Anonymous wrote:Oh, I'm sad to hear you say that. I love being married! That said, if DH died early, I would likely not remarry. I think I just really like him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always think that—if you thought about your best friend from HS or college or your 20s and then imagine you had to live with them for the rest of your life and make all decisions jointly...you would say “no way! That’s crazy!”
All that plus sex is a lot to put on one relationship. It’s no wonder that it fails 40% of the time, and is fairly miserable in about half of the rest.
Actually, occasionally I have a fleeting thought that marriage has all the fun of a nonstop slumber party (and a lot more benefits than that, haha) -- but I cherish the closeness and intimacy of being there for each other, year after year. We are extremely compatible and know each other well, yet he still manages to surprise me and make me think on a daily basis. I admire him deeply ... the kindest person I know, a strong work ethic, the kind of man that babies and dogs and cats are just naturally drawn to. He's just a ray of sunshine in the world basically, and I get to live with him! (Married almost 21 years.)
Anonymous wrote:My marriage is great and I have seen some really wonderful marriages among my relatives. I do think that immature people attract drama and marry poor partners. I have seen miserable marriages too.
One thing people should do is not have kids children rightawy when they get married. We had our DC after 5 yrs of marriage and it was great.
Anonymous wrote:I know some people are happy forever. But I’ve been with my husband for 26 years (not all of them married but got together young) and it has really lost its luster. I have a great husband, but honestly he bores me. A lot of the time, I wish I could live alone. Not like never see him...but have my own place. Have more autonomy. I basically went from living with my parents to living with my husband. Perhaps when our kid goes to college in a few years, we will reevaluate what our lives look like. I love my husband and would be kind of lost without him but am also completely bored with him at this point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know some people are happy forever. But I’ve been with my husband for 26 years (not all of them married but got together young) and it has really lost its luster. I have a great husband, but honestly he bores me. A lot of the time, I wish I could live alone. Not like never see him...but have my own place. Have more autonomy. I basically went from living with my parents to living with my husband. Perhaps when our kid goes to college in a few years, we will reevaluate what our lives look like. I love my husband and would be kind of lost without him but am also completely bored with him at this point.
This is an internal issue with you, more than it has anything to do with your marriage.
Anonymous wrote:Women my age (mid40s) often say “marriage is so hard”. I don’t know if they al mean it or they just don’t want their friend in a crappy marriage to feel bad.
I think if marriage is that hard you are married to the wrong person. I think marriage is pretty easy 10 years and 2 small kids into it.
Anonymous wrote:Women my age (mid40s) often say “marriage is so hard”. I don’t know if they al mean it or they just don’t want their friend in a crappy marriage to feel bad.
I think if marriage is that hard you are married to the wrong person. I think marriage is pretty easy 10 years and 2 small kids into it.
Anonymous wrote:People want to get marriage because a good marriage is an amazing thing. Personally I think choosing a spouse is the single most important decision a person ever makes. And its not like I'm the only person saying its important, but it is REALLY REALLY important to not pick someone crappy.
And unfortunately a lot of people make the decision in their late 20s and early 30s with the pressure of childbearing at their backs like they're playing a game of musical chairs. Or they make it when they are young and haven't really grown into who they will be yet. And so the decisions aren't as informed/careful as they should be (although some work out, yay!).
I think at the end of the day the ranking of happiness or whatever is like
1) Very happy married people
2) Good but nothing special marriage people, happy but not like, deeply in love
3) Very happy single people who have built a good community
4) Decently happy single people who are somewhat lonely sometimes but who have built a good life
5) Married couples who don't get fulfilment from one another but who have built a good life together. They could take or leave the other person but have good lives they have no interest in blowing up
6) Somewhat dissatisfied single people who regret how they got to where they are but who are still like, fine. They have regrets and wish their life was different but they have friends/support
7) Unhappily married people who actively dislike their spouse and feel lost
8) Unhappy single people who are actively angry all the time that they are alone
9) People in really bad marriages with abuse/neglect
I think when you are single, your happiness is a choice based on how much community you can cultivate. But as you age, particularly when you are elderly, the lack of a partner becomes more of an issue.
But the partner/spouse is a double edged sword. It can bring your life to high highs and it can bring it to low lows. People get married because who doesn't want high highs? They don't think too much about how low a low can be.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t know OP. I find marriage much much harder than parenthood.