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Marriage: The art of compromise

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I was asked the other day what it is that makes my marriage work so well. One of the younger girls at work is due to get married in a couple of months, and she is trying to figure out what it is that has made my marriage prosper. She is only 18, and I can't help but think it terribly young. I guess it is how many people must have felt about my plan for marriage when I was 18, but I just don't remember being quite as dingy as this girl.

All I could tell her is that if you want things to work, you have to be willing to not have everything your own way. My husband and I have very little in common. We've different interests, different tastes in food, clothes, and darn near everything else. We do have similar financial goals, and plans for the future, but that is about it. We've a different religious backgroud, and we come from different demographics. I'm your basic middle-class girl with parents who are still married and what was once a tight knit family all in one are. My husband is from a broken marriage, his parents divorced when he was a kid, and then his mom remarried and divorced again. They were from a lower income family than me, and there was a degree of harshness to his childhood that was never present in mine.

I guess in short, we are statistically destined for divorce, and yet here we are almost six years later still happily married and very in love. So how did it work is the real question? Compromise. We discuss everything, and we meet in the middle most times. Sometimes he gets his way, others I get mine, but mostly we find a medium that we can agree upon. We have very few rules in our marriage, but a firm one is that we NEVER fight over money. We just flat refuse to do it. Money can't buy the love we have, so it isn't worth ruining the one fighting over the other. Each year we see a little more eye to eye on things, but our first years were rough. Neither of us were that willing to bend, and it was sheer stuborness and a belief in our love that kept us together. Our final rule is that we accept the other for who they are and not who we wish them to be. If this means overlooking and working around traits that are less desirable, that that is what we do to make it work. It drives my hubby crazy that I'll get mad and refuse to talk about it. I'm a tempermental person, but I'm not good at venting that anger. Then out of the blue I'll attack with something saved from before in retaliation for something that has pushed me over the edge. It still makes him angry that I do it, but he accepts it, and I just accept he'll be mad when I do it. I try not to, but it still happens from time to time. I can't stand that he is lazy when it comes to picking up after himself. He'll leave dishes and wrappers around the house, and I follow behind because I don't like the mess. All the nagging, talking, and arguing in the world hasn't changed it, so now I'm resigned. I still complain, but I just pick it up and don't get too mad.

I guess that is just marriage to me. It is one big HUGE compromise. I've very few decisions that have not been altered from their original conception, and I'm sure Tom feels the same. I only hope that the girl at work can understand what I said, and that she will have as happy of a marriage as me.

Take Care,
Meg
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  1. mtpspur's Avatar
    Well said and well written. Yes when the honeymoon is over the socks still need picking up. By someone. Now the Mrs. and I do fight over money (mostly the credit card balances) or rather how it never seems to be enough yet we have never starved in all these years and somehow the cars still run. I do feel she and I don't always share what we 'really' think about some things for fear of hurting the other's thin ego. Our mantra is I love you anyway and besides if she hasn't thrown me out by now probably won't happen. I liked what you said about the changing of persons. I have found Ruth and I have mellowed over the years. She finally knows Avengers from Justice League members -- and still doesn't care. A work in progress indeed.
  2. Granny5's Avatar
    I hope the young girl you explained this to will understand it as well as the old married folks do. Beautifully written, Meg. I think that when Dan and I decided to get married, we decided that we would be married forever, not just until we got tired of it. I believe some youngsters marry with the idea that if it doesn't work out to their liking, they'll just divorce. (Dan and I have never been able to afford a divorce!) But we have never considered it. We're married, we love each other, and that's the way it is and the way it'll always be. Anyway, we could never decide who got the kids and the bills..I said he got them, he said I had to take them. Now we can't decide who gets his mother.
  3. Shalot's Avatar
    I can relate to everything you've said there. Compromise is huge. And one big thing people can do to make it work is to be aware of the things that tick their spouses off, and make an effort to do what they need you to do sometimes (especially when they're having a rough week or something), with the understanding that even though you may not always be able to pick up the wrapper, or load the dishwasher according to mr. anal retentive's idea of how a dishwasher should be properly loaded, but you do make the effort to do it sometimes. And I've read money is one the major causes of divorce. With that in mind, money needs to be discussed - if two people don't have any idea of what the other expects as far as money is handled, then the relationship is doomed, imo.
  4. 's Avatar
    Vey good blog. Rich and I have had our share of ups and downs as I know he has shared. But after 27+ years of marriage, we still manage work work things out, one day at a time, one step at a time. I hope the best for you. Ruth(mrsmtpspur)
  5. Virgil's Avatar
    Comprimise is important, but you will come across things that are not comprimisable. There are things that one can't split the difference. For me (I've been married 16 years, will be 17 in June) the bottom line is commitment. I think of it this way. I am married and there is no option other than staying married. You have to work it out, even if you have to lose.