Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Low expectations.
Ha!
It’s actually the results of a “happy marriage” study.
Anonymous wrote:Nobody has pointed out that none of this matters unless BOTH people do these things. You can do everything right and still end up divorced if your spouse decides to flake. People change and sometimes they change in ways that aren't something you can go along with or condone. I don't think I'd call this luck. It's more like having the good fortune that your spouse doesn't change and decide to flake on the marriage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Finding someone with good emotional health and control. Finding someone who doesn’t want to spend their life bickering over stuff that doesn’t matter.
I think being willing to let stuff go is very underrated.
I remember when we got married there was all this talk about “never go to bed angry” but sometimes just going to bed is as good/better than spending an hour talking about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. prioritize our relationship over the kids
2. don't nag (women)
3. make lots of time for each other (weekly date, etc)
**very** happily married nearly 15 years 5 kids
This was a good, pithy list, until you blew it, PP, with the second item on the list.
Nagging is not exclusively something done by women. Either you're a woman with a low opinion of other women, or a man who believes only women are nags. Whichever is the case: Your personal experience isn't a universal truth for every woman (or man) ever. Pretty misogynistic to label nagging as an issue only for women.
Anonymous wrote:I think I did three things right.
1. I found someone compatible with me. My husband is not perfect, he has some significant flaws, but those are the flaws I can deal with or tune out from. He will probably say the same thing about me.
2. I did not do it on purpose, but while dating, we spent lots of time together- just the two of us (long distance dating makes you do that). I was shocked how many marriages fell apart during Covid, but then realized that many couples have never been forced to spend much time holed up together and had no idea how they would function in that closed loop. We did and liked it.
3. Contrary to the popular advice from therapists, I am very direct and don’t do manure sandwiches. I am not waiting for a “better” time to have a conversation or look for gentle way to tell him that e.g. loud chewing is disgusting. I just say hey, cut that out.