Anonymous wrote:I’m in a somewhat happy marriage although we definitely have our low points.
I married the nice guy. DH is kind, patient and kind. He is also handsome, smart, well liked by all, very successful and a fantastic father and person.
I think the key is to marry a good person.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My culture and religion. The people who surround me. Divorce, DV and cheating is very rare in my circle.
Mostly college STEM educated people - both men and women. High earners.
South Asian, right?
No, no. Midwestern Christian WASP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is such a disingenuous thread. People congratulating themselves on the attributes that make their marriages last. I would say it’s really easy to stay married if the following things are there: fidelity, both partners fulfilling their commitments/obligations (not protracted unemployment or financial irresponsibility), no abuse (physical, emotional etc) or serious mental illness . These are the things that wreck every marriage regardless how “forgiving” and cool and what not everyone is. Even if the partners stay married - the relationship is over. And that’s what counts.
There is a difference between struggle love and making it through hard times together. If you both want the best for the other person most of the things you mentioned should not occur. Also, if it’s gotten to the point of financial irresponsibility, infidelity etc, that means there were many missed opportunities for the person to change course and something hasn’t been resolved.
You are saying yeah it’s easy to be happy of you live in a house with a roof while previous posters are saying you have to be willing to fix leaks early on even when it’s not easy so your house keeps a roof. That commitment to marriage hopefully includes individual accountability and a willingness to seek help when needed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We separated at 16 years and it comes down to stress. Basically the pressure just kept building and building until we lost faith in each other and everything just exploded.
When stress levels are managed it’s easier to laugh, which further de-stresses. But as the anxiety levels rise, rational thinking and the ability listen and trust decline and you get trapped in this complicated drama triangle that is almost impossible to escape.
I think it depends. We actually lean on each other MORE in times of stress (work, aging parents, hard teens, etc.) It’s those times I realized how screwed I’d be without him. I’m more likely to take him for granted in the “easy times.”
We also put a lot of time and effort into our sex life. It sounds superficial, but I think it has helped a lot.
Anonymous wrote:Almost all of our friends are married to same race, age, religion, culture, values, education and socioeconomic backgrounds but that only keeps them together and comfortable. What makes some couples happier than others is being happier individuals to begin with and finding happy partners. Nobody can make you laugh if you aren't listening to their jokes or enjoy humor to begin with.
Anonymous wrote:We separated at 16 years and it comes down to stress. Basically the pressure just kept building and building until we lost faith in each other and everything just exploded.
When stress levels are managed it’s easier to laugh, which further de-stresses. But as the anxiety levels rise, rational thinking and the ability listen and trust decline and you get trapped in this complicated drama triangle that is almost impossible to escape.