| MercatorNet | March 31, 2017
5 keys for a happy marriage
Fundamentals for making it work.
Sometimes, in places which are known for the inane, you discover a gem. Memes on Facebook are a great example. Neither I nor my husband are prolific “Facebookers”, but we both know what memes are, and they’re mostly stupid. That said, the other day when I gave in to clickbait I found a couple of examples I thought worth repeating:
“Marriage is just texting each other “Do we need anything from the grocery store?” a bunch of times until one of you dies.”
“My wife wanted 2 kittens but I am the man in the house so we got 2 kittens.”
They’re both quite funny, and they’re both very real.
The first one deals with the boredom and monotony of marriage. It’s so lovely to hear that a grandpa and grandma, after 70 years of marriage, died next to each other just two hours apart. But this is more like a Hollywood romance and not so much like your standard suburban marriage.
A long, long relationship with one other person, where each day their same old bad habits are in your face from the get-go, does not feel romantic – almost all the time. I’m not saying that my husband has lots of bad habits (we both have some), but that romantic feelings can be replaced by a nagging irritation at the bad habits of the other.
Meme 2 raises one of the other great challenges of marriage: compromise. I understand that it also light-heartedly jokes about this husband wanting to “wear the pants”, but realising he doesn’t. But it also involves one spouse giving in for the betterment of the relationship. For two people with different viewpoints, tastes and preferences, both often stressed with daily life, and who want different things for their house and their family, compromise is necessary, very challenging, but really worthwhile.
My husband and I are both clear that there’s no single, magic ingredient to a happy marriage, but there are a few things which we agree are fundamental for all. We could talk about the topic for days, but for the sake of simplicity we’ll keep it to a round list of five things that we think are important for your marriage:
- Forgive. If you read this far and no further, you’ll still take a home a gem tonight. Saying “Hey, I appreciate your apology and I’m sorry too. Let’s move on,” and meaning it, is the oft forgotten companion of an apology. Of course, this means that one of you has to suck it up and admit a mistake, but it’s equally important that the other half can accept an apology and admit any part they may have played in the conflict. Make up no matter what it costs, otherwise there will be a wall between the two of you, built by the bricks of your unresolved conflicts.
- The most important relationship in your family is between you and your spouse. If deep romance and friendship between you is a thing of the past, you can, and should, rediscover it. It’s easy to disappear into your work or focus on the kids and ignore your spouse, but your relationship is the foundation for your family. It really helps to regularly spend some time (but not too much) away from your children together, just enjoying each other’s company. The time investment is worthwhile.
- Listen if you don’t like listening, and talk if you don’t like talking. Each person has to do a lot of both, but understanding whether you have a tendency to clam up or to be disinterested is key. Your spouse needs to know what you’re thinking and feeling, and you need to know the same about your spouse. If you don’t, you’re going to miss the mark in communication, and without good communication your relationship will feel stifled.
- Know how the other feels loved. Knowing how to love means knowing how your spouse will feel loved. If this means an affectionate touch, a phone call during the day, a kind word, or making him or her a cup of tea, then do it. It costs you little, and gains you a lot. After years of marriage it can be easy to take your spouse for granted, but these small things can show them each day that you continue to love them.
- Compromise. Just give in. By tomorrow morning will you really care whether you watched Batman or Casablanca? Once you’ve had dinner does it matter if you ate Japanese or Thai? Again, you give a little and you gain a lot.
A final word: we both know that these pointers are hard to put into practice. It can be difficult to forgive and make up after a fight, and we can struggle to put time aside for each other when the kids are needy, your job demanding, and your house a mess.
But it’s worth it. It’s totally worth it.
Maurice and Jane Watson are the proud parents of 8 children. Maurice is an accountant, so he left the writing to Jane, a physiotherapist. Maurice and Jane are on the board of Family Education Australia, and together run marriage weekends and courses on parenting, which are open to all married couples. If the content of this article looks worthwhile to you, then visit http://www.fea.org.au/ for more information.
March 31, 2017
We have published a fair bit about that hot topic, gender, in recent months and I have read it all but, frankly, I would be hard pressed to give a definition of the term as it is currently used. Ridiculous, isn’t it, that an averagely intelligent person cannot learn the definition of a word that leaps out from every page on the internet, every day.
But there is a good reason for my learning difficulty, as Douglas Farrow explains in an extremely helpful article today: it’s because the meaning of the term changes with every person who uses it. In other words, there is no definition in any normal sense. Or there wasn’t, until Dr Farrow, who is Professor of Christian Thought at McGill University in Canada (that gender wars frontier), invented one that really captures the whole gamut of meanings. To find out what that is, get yourself a cup of tea and read the article.
There’s other great reading today, of course, but the short piece by Maurice and Jane Watson, an Australian couple, on 5 keys for a happy marriage, is very nice and practical.
Carolyn Moynihan
Deputy Editor,
MERCATORNET
After Brexit, what can revitalise the European Union? By Margriet Krijtenburg The principles of its founding father, says a Robert Schuman scholar. Read the full article |
5 keys for a happy marriage By Maurice and Jane Watson Fundamentals for making it work. Read the full article |
Rockin’ the (growing) suburbs By Marcus Roberts The spread of American suburbs continues. Read the full article |
Fertility Awareness-Based Family Planning: good for both body and soul By Ana Maria Dumitru Rejecting artificial birth control is the most pro-woman option. Read the full article |
Cracking the gender code By Douglas Farrow Seeking absolute authority over our bodily selves. Read the full article |
The (still) unexplained breast cancer epidemic By Carolyn Moynihan A new British study shows a high correlation with risk factors that remain ignored or denied. Read the full article |
‘We’re here, we’re queer, get Peterson out of here!’ By Brent McCamon How a psychology professor made Canada’s National Gallery ‘unsafe’. Read the full article |
Are converts to Islam more likely to become extremists? By Kim Knott and Matthew Francis Conversion and radicalisation are not one and the same. Read the full article |
Canadian doctors should not be forced to refer for euthanasia By Christine Cserti-Gazdewich A vegan, environmentalist, secular humanist doctor explains why Read the full article |
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5 keys for a happy marriage
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