every time you think you’ve mastered the material,
he’ll change a bit. And so will you. As two people grow and evolve, the
real work of marriage is finding a way to relate to and nurture each
other in the process.
“It’s like losing weight,” says Andrea Harden, 45, of Buffalo, NY.
“You want it to be a one-time deal. You lost it, now just live. But
then you learn it’s a lifestyle. That’s marriage. The effort is a
forever thing.” So don’t be too hard on yourself - or him - on those
days when you feel like you’re struggling through remedial math.
You will sometimes go to bed mad (and maybe even wake up madder).
Whoever decided to tell newlyweds “Never go to bed angry” doesn’t
know what it’s like inside a bedroom where tears and accusations fly as
one spouse talks the other into a woozy stupor until night meets the
dawn.
If this scenario sounds familiar, I’ve got three words for you: Sleep
on it.
You need to calm down. You need to gain perspective. You need to just
give it a rest. I’ve found that an argument of any quality, like a fine
wine, needs to breathe. A break in the action will help you figure out
whether you’re angry, hurt, or both, and then pinpoint the exact source.
Maybe the fight that seemed to erupt over the overflowing garbage can is
really about feeling underappreciated.
Could be you’re both stressed out at work and just needed to unload
on someone. Taking a break will help you see that, and let go. Or maybe
you really do have a legitimate disagreement to work out. Without a
time-out, sometimes a perfectly good argument can turn into an endless
round of silly back-and-forth, rehashing old and irrelevant
transgressions as you get more and more wound up.
Even when you do manage to stay focused and on topic, there are some
fights that stubbornly refuse to die by bedtime. And if you stifle your
real feelings just to meet some arbitrary deadline, your marriage will
surely be the worse for it. “This was a huge lesson for me,” says
Andrea. “As women we’ve been trained to make nice. But the whole
kiss-and-make-up thing just to keep the peace was eating me up inside.
I’d let things build up inside me until I just exploded. Now I wait a
while to get hold of myself - let the emotions settle a bit - and state
my position. Even if that means reopening the fight the next day.”
Getting your way is usually not as important as finding a way to work
together.
I can be a bit of a know-it-all. There, I said it. It’s really not my
intention to be hurtful or brash with people I love. It’s just that a
lifetime of experience has taught me that in most areas, at most times,
I am right about most things. What shocked me several years into my
marriage, though, was the realization that the more “right” I was, the
more discontented my husband and I were as a couple. See, oddly enough,
throughout his life Genoveso has been under the misguided impression
that he’s right most of the time (go figure!). So we’d lock horns -
often. That is, until I learned a few things.
Namely, that when it comes to certain disagreements, there is no
right or wrong - there is simply your way of looking at things and your
husband’s. “I used to be very black-and-white earlier in our marriage,”
says Lindy Vincent, 38, who lives in Minneapolis. “Now I see that I’m
not all right and my husband is not all wrong. There’s more gray in life
than I thought, and that’s taught me patience and the value of
compromise.”
The more I get to know and appreciate my husband for who he is, the
more I respect his positions. That doesn’t mean I always agree with him.
But I can see the value in striking a balance that satisfies us both.
And instead of harping on how wrong he is, I can usually swallow the
verbal vitriol and simply say something like, “I see your point” or “I
hadn’t considered that.” After I sincerely acknowledge his view, it
seems to become easier for him to hear mine. And because I know I’m
being heard, most of the time now, I don’t even want to prove how right
I am anymore. Funny how that works, isn’t it?
A great marriage doesn’t mean no conflict; it simply means a couple
keeps trying to get it right.
Maybe you think that because of my newfound wisdom, Genoveso and I
never fight anymore. Ha! As important as it is to strike a balance, it’s
also important to have a big, fat fight every now and then.
Because when you fight, you don’t just raise your voices; you raise
real - sometimes buried - issues that challenge you to come to a clearer
understanding of you, your man, and your relationship. I wouldn’t give
up our fights for anything in the world, because I know in the end they
won’t break us; they’ll only make us stronger.
You’ll realize that you can only change yourself.
Ever seen the ‘80s sci-fi cult classic Making Mr. Right? When the
stylish heroine, played by Ann Magnuson, is hired to teach a robot how
to act like a human, she seizes the chance to create a perfect guy. A
hotshot commercial whiz, she uses her marketing prowess to shape John
Malkovich’s android character into her personal version of the ideal man
- sensitive, eager to please, and willing to listen.
There is a bit of that makeover fantasy in all of us - something that
makes us believe we can change the person we love, make him just a
little bit closer to perfect. We may use support and empathy or shouts
and ultimatums, but with dogged conviction we take on this huge
responsibility, convinced we’re doing the right thing.
Whatever our motives, the effort is exhausting. Transforming a
full-grown man - stripping him of decades-old habits, beliefs, and
idiosyncrasies - is truly an impossible task. And you will come to
realize, sooner than later if you’re lucky, that it is far easier to
change the way you respond to him.
Here’s a perfect case in point: “I used to go off on my husband
because he didn’t empty the sink trap when he cleaned the kitchen,” says
Kimberly Seals Allers, 36, of Bay Shore, NY. “It got me nowhere; my
rants only made him resentful. Now I come home and when the kitchen
looks clean, I’m like, ‘Cool, now all I have to do is empty the sink
trap.’”
As you face your fears and insecurities, you will find out what
you’re really made of.
I’ve got issues. Trust issues. Control issues. And others, I’m sure,
that I’ve yet to fully discover. I guess I’ve always known I wasn’t
perfect.
But in more than a decade of marriage, I’ve been smacked upside the
head with the cold, hard evidence.
There were clues when Genoveso and I were dating, especially with the
trust thing. Whether he teased me about a new haircut or came home late,
I seethed for days and even let thoughts of divorce creep into my head.
I figured, if he loved me - really and truly - this stuff wouldn’t
happen.
I’d like to be able to say that this irrational behaviour lasted only
a few months and I eventually worked it out. Kind of, sort of, is closer
to the truth.
I still struggle as a work in progress. But I am completely clear in
the knowledge that many of the deepest frustrations in your relationship
are an opportunity for you to confront yourself. That can be difficult
to accept - after all, it’s so much more comforting to keep a running
tab of your hubby’s deficits and tell yourself that his failings are the
only thing standing between you and a better marriage. But if you let
it, this bumpy journey toward self-awareness can be one of the more
fulfilling rewards of a committed, long-term relationship - you’ll learn
to love your quirks and be compassionate toward yourself, just as you’re
learning to do with him.
That’s the strange beauty of marriage: It’s full of hard times and
hard lessons that no one can ever prepare you for. But in the end, those
are the things that give richness to your life together - and make your
love even deeper and stronger than when it began.
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