Fill in the blank: Marriage is
_______. Depending on your own relationship status, maybe the first words that
came to mind were “fun” or “exciting” or maybe even “not for me.” But I think
it’s safe to say that if you’re married, at one point or another, you would
fill in that blank with “hard.” Marriage is hard—it’s awesome,
but it’s challenging. But if you’re committed to it, the hard stuff will grow
you and make you a better person than the day you said, “I do.”
Hannah, who blogs
at The Art in Life, has only been married a few years,
but a recent struggle she and her husband went through has had her thinking a
lot about the challenges of marriage and what she wished someone had told her before she got
married. “When you get married, you don’t think about things
like ‘how will my spouse and I navigate tense moments like finding out someone
blew through our credit cards,’” Hannah writes. “You imagine all the happy
things, and you imagine hard things too, but of the grand variety. Those
things can break you, but they also prompt people to rise to the challenge.
What I’m talking about are the little things that eat away at you, slow water
over stone.”
Yes, it is often
the little things, over time, which can have us building a wall up between us
and our spouse, brick by brick. But if the foundation is secure, these little
things don’t have to crumble our marriage. Hannah lists four specific things
that have made a difference in laying a strong foundation in her marriage. They
are:
1. MARRY SOMEONE
WHO IS PATIENT WITH YOU.
“Whatever patience
you have in dating will be cut in half by marriage, and probably again in half
by children,” Hannah says. “Start with a lot. Someone who is prone to
anger will be someone who is miserable to walk through life with, because there
sure are a lot of reasons to get angry.” If you are the “angry one” in your
marriage, take some time and do a heart check—what is your anger telling you?
iBelieve writer Wendy van Eyck discovered that her anger was often a symptom of a
deeper anxiety and insecurity issues. “I realized I was angry
because I was feeling insecure,” Wendy writes. “In that instance, it was my
fear of being wrong and looking stupid that had caused me to lash out.”
2. MARRY SOMEONE
WHO IS YOUR ADVOCATE.
“I feel like that
should be a given, but I am startled by the number of people I meet who are
dating someone who discourages them,” Hannah notes. “Life will discourage
you, so pick someone who doesn’t.”
3. MARRY SOMEONE
WHOSE CAREER YOU CAN GET BEHIND.
What do you
imagine life like with your spouse? Dinner with the family every night at 6?
Raising kids and growing old in the same house? Traveling the world together?
If your expectation is for family dinners every night, consider how important
that is to you before you marry someone who works nights or someone
whose job requires extensive travel. You’ll save yourself a lot of heartache if
your expectations align with reality.
4. MARRY SOMEONE
YOU LIKE TALKING TO ABOUT THINGS OTHER THAN YOUR RELATIONSHIP.
“I like James, as
a friend, not just as husband,” Hannah writes. “I think he’s interesting and
funny. If I didn’t, life would be boring blah punctuated with a little
romance.” I like Hannah’s advice, but I’ll add this caveat to it: I think many
couples don’t talk intentionally about their relationship enough.
Sure, they’ll have it out when fights come up, but it’s important to talk about
your relationship before the drama happens. Taking an evening
once a month to discuss your marriage can do wonders in making sure both people
feel heard and validated.
What do you think?
What advice would you add to this list for couples who are considering
marriage? Leave a comment below and let us know what has helped your marriage
stay strong over the years!
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