Shook up
- Female
- Married
- In this relationship for TEN YEARS (I picked this because of statistics on divorce before and after the ten year mark - ten years is "pretty stable")
- Happy (not just biding her time until the kids are old enough for a divorce, not wondering what life would be like if, not trapped but grinning-and-bearing-it, not Working Through A Rough Time Right Now, but GLAD she's there)
I came up with one after a fair amount of thought. I have several other possibles. For most of these possibles I have to stretch one or more of the criteria - sometimes the length of time, and sometimes I don't know the lady in question well enough to say whether she's grinning and bearing it. But there was one DEFINITE.
So I thought of my own life, and I thought, okay, I'll try to stick it out. One out of hundreds of women I know -- hey, I can match those odds. I'm willing to work at it. She exists, so I know it's possible.
Last night I learned she's filing for divorce.
Y'know, I hate to sound like a cynic, but some days the cynical answer really does fit what I can see.
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I'm not worried about Kimmy and me, though. We know how much work it is to make things last.
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I'm not worried about Kimmy and me, though. We know how much work it is to make things last.
Excellent. So few do, it seems sometimes. And it doesn't have to be arduous difficult work, if you just keep up with it. Maintenance is a lot easier than rebuilding...
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Hope that helps!
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Thing that really gets me about this gal is that she actively praised her husband. She'd send a note to her friends saying how her day was, and somewhere in there would be something he did that she really appreciated. This was a pattern that went on for years. I have never seen another woman do that! And now, after being out of touch for several months, this. One of them's had some kind of personality shift, I keep thinking.
I'm sad to see a good thing die. :-(
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Just because a relationship ends, does not mean it's a failure.
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My sister (3.5 years my junior) has recently become very disheartened as I and our two cousins (both my age) have all been married and divorced. And worse, all our husbands were abusive. Also, a woman we grew up with (also my age) who was married a year before I was, is also now getting divorced. My sister is really discouraged.
At my high school reunion, there was one other woman from my social circle of sorts who had already been married and divorced as well (like me). We've only been out of high school for 10 years.
Yeah, it is depressing at times
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Isn't it? But you are happy with your Kitty now, yes? Ten years from now I hope you are still happy. :-)
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I have the same fears as you - the odds really do seem overwhelmingly against having a long-term, stable, HAPPY, monogamous relationship. I just did the same mental inventory you did and I couldn't come up with a single person. The closest I came was my best friend who is in a long-term (8 year) monogamous lesbian relationship which, by all indications, seems to be happy and fulfilling to her. The only other happy relationships I know of are all shorter (5 years or less). Although most of those are people who had VERY bad first marriages and have just embarked on their second - so my hope is that they all learned something from the first & the second will be better for them (statistics don't seem to bear that out though).
I know in my own relationship - I love my husband, I am happy to be with him but it is so damn hard to maintain a happy, equitable, fulfilling relationship. It is WAY more work than I ever thought it would be. And some days I feel like we're really not going to make it. We have had an awful lot of things to deal with in the short time we've been married (2 years next month) so I'm hopeful that at some point the bad news/hardships will ease up & we'll have a better idea if it's always going to be such a struggle. We both have had so much to deal with, not including each other, that it's just inevitable (I think) that our marriage would have some strain on it.
I'm just babbling now, so I'll stop - I just wanted to let you know that I hear exactly what you're saying!
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Indeed I am. That was like a bucket of cold water on the head. Sigh.
I just did the same mental inventory you did and I couldn't come up with a single person.
Yeah. Of course, ideally we'd be looking at people a little older than ourselves, as not everyone in our generation got married in their early twenties. But still... our parents, grandparents, neighbors? Where are the happy ones? I need some role models here, darnit!
It is WAY more work than I ever thought it would be.
Ain't that the truth! At least you're DOING it, which is better than I did for a while - I put it off, which got us in trouble. Lots to fix now. Bad CJ, no biscuit; don't do that again!
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I've known a few other couples over time, too -- my host parents in Australia (about 45 years), the parents of the kids I used to babysit (on about 23 years now), the sister of one of them (about 20 years), and so on.
I know a pair of women who have been together since '65, but they aren't allowed to get married. (One told the other, in front of me, "You only stay with me because I make good biscuits." The second replied, "You only stay with me because I suck on your hoohoo." The first one giggled and blushed.)
Casey and I might never get married -- might, might not -- but if we make it ten-plus years (any votes?) I'd consider myself one of those. We aren't legally married, but then, neither are my sister and her girlfriend. ;)
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I love the exchange between the two women you mentioned. That is great. :-)
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My most distant LDR partner has an almost perfect marriage, and they've been married for over 10 years, so that's another case for you. (Of course she, too, has had some poly hell... I note a trend here, where if a relationship survives poly hell it seems to be stronger and more resilient in the long term. Hmmm... I wonder how general that is?)
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a) I'll start knowing people who are older
b) I may start deliberately choosing to know people who are happier
Worth a thought. Hmm.
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I think this is a pretty common occurance, whether for poly or mono relationships. "What don't kill ye, makes ye stronger!" I know that my relationship with my husband went through the fire in the mid 90's, and it's been getting steadily better ever since. The poly hell I've been through recently had nothing to do with my husband, thank goodness, because it meant he could support me through it.
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Unfortunately in my family, in my generation, I don't see a lot of that - I have 4 male cousins (2 each on maternal/parternal sides) . One never married (had a long term relationship that didn't work), one is divorced and raising his son (apparently she had problems), and one just got divorced after 10+ years. (The other one is married, not sure for how many years.)
Both my mom and my maternal uncle were married twice, as were my maternal grandparents.
However, my aunt and uncle on my dad's side have been married close to 50 years as were my paternal grandparents.
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I can guess what Kathy might say, but you should probably ask her yourself.
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Your Kathy is (as I told Joe about his Chris - gak, too many name duplications here) on my short list. I don't know her well MYSELF, but if she were grinning and bearing it, I trust YOU would know. Some men would, some wouldn't, YOU would. In my opinion.
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Nov 1986, ok, coming up on sixteen years together; just passed eight years promised. Heh. Just had to convince myself I could still figure it out. :-)
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I don't know too many people my own age who've made it more than 10 years, but some of that may be because a lot of women have been putting off marriage until a bit later in life to get the career stuff underway first...
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Relationship role models. Wish I had more of them, more varied ones, more happy ones.
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But there are times... :):)
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Some people get to see a model of an overall happy marriage when they grow up, by watching their parents. Mine were, or I should say my mother was, miserable. She was waiting until the kids were old enough so she could leave. Then they went to years of marriage counseling, mostly to decide whether to bag it, and EIGHTEEN YEARS LATER are approaching something that looks "happy". Yeesh, what a lot of time she was sad.
Re:
Welll...
If I could nominate myself here, my wife and I can count twenty years as a committed couple, eighteen of 'em married, and we don't seem to have hit a relationship-breaking event. (Certainly we've had some that were relationship-threatening, but the threats never came to the point.)
Re: Welll...
So a while back I started deliberately searching for better r'ship role models. That's when this list got started...
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I'm not entirely sure what it would take for our relationship to transition (I don't know if it would end -- we'd always be friends, I think) and I hope I never find out. The past year was kinda rough with both of being unemployed for a stretch, but it's much better now.
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We're going on 12 years married, and over 16 years together, and are happy.
I'll send you the contact info in email.
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One last comment
Also, tow people that I don;t believe you know,
One last comment
Also, two people that I don;t believe you know,
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When you said that your friend who just got divorced was praising her husband, do you mean she was hiding that there were problems in the relationship? I'm sure I wouldn't stop praising OH up until the end, if there is one. Just because it might turn out we're not entirely compatible, doesn't mean I'll consider him a monster.