Anonymous wrote:But how much? Sometimes it feels like to much.
Anonymous wrote:If you marry the right person you don't even need to compromise. My wife I agree on everything. Like literally everything
Anonymous wrote:If you marry the right person you don't even need to compromise. My wife I agree on everything. Like literally everything
Anonymous wrote:In my marriage, we each let go of things where we disagree, but don't ACUTALLY care that much if the other person cares more. So basically, unless it's a safety issue, whoever cares more, "wins."
For example, I think it's tacky as hell to put up cheap decor for Valentine's Day and Halloween, etc. But my husband likes to do it and the kids love it. It's not permanent, it makes them happy, so I let it go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think my marriage is about compromise. But we have to compromise to protect it. Every time you reach an impasse, you have to ask yourself “is this worth creating conflict in my marriage?” Sometimes the answer is yes. But most of the time? It’s no.
So I don’t think of it as being about compromise. The compromises are the choices I make because I value what my marriage is actually about — loving and supporting each other, building a life together, raisin a child together, taking care of each other.
OP here. The problem comes in when it is almost always the same person backing down/giving in. And the other person not even acknowledging or realizing that, and denying it when it’s pointed out. I’m just so tired.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think my marriage is about compromise. But we have to compromise to protect it. Every time you reach an impasse, you have to ask yourself “is this worth creating conflict in my marriage?” Sometimes the answer is yes. But most of the time? It’s no.
So I don’t think of it as being about compromise. The compromises are the choices I make because I value what my marriage is actually about — loving and supporting each other, building a life together, raisin a child together, taking care of each other.