T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
276.1 | Your not alone | WHOARU::HARDING | | Wed Apr 08 1987 09:29 | 14 |
| No you don't have anything wrong with you. If you do I also
have the same problem. ( I don't see it as a problem). My
wife and I will be married 20 years this fall. Whats our
secret, really I don't know. We communicate well, try to see
each others side in a dispute, enjoy some of the same things,
but still have seperate interests. My wife is more out going and
asertive then I am. We give each other support when we have
work or other problems. No we are not perfact. There are times
when things don't mesh right. Maybe we were one of the lucky
ones.
dave
|
276.2 | quack | KLAATU::THIBAULT | It's in the bit bucket... | Wed Apr 08 1987 09:45 | 9 |
| My parents are approaching their 40th anniversary. My brother Daryl is
approaching his 15th anniversary and my other brother Daryl is approaching
his 3rd. Both my sisters-in-law have parents and brothers and sisters that
have been marrried (once) for quite some time. I read somewhere that children
of divorced parents are more likely to be divorced than children of happily
married parents. Course there are some marriages that were never meant to
be.
Bahama Mama
|
276.3 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Wed Apr 08 1987 10:48 | 17 |
| I think that love usually doesn't last forever, but that doesn't
mean it can't last for more than 2 or 3 months either. I was in
love with my ex-husband for 8 1/2 years and then we drifted apart.
My parents were in love and happily married for 37 years, until
he died. I think some people just get lucky and their love lasts
a long time. But, you never know if it's forever until one of you
dies, do you? I mean, you may have been in love for 20 years, and
then fall out of love next year. I guess all we can do is enjoy
it while it lasts and hope it lasts forever (if that matters to
us).
I, also, wonder how many people who are still with their original
partners are ecstatically happy, and just not completely miserable.
There's a big difference.
Lorna
|
276.4 | 31 years + divorce = PAIN | JUNIOR::TASSONE | Spring Fling | Wed Apr 08 1987 12:09 | 44 |
| RE.2 Are you talking about parents who divorce when a child is
very young that "the children" are more likey to be in marriages
that end in divorce, or are you talking about adult children who
are married, their parents get divorce and then they are more likely
to get a divorce? I am not married but my sisters are. The oldest
sister has been married shy of 11 years. My other sister has been
married shy of 7 years. I am not married and neither is my 22 year
old sister. My parents divorced in 1984 after ****** 31 ******
years of marriage. What went wrong: they never loved each other
even from the beginning. She got married to "get out of the house"
and away from her father that was beating her younger sisters and
"he" got married because he was rejected by another woman of his
nationality (Italian). My mother was french, seamingly refined
and from a "rich" family. So, they knotted together but in 1975,
my mother pulled a gun on my father (nothing happened, Thank God)
but since that day, no love passed between them. So, why did they
last until 1984? Because my father had a little woman on the side
and could continue the facade until my sister was in college. Then,
because my mother faced up to her drinking problem and my father
left her for a woman 22 years his junior, all hell broke loose and
that was the end of it, no counseling, no marriage workshops, nothing.
Abandon ship.
You know what, my mother is VERY VERY happy and will be married
this fall to a great guy (who is also divorced but in touch with
HIS children) and I am happy for that.
As for my father, don't really care what happens to him....but,
he married the "other woman" this past Saturday and I did not attend.
I really hope that if you're in a marriage that "isn't quite right"
but you "want" to work on it, you will TRY. If it's worth keeping,
you work at it. If it's not, you end it.
I sound bitter and angry and I am. I'm in counseling right now
to combat my negative feelings towards my father. It has been real
rough.
All this crap and only 26 years old. I would have been better off
it they divorced earlier. But, my mother said she was from the
old school and you "stuck it out for better for worse, for richer
for poorer" with no regard to mental health. Boy have things changed.
Cathy
|
276.5 | | FAUXPA::ENO | Bright Eyes | Wed Apr 08 1987 12:39 | 23 |
| re .3
Agreed, Lorna, being in love doesn't last forever. But, love doesn't
have all that much to do with a successful marriage.
It's a big component, but I think friendship is a bigger one. And
I believe that love is not something that happens to you, or comes
from the outside, love is something you choose, something you do.
This doesn't mean that a successful marriage is just a matter of
choice -- you can't make choices for your spouse. But if both partners
are committed to choosing to love each other, to work at the marriage,
the chances for success are higher.
And it helps to have a common "vision" of what you expect out of
the marriage. That means discussing expectations, so people can
make adjustments in their behavior if necessary and let go of
unrealistic expectations if necessary.
I'm not a long-married person (three years next week), but I intend
to be.
Gloria
|
276.6 | I've been divorced | CELICA::QUIRIY | Christine | Wed Apr 08 1987 18:40 | 26 |
|
I've been divorced. The reasons for getting married were all bunged up
in the first place, I can't remember specifically how I rationalized it
at the time, nor can I believe that I actually did do it, but I've
learned from that mistake and I'll not make a similar one again. It
broke because I was never committed to making it work. It might have
broken even if I had been, but I wasn't so it didn't even have a chance.
That's probably the one thing I've done that I'm most ashamed of. I'd
like to be married, or partnered for life, but I take it all very
seriously now and I'm not in any big rush.
I've often wondered how much I've been affected by Lack of Father. My
parents divorced when I was a baby, and my father was generally not
present. My mother remarried for a short time (a year or two, maybe)
when I was 7. The guy was a lot of fun, we sang songs while driving in
the car, but he was also an alcoholic and a kleptomaniac. When I was 17
she married my stepfather. I loathe the man. I've blocked out big
chunks of my life from about 16 - 18, which is when I bailed ship. But,
he didn't really have any effect on me, I don't think. I did latch on
to kindly, fatherly sorts of men as a child, though. I remember fondly
Mr. Martin the Mailman, and Mr. McQuivey the father of two of my friends
till they moved to Missouri. I think I've probably been handicapped a
bit by not having seen a marriage in action, but I don't think it's
something I can't overcome.
CQ
|
276.7 | RE: .5 -- Great! | HUMAN::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Wed Apr 08 1987 21:27 | 17 |
| Gloria, (May I call you Gloria?)
Thank you for your note. The point about love being something
you do something you commit to is very important, and not
appreciated nearly enough. (And by making it, you saved the
conference from having to endure one of my long daitribes on the
subject.)
Selma and I have been married almost 14 years and were together
for about 4 before that. We are much much more than "not
miserable." Being married for us has its ups and downs, but the
downs are less frequent and better every year and the ups are
really great. It's been a lot of work, and will be, but it's
great. The secrat, to my mind is love, trust, commitment, hard
work and lots of fun. Oh yes and loving.
JimB.
|
276.8 | the sum is greater than the parts | OPHION::KARLTON | Phil Karlton, Western Software Lab | Wed Apr 08 1987 22:45 | 8 |
| Jan and I got married back in August of 1968 after going out on
3 dates. For the most part we remain ecstatic. We have had only
2 fights/arguments/disagreements that have lasted more than a day.
It's a lot of work; but then it's been hell of a lot more fun. For
the most part, we still consider ourselves newlyweds.
PK
|
276.9 | Thru the years...you've never let me down... | MTBLUE::ROBBINS_GARY | | Thu Apr 09 1987 04:33 | 22 |
| My wife Karen and I have been married 12 years next month. We got
engaged after we had dated 6 weeks, married 5 months later. And
no, it wasn't because we had to.
It's been rough at times, but it gets better as the years go by.
Marrige is a partnership, you've got to work at it. Trust is our
biggest asset. We can always count on each other to be there when
needed.
Lots of folks today break up after the honeymoon is over..."Good
times are gone and so am I"...well,real love, not romantic love
is when you stick around and work it out...and the rewards are
worth it.
The more people we know that break up, the stronger we cling to
one another...and the harder we try to make it work. And work it
does.
Oh, there are ups and downs, good times and bad...but that's all
part of it, isn't it ? Kenny Rodger's song "Through the years"
sums it up for us, it's kind of our theme song. Listen to it
sometime...
|
276.10 | From the other side... | SHIRE::SLIDSTER | | Thu Apr 09 1987 13:04 | 21 |
|
I am not one of the ones who remained married despite a lot of effort.
I thought I had all the things that people are talking about, ie
commitment,love,hard work etc,etc and then one day, after a period
of not really talking a lot we just decided to split. After we split,
we realised that we didn't really *love* each other - it was just
easier to stay together than go through the hassle.
Post split - well, life is different now. It's much more fulfilling,
for me personally, being single. Sure, there's a lot of pain and
a lot of dashed hopes but should any of you currently married people
find that it's not working - don't stay there - it's not worth it.
Dont get me wrong, I'm not advocating Divorce to anyone but it's
not the end of the world - merely the start of a new phase of life.
be lucky,
Steve
|
276.11 | Explanations | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | Back to Reality | Thu Apr 09 1987 18:34 | 24 |
| I can think of several situations that would account for two
individuals remaining in a marriage.
. Two people meet and the union is "made in heaven", "the perfect
match" they are best friends, in love and ecstatic.
. Two people meet and realize they have common goals, similar
interests and enjoy each others company. There enjoyment comes
from the companionship they derive from each other.
. Two people meet and make a contract...each provides the other
with some need and they live a married life and maintain their
separate interests.
. Two people meet and marry and the marriage does not work out
but they stay together for any number of reasons (children,
religion, financial)
I would say the first situation is luck and those that have that
kind of marriage should say Thank You daily. The second two are
hard work and those people should be commended. The fourth situation
is sad and I don't know whether to admire those people or pity them.
My marriage did not work out and I will always wonder if I should
have made the best of a bad situation.
|
276.12 | I'll be darned if I know! | ATPS::FODEN | | Thu Apr 09 1987 19:48 | 47 |
| Wonderful question. I wish I had the answer. I've been married
twice. Once when I was 19 and I knew it wasn't going to work but
did it anyway. The other when I was 25 and thought it would last
forever, and 15 years later didn't want it to last another minute.
We understood all about communication, love, commitment and hard
work and we put it into practice daily. However, it seemed that
there was all that it was about, the work and the commitment and
just this empty space between us. He wanted and deserved what I
couldn't give and I wanted what he was unable to give. We grew in
very opposite directions at different speeds.
It took marriage counseling to help me clarify that we both deserved
much better from life. Separating was a very painful process,
however my only regret is that we waited so long for all of the
wrong reasons, children, $$$, property, shoulds, etc.
I can only applaud those who are together in a loving, supporting,
long term relationship that works, it is heartwarming to hear that
some of you have made it.
While I was in the relationship, I didn't realize just how bad it
was, now that we have separated, I realize just how valiantly we
carried on under impossible circumstances. I am simply not the
person I was 15 years ago. I have different wants, needs, expectations,
desires, pleasures, issues, etc. and trying to be a person I no longer
am for someone who had every right to assume I would never change was
a constant insidious and painful drain. I was always trying to fit myself
into a mold, always working on myself so I would be a better person
and the marriage would be ok. I was always wanting us to do workshops,
marriage encounter, etc so the marriage would finally be OK.
Everything we did benefited us immensely as individuals, however, it
was like trying to make an avacado and watermelon into a banana, both would
be irreparable altered in the process. And it just got so the end
result "maintaining a marriage" wasn't worth the cost of two perfectly
good but different people.
He still feels I will someday regret breaking up, however I feel
I have done the right thing (if there is a right thing).
Again, I am glad to hear from those who have made it and how they
have done it. I have much to learn in the area of relationships.
Jim B. I find your words so wonderful and moving.
Alicia
|
276.13 | Going on twenty... | STUBBI::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Thu Apr 09 1987 22:31 | 29 |
| This has been a question that I have been meaning to answer
but have found it hard to find the words....
I guess that Don and I come the closest originally to Joyce's
second situation - tho after twenty years he is definitely my
"best friend" today.
Being married and staying married is somethinI can't necesarily
find the reasons for - but we do work at it, we still love each
other, and we keep trying every day of our lives. A good friend
of mine has said to me that you may have to work at it but it
shouldn't seem like work all the time.... there is a lot of truth
to that....
My parents will be married 49 years this September, and my younger
sister will be married 21 years the same month. Both are warm marriages
full of love and friendship and both have had their rough spots
and survived them. My youngest sister married her highschool sweet
heart and divorced him after they both finished school - she has
just celebrated her 8th anniversary of her second marriage and it
looks like she definitely has a winner this time.
One of the thin that was very special to me was to inadvertantly
over hear my Dad talking to his three sons in law about how happy
he was with the men his daughters had married and watching how these
four men who really don't have a lot in common worked on being
friends with each other.
Bonnie
|
276.14 | I guess we're not weird. | GENRAL::FRASHER | Disguised Colorado mountain man | Tue Apr 14 1987 01:42 | 19 |
| Well, I was a bit apprehensive about entering this topic, but I'm
glad I did. Its nice to know I'm not alone. Its nice to hear of
others who are happily married. And it hurts to hear those of you
who were hurt by marriage. Believe me, if you get a good marriage
next time, its worth it. I sincerely hope that its a hurt that
I won't ever have to feel.
One reply got me to thinking about when we have fights, even the
real screaming matches (yep, even happy marriages have screaming
matches), while we were screaming at each other, a little voice
in the back of my mind reminded me that I love this person and I
couldn't live without her. Now, that just *has* to be love. Has
anyone else ever experienced that?
I think trust is the ultimate key in a good relationship. Without
trust, you might as well hang up everything else. Of course, it
won't work all by itself either.
Spence
|
276.15 | Still crazy ..after all these years | NWD002::SAMMSRO | Robin Samms | Tue Apr 14 1987 01:55 | 7 |
| Been married 11 years next week,no sign that it's going to change
and,add two years of living together before that.
Sometimes it seems really difficult,but mostly it seems easy ,and
the positives far outweigh the negatives.
...Robin
|
276.16 | you're not alone! | NEWVAX::BOBB | I brake for Wombats! | Fri Apr 17 1987 16:26 | 24 |
|
My folks are going to be celebrating their 50th anniversary in the
next year or so (I'm terrible with dates...). I've been with Jeff
full-time for about 6 years, but we've known each other for over
14 years (high-school sweethearts). And if things keep going like
this, we'll be together into the afterlife.
We've both done a lot of changing over the years and are still
changing. The relationship changes daily. Sometimes things are great,
some days they aren't so great. But, and as someone already said,
the downs no-where near offset the good times. He's my best friend,
the one I want to share everything with and when he's not around
I really miss him.
The relationship does takes work and sometimes I get tired of doing the
work, as he does. I know I would be a different person if he wasn't in
my life and sometimes I resent not being that person. But then,
I think about what life would be like if I didn't know him and it
makes me quite happy that he is there.
Don't feel like the odd wheel, just because we usually hear about
the "failures" and think that's all that's around. The working
relationships tend not to be as news-worthy.
|
276.17 | Marriage <= Happiness | JUNIPR::DMCLURE | | Thu Apr 23 1987 14:20 | 45 |
| My parents have been married for 30 years in a first time marriage
as a result of meeting in college. They used to relate their experiences
of all their friends getting divorced to the point where they were about
the only people they knew who were still married! It's not too unusual
to be in this situation, so don't fret it.
As for myself, Karin and I just celebrated our 2nd wedding aniversary.
We also met in college, but for us, it was more like grad school (both of
us pursuing second majors). We dated for a couple of years before tieing
the knot, but I was ready to get married from the start (Karin was the one
who needed convincing). I spent my younger years shopping around. As a
result, I got most of my curiosity out of my system; what's left can be
satisfied by my imagination combined with this strange sense of deja' vu
that I experience with most people I meet.
Our families are lucky in that we all enjoy each other. This could
be partly due to the fact that both of our families are a thousand miles
away, but many times I wish that we could be together even more. I think
it's important that the families can get along too because a marriage will
effect both families just as much as both the families effct the marriage.
Of course, some people don't consider one's family to be that important,
or maybe just wish their family was more understanding, but there are many
forms of extended families which a couple can enjoy as well.
Looking back on my life, I once vowed never to marry (blew that one),
and I had since changed my mind, but went for years without any luck finding
a mate. Then, it happened. It was irreversable, our fates were sealed.
It's as though niether of us had any further control over our own destinies.
We knew what had to happen next, so we both retired from the singles scene
and settled down. Since then we often wonder what it would be like with
someone else, and occasionally fantasize about other people, but our basic
interests have since moved into other realms, and these thoughts only occur
during full moons and such (Howl!!).
I'm not sure how important it is that a couple stay married, I think
the important thing is that they stay happy. If getting divorced is the
only way to achieve happiness, then more power to the divorce. For those
who choose to stick it out, hang in there - chances are things will work
out ok. If you've hung in too long already, but are still determined to
make it work, then try an extended family situation; chances are, there's
at least one reason you are still together, so build on that and fulfill
other needs elsewhere. In any case, I wish everyone the best of happiness
for themselves and their families!
-dav�
|
276.18 | Me too - in it for the long haul | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Thu Sep 17 1987 13:55 | 23 |
| A late reply, but just wanted to let you know there's another "original
partner" out there. Dave and I have been married 13 years, and
knew/courted each other for 9 before we married. Neither of us
are the kind of people who desire endless stimulation and/or excite-
ment in our lives; perhaps that helps. I feel more loving towards
the man (or perhaps just as loving, but in a completely different
way) than during courtship. How do we do it? Tina Turner's lyrics
say it best:
"We gotta show some
Respect
We got a love to
protect,
Don't take it for granted
I know
That if want to
stay gold
We gotta show some respect For the things that I love about ya
For the woman that you see inside
Don't let it walk out the door
Love follows every time."
Marcia
|