Thursday, March 03, 2016
Tips For A Happy Marriage
[You may have seen this already -OR- you may not have seen this already. According to figures from Google, there were TWO views from 2/28 until now. I am re-publishing to see if those numbers change. If not, I guess I've just become horribly unpopular. In any case, if you've seen this already, my apologies for inflicting it upon you again.]
Before I tell you how to be happily married, here's something completely different. I'm in the Boston Herald today (if today is Sunday in your neck of the woods; if not, I'll still be there, but I'll be looking at my watch and wondering where the hell you've been.) I'm pre-scheduling this post, so I'm unable to give you a direct link. However, if you go to the Boston Herald Op-Ed page, I'm sure you'll be able to find me (and then make a wonderful comment, as you sometimes are wont to do.).
Now on to what the title of this piece promises - handy tips for a happy marriage.
[photo by Daryl Singer Edelstein]
Recently, a story made the news about the
longest-married couple in America, John and Ann Betar. Providing – and God
willing - they’re both still alive as you read this, he’s 104 and she’s a
relative child bride at 100. They’ve been married 83 years. Of course, they
were asked about ways to keep such a long marriage happy. They replied, “It’s
just important to be content with what you have”, and other similar statements.
Theirs is a sweet story, but my wife and I will be
celebrating our sixth anniversary on Monday and I think we have more concrete
advice to offer. For us, the less conventional married stuff we do, the more
successful our marriage is.
First off, we have separate bedrooms. This may make
you think we don’t do that thing most married couples do as often as some other
married couples do it, and that may or may not be true – I haven’t taken a survey
– but I’ll tell you the advantage: We both get a good night’s sleep. She
doesn’t listen to me snoring like an asthmatic lion and I don’t have to contend
with her using a television set as a night light. Maybe you have a mate who hogs
the covers or you like the air conditioner on while she wants to turn up the
heat. There are no two people in the world who enjoy exactly the same way of
sleeping and one of you is getting a worse night’s sleep if you share a bed.
Keep the beds in different rooms. You can always get together when the urge
strikes.
When one of us wants to watch something dreadful on
TV – my wife likes Judge Judy and Dance Moms; for me, it’s The Three
Stooges and boxing matches – instead of arguing, one of us goes to our very own
separate bedroom and reads until something we both like comes on. We maintain
our love and, despite our hideous tastes in television programming, we’ve also
become more erudite.
It’s nice to share mealtime, but there’s no rule
saying you have to eat the same things. I can count on the fingers of one
greasy hand the number of times I’ve had to share my lobster sauce, fried rice
and chicken wings, while my wife has never been compelled to give me a bite of her
liver (and I mean that in a non-Silence
of the Lambs way.)
We have hobbies that take us out of the house and
give our partner some alone time. I’ve played fast-pitch softball at least
twice a week since we’ve been married; sometimes it’s been twenty games a
month. My wife has been more civic-minded in her solo efforts, as a member of
various public committees and such, but it’s all good. We do something we love,
which the other person doesn’t, and we love each other more when we’re together
as a result.
Finally, we make it easy to remember special
occasions. For instance, I never forget our anniversary. As I said earlier,
it’s our sixth on Monday. We’ve been married twenty-four years, though. That's Leap
Day.
And before you accuse me of being a cheapskate on
anniversary presents, it was my wife who suggested we be married on that day.
Therefore, maybe the most important tip of all is to marry someone whose
serendipity matches your own general sloth.
Soon, with more better stuff.
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4 comments:
Well, Happy Anniversary to you two non-conventional lovebirds! Next year, I'll try to remember to raise a glass in your direction at 11:59 on the 28th, and be sure my toast is sufficiently long-winded to last past midnight, so I'll be sure to catch your Silver Anniversary in there somewhere. . . (And, "snoring like an asthmatic lion". . . I like it. . .)
I'm not sure what sage advice I'd offer to anybody who asked us what our secret to marital longevity is (altho, we're several years from even being halfway to 83 years. . .) Maybe the eight kids has something to do with it (or maybe, you know, it's just the causal activity for those kids). . . I know that Jenn likes to be warm in bed, and I generate a lot of body heat. . .
And Happy Birthday!
Congratulations! Love the idea of being married on the 29th. 24 years is awesome. What a woman, to put up with you for that long. And does she really like liver?
BTW My cousin's husband's birthday is that day too.... he was 17 this leap year!
Your tips are practical and touching at the same time. I think marriage is about patience to each other and having some private space.
Belated best wishes to you and Your Loveliness! I hope you had an anniversary you both could look back longingly at.
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