Exactly. Well said and I couldn't agree more. OP: Or did you attach this term only after you knew things went sour? Just wondering....
|
I don't think anyone uses this term until after it's over. It part of the relationship post-mortem when you realize it was a starter marriage. |
| I was married for 4 years. Starter marriage ended when husband decided he did not want to work. At all. And spent all day reading comic books. We worked with that, hard, for a year, therapy, meds, the whole 9 but nothing gave and one day I came home to find that he moved out. Sad trombone, but in retrospect it was the best thing that could have happened to me. |
You are not alone. Talk to any married couple for 30, 40 or 50 years and most will tell you there were times that were trying and some serious enough to have considered ending the marriage. Congrats on the 50th and a wish for many more. |
| I busted my wife red handed having an affair. |
| He died. Problem solved! |
More than family stuff, carried the emotional load for awhile. You are so correct about what you wrote. Trust - that when things are hard, you'll be there. How can you experience this if you look at it as a 'starter marriage'? |
This. No shit, OP. What an attitude! |
No no, we've heard of it. It's what you say about other people's marriages, not your own!! |
Duh people use the term once the marriage is already over |
| All these sanctimonious responses are completely missing the point. No one goes into a marriage thinking it's a starter marriage, dumbasses. This term is only applied to one's own marriage in retrospect. |
|
When he'd go on s business trip, and I'd wish that he'd die in a plane crash I knew it was over. He had a trip in Hawaii, and I had zero desire to go with him to paradise.
I took the easy way out and had an affair. Just cut your losses especially if you don't have kids. |
|
DH's first marriage was kinda a Starter Marriage--but, like others have said, you don't go in thinking that way. DH was married less than one year (but dated 6-7 years, living together for most of that), no kids, but was in his mid-30's.
He realized he got married because it was the 'next step' and there wasn't anything majorly wrong with the relationship. No major fighting, she was a great person, so why not marry her. It was only when they started talking about having kids (and the finality of being totally attached to her, even if they broke up) AND a hot woman paying attention to him (which made him realize what was missing from his marriage), that he knew he had to leave. It was hard because it was less than a year after the wedding and she did not see it coming. Again, nothing WRONG with the relationship, so she was blind sided. He realized, he didn't like to rock the boat, so he didn't make clear what his needs were (and at the time, I'm not sure he even could have told you what they were). He still feels guilty about what happened. She really is a wonderful woman and he only says great things about her. Now that he is in a good marriage (with me--I'm not the hot woman. I came along many years after that), he can see what was missing from his first. He sees that just because there wasn't anything wrong, doesn't mean it was right for him. |
i took it to mean that she's happy she didn't leave when the going got tough as life got easier later once they got through having small kids in the house. LOts of couples consider divorce around that time. |
Op here. Nope, no kids. |