Anonymous wrote:Low expectations? This isn't a knock against DH, I just grew up in a lower socioeconomic class so the kinds of conflicts and issues that we navigate in our marriage seem so small compared to the kinds of things my parents had to navigate in my childhood.
Anonymous wrote:It helps that we were younger, didn't have lot of sexual experience or relational baggage so didn't make comparisons but just grew together in this adventure which we call life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly- not having children. You don’t have much to fight about.
Really? We became closer after having kids. Kids are the superglue of our marriage.
Agree. Kids make our relationship exponentially better. Our love has grown through raising them and we never fight about them.
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.
This is a really good point although some marriages do survive these problems.
DH’s mother had bipolar disorder. MIL and FIL stuck together until her death. I don’t know how happy DH’s father was with the marriage, but he did love MIL and his grief was pretty profound when she died, although there was some relief mixed in.
BIL has severe MS and SIL has been a caretaker for him for 10 years, they were never able to have children. Somehow they find happiness together, in their memories of better times in particular, and you can feel their love for each other. I don’t know how to describe that- profound? Maybe seeing the level of commitment of her parents gave SIL the tools to work through this. Maybe it is our struggles that prepare our kids for their challenges.
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.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly- not having children. You don’t have much to fight about.
Really? We became closer after having kids. Kids are the superglue of our marriage.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly- not having children. You don’t have much to fight about.
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?
Lots of DV in the South Asian community.
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?