Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Blissfully. Really. 22 years. Communication. We're just honest about stuff and talk it out as soon as it comes up and always have.
This, except we've been together for 18 and married for 15.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Married 7, together for 10, two kids (3 and 5), very happy. I wasn't going to respond because all the PPs pretty much covered it, but had to respond the poster who said that sexual fidelity would be "too tough." That is the OPPOSITE of our experience. Because I know that DH is committed to me 100%, it has allowed for us to be closer and happier. The trust and intimacy in our sex life has made it better and better over the years, and allowed us to weather storms of pregnancy, having small children, and all of life's stressors. I can't separate my sex life from my marriage, because they feed each other. Sexual fidelity hasn't been "tough" for us at all, and I can't imagine how involving other people in something that intimate would improve my marriage.
It's actually simple for us - DH wants sex about 3 times a month, and three times a week is not, and never has been, sufficient for me. I do not confuse other sexual relationships with the intimacy of marriage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm happily married in that I know my spouse will always be there for me. We do not insist on sexual fidelity - that would make it really tough.
I hope this is meant to be funny?
Sexual fidelity is marriage, by definition. The longer we are together, the better the sex, because sex is intimacy, trust, knowledge, understanding, total and unconditional giving, a union of two into one. Sex is so profound, it can lead to a totally unique human being.
The thought of anyone besides my husband trying to be intimate with me is not only disturbing, it is unsatisfying. There is no way anyone else could give me the pleasure my husband gives me, and the technical stuff is not what I am talking about. My husband respects me, cherishes me, supports me, protects me, KNOWS me as a whole person--that is sexy, above all else.
The longer I live, the more I realize we are not obsessed with sex as a culture--we are afraid of it. Afraid of its full, true meaning.
Anonymous wrote:Married 7, together for 10, two kids (3 and 5), very happy. I wasn't going to respond because all the PPs pretty much covered it, but had to respond the poster who said that sexual fidelity would be "too tough." That is the OPPOSITE of our experience. Because I know that DH is committed to me 100%, it has allowed for us to be closer and happier. The trust and intimacy in our sex life has made it better and better over the years, and allowed us to weather storms of pregnancy, having small children, and all of life's stressors. I can't separate my sex life from my marriage, because they feed each other. Sexual fidelity hasn't been "tough" for us at all, and I can't imagine how involving other people in something that intimate would improve my marriage.
Anonymous wrote:I'm happily married in that I know my spouse will always be there for me. We do not insist on sexual fidelity - that would make it really tough.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Married 13 together 20. Very happy. Mutual respect communication, laughing, still in love. It's work - both of us make each other feel special and important. Always say thank you. Spend a lot of time together as a family and enjoy each others company. You won't be happy unless you both work at it. If it's not what you want now, take the lead and change your behavior first, be positive up beat, He may follow your lead.
I agree with this poster. We've been married 10 years and together for 13.
Anonymous wrote:Married for 10 years, together for 12 years. This is my 2nd marriage, DH's 1st. We had a rough time when we had the twins and my parents were living with us helping out, it was a rough time, we preserved and got through it with lots of patience, communication and understanding.
We take out vows very seriously, and since DH comes from a divorced family, and he often talks about how he was from a divided family and didn't want that for himself.