Not your parents’ relationship: The
keys to a good marriage are different now
By Sean Elder
WebMD Feature
Once it was simple. You got married,
had kids, worked the land, and stayed married whether you could stand each
other or not. The concept of "a happy marriage" was no more relevant
than the idea of "a pretty tractor."
"That has changed over time as
marriage has become more independent," says Steven Nock, a professor of
sociology who studies marriage at the University of Virginia and author of
Marriage in Men's Lives. "Couples don't need each other for quite as many
things as they once did. If you're running a farm with someone, it doesn't
matter if you're pissed at her or not. You need her labor as much as she needs
yours. The couple is more or less equally dependent on each other."
Chances are, though, if you are
reading this, you are not running a farm with your mate. And if you are, you
are probably doing it out of choice, not necessity. As a recent Washington Post
story pointed out, "As marriage with children becomes the exception rather
than the norm, social scientists say it is also becoming the self-selected
province of the college-educated and the affluent." Marriage in America is
becoming more like a luxury car ―― in other words a BMW, not a Harvester.
This doesn't necessarily mean modern
marriages are happy marriages. According to the latest U.S. Census data, the
overall divorce rate has declined as couples get married later in life, often
after living together. But the divorce rate for first marriages is still about
47%.
Having
a happy marriage today means thinking of reasons to be together
"From my perspective, the hardest
thing is issues of commitment and trust," says Nock, who has followed
couples over time and conducted interviews with 6,000 married men since 1979.
What does commitment mean to the modern husband? "I'm going to behave myself
because I'm committed to this relationship," is how Nock describes it.
Because people have left the farm, and because women have achieved financial
parity, married people need new reasons to stay together.
"I have studied what people
imagine would happen to them if their marriage were to end," says Nock.
"If you don't think horrible things will happen, you are a different kind
of spouse than if you think they will. In my work, it is a very strong
predictor of divorce." In other words, if you can see yourself taking that
next step and can visualize yourself as single, you are more likely to be
stepping outside the marriage.
A
key to happy marriage: Keeping separate lives
While too much independence ― the kind
that leads to infidelity or workaholism ― is a marriage breaker, too much
dependence isn't the answer either. "Every good marriage is based on an
awful lot of separation," Nock says. "People need to have a separate
life and existence to feel validated as individuals. They can't live solely as
somebody's partner."
Nock also says people have to ask
themselves what is going to keep them together when the love fades. The short
answer is anything that would be lost to both parties if you split up.
Happy
marriage tip: Married sex is better
"If my wife and I split up, I get
to keep my own earnings, investments, assets, and toys. And the same is true
for her," Nock says. But some things don't fit that category. "I
don't know how you quantify that reaction when you and your wife see your child
take her first step," Nock says. That is worth something and cannot happen
without both partners. And there are countless things like that involving
children."
But what if you don't have children?
Well, the chances are you have more sex, and, according to Nock, it is still
the case that marital sex is better than extramarital sex. "Most research
suggests," Nock says, "that couples figure out how to please each
other better than strangers do."
Marriage
and tradition ― They belong together
It also turns out there is a reason we
put stock in anniversaries. Divorces are much more common in the front end of
marriage, and the longer you stay married, the less likely it is you will get
divorced. When that happens, there are other intangibles at risk.
"After a divorce, lots of couples
and kids complain about the loss of traditions," says Nock. "What are
we supposed to do on Easter or Passover?" The fact is, we need traditions
― starting with marriage itself.
"People don't think it matters
when you stand up and make these public vows," says Nock. "My
students don't get it. It may seem like flimsy glue, but it's better than never
making those statements ― those pledges of fidelity, of help, and
support."
Scenes
from a happy marriage: Dating
There are plenty of reasons why you
should stay married. You will live longer, earn more, and be a more social and
altruistic member of society than your single counterpart. The question
remains, in the hassle-free no-fault divorce world, how do you stay married ― happily,
that is? Terry Real, a Boston-based marriage and family therapist and author of
The New Rules of Marriage: What You Need to Know to Make Love Work, suggests
you try dating your wife.
"It's good for your children to
see you go off for the weekend and leave them at home," says Real.
"It's good for them to see you going off on Friday night because it's date
night, even if it's just jeans and a pizza and a movie. It's a tremendous
inoculation against marriage failure down the pike to put a little time and
energy into marriage all the way through."
A
happy marriage requires more maintenance than your car
Many men, Real tells WebMD, try to fix
their marriage after it is broken, after their wives have turned off or they've
lost the incentive. "What I tell guys is, 'If you don't put oil in your
engine, it freezes.' Guys will put more energy into maintaining their car than
they will into maintaining their marriage, and if you don't maintain something,
it breaks."
Among his tips for a happy marriage is
to let your wife kvetch. "A lot of guys don't want to go out alone with
their wives because they know when the wives are alone with them, they're going
to complain." Don't fight that, he says. "Take your woman out and cut
her some slack. Don't insist that everything go your way." Listen, nod,
agree now and then ― but within limits.
Doing these things is not the same as
compromise. "I don't want people to compromise on the one relationship
that is the most important relationship of their lifetime," he says.
"Women don't get what they want because men can't deliver emotional
intimacy. I talk to women about how to go about getting that. Guys don't get
what they want either. But we are so dumb and used to having low expectations
that we grumble about it, and then don't do anything about it. My message to
both sexes is: Go back into the ring and duke it out. Most guys do not feel
appreciated, cherished, and loved and desired in their marriage." You need
to learn to ask for those things, he says ― before you end up paying for them
with an extramarital affair.
"You can ask for what you need on
your job; you can say you don't feel appreciated in the work place. You can't
be selectively incompetent. Awaken to your responsibility to bring those skills
home with you."
Source: Secrets to a Happy Marriage
No comments:
Post a Comment