how to have a happy marriage

The most important ingredient in a happy marriage? A GREAT FRIENDSHIP

I am reading a marvelous book right now:  30 Lessons for Living: Tried and True Advice From The Wisest Americans.  The first chapter, called “GREAT TOGETHER,” is advice from our elders about choosing the best life partner for yourself.

Lesson one is choose a partner with similar core values.   Lesson two is the importance of genuine friendship between life partners.

This lesson is simple.   Look for a partner you would choose as a friend, a BEST friend!  As one elder put it: Think back to the playground when you were a kid.  Your spouse should be that kid you wanted most to play with.

They suggest you consider what you would like in a lifelong friend and look for that in a potential spouse.   Ask yourself, if we weren’t in love, would we still be friends?   When the excitement and passion we all experience when we first fall in love wears off, what will there be to keep us together?

Romantic love is short lived and generally insufficient to maintain a long successful marriage.   The love you think you feel when you first meet is often a mirage, for deep love develops slowly and continues throughout a lifetime.

After the intense physical attraction wears off, will you share similar activities and interests?  Will there be the joy that comes from sharing a similar sense of humor about how silly life can be at times?   What will you be sharing for a lifetime with this person you care so much about now?

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What do YOU need most in a life partner?

I am reading a great book right now:  30 Lessons for Living: Tried and True Advice From The Wisest Americans.  The first chapter, called “GREAT TOGETHER,” is advice from our elders about choosing the best life partner for yourself.

Their resounding answer to the question what you need most in a life partner is similar core values. And, after one failed and one very successful second marriage at age 50, I couldn’t agree more!

One elder in the book said that when he first seriously started considering a new girlfriend for the role of wife, he showed her a list of the seven or eight things that he most valued, and what he wanted most from his new wife.  He included things like “family oriented” and someone who enjoyed lots of touching, because that was important to him.

Of course, there is a catch: to ensure shared core values you must know what your values are, and exactly what you seek in relationships.  Have you spent the necessary time alone to clarify your own core values?   Could you list them now?

When I met my new husband at age 49, I wanted to make certain we had similar values around money, because I knew dissimilar opinions about how money is spent can ruin a marriage FAST!   So one day I brought over my financial information to his house and said, “This is what I have.  What do you have?”  This launched an honest discussion of what we had saved so far, what we each envisioned spending it on eventually, and what we wanted our retirement to look like.

Yes, shared values are essential.  And so is honesty about who you are, and what you want now out of life.

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