Edit: I'm editing this post NOT to avoid looking like the asshole I am, but to respect some strong commentary.
A lot of folkas have had bad experiences in marriage and divorce.
I don't know a damn thing about their circumstances, for the most part, but I ahve watched good friends and close family go through it was well. I have tried to do some things in my life, that I think have been successful in helping me have a marriage where both my wife and I have been happy enough to stay together and, I think, happier than a lot of other people. Your mileage may vary but this has worked for me.
1. Marry for the right reasons. I've seen friends and family get married because they seemed to think:
a. It was a way to get laid regularly, and they hadn't been getting laid regularly before then;
b. Their spouse would worship (love and worship are two different things IMO) them unconditionally, and they needed that to fill your own psychological holes;
c. So they'd have someone to fill the role of breadwinner, breeder, maid, nanny, chef, arm-candy or any role other than independently worthwhile human being;
d. That their spouse would not judge them or challenge them to be a better person than they were;
Those marriages did not end well, and I think that's on them. I spent a lot fo time trying to make sure I married someone because our personalities meshed well (which involves knowing something about your own personality) and that we had similar or at least compatible life goals, and making sure we actually valued each other as complete but still growing and changing human beings. That worked for me.
2. I try really hard to make that I always respect my partner. Even when I think she's being unreasonable.
3. I try to make sure I cut her a lot of slack. I'm a long fucking way from perfect. I'm annoying. I piss people off. At times I am arrogant, self-centered, selfish, petty, vindictive and a little bitch. Shit, sometimes I even smell bad. This means that whatever she does, I owe her some serious slack, and I need to make a serious effort to live with and even relish her imperfections and flaws.
4. I've spent serious time and effort to figure out what she needs, then deliver that. I'm not talking about new skis (although I also buy her new skis). What's it going to take for her to find some basic happiness, satisfaction, contentment? What would help her find inner peace, and become the person she wants to be? I try to figure that out, then do it.
5. Stop thinking I'm entitled. I'm not. At least not any more than anyone else is. And when I find myself thinking I am entitled, I push back hard on that.
Some marriages will fail despite doing all these things. I get that. And some people are just toxic no matter what you do. But if you find yourself married to such a person, I think you almost certainly failed at step 1.
Lots of folks claim they want a "good marriage." But they either won't put the work in. Or their definition of "good marriage" is fucked up to begin with. The above is a big part of what I've done to try to help build what I consider a good marriage.
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