Maybe Life is always like being on a trapeze or a tightrope at the circus...
Brody Ekberg wrote:that throwing it all away is an absolute last resort for me
Brody Ekberg wrote: She believes some people are just not a good fit and that this shouldn’t be so hard.
I'm only 64! That's not to old to learn to be a permie, right?
Some places need to be wild
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Be Content. And work for more time, not money. Money is inconsequential.
Brody Ekberg wrote:“High school sweethearts” and similar romantic relationships that start out in adolescence are much more difficult to maintain than romantic relationships formed as mature adults. And although they are more difficult to maintain and therefore probably more likely to fail, they are also probably stronger than adult formed relationships, so long as they survive.
"The world is changed by your example, not your opinion." ~ Paulo Coelho
At my age, Happy Hour is a nap.
Jane Mulberry wrote:
Brody Ekberg wrote: She believes some people are just not a good fit and that this shouldn’t be so hard.
Um, no, I don't think so! Relationships can be hard, no matter what age people get together. A relationship being hard doesn't necessarily mean the couple are a "bad match". It does mean they are going through a bad patch aka a growth opportunity, and commitment to staying in the relationship and growing it into something more is the only thing that will get them through.
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I'm only 64! That's not to old to learn to be a permie, right?
Saana Jalimauchi wrote:This is where my brain took me, it might or might not be helpful in moving forward but it made my own thoughts a bit clearer to myself so I thank you for starting this thread.
I really hope you two find a way to somewhere better from the current situation.
I think life as a journey. You are walking on paths, making turns, climbing hills and sometimes you just lose the path and end up in a swamp.
There can be moments you really are traveling alone, but usually there is someone at least in the yelling distance plus the random passerby's you might just wave your hand to or maybe exchange a few words.
However, the people you are traveling with are on their own paths and at some point in time you might realize the road you two are walking hand in hand on is not leading you the right way and if you have been traveling together for a long time there's a chance you have both ended up on a personal detour. Or maybe you just have to go around the mountain you are looking at but from the different sides, and then you meet again on the other side.
The beautiful part is that there are no wrong roads, you will always be in the right place, the things you have gone through have built you up. Sometimes the experiences break you apart a bit (or a lot) but in the long run you'll notice it was a good thing to happen as there is no point in building on top a shaky foundation and you end up somewhere better.
Brody Ekberg wrote:that throwing it all away is an absolute last resort for me
You wouldn't be throwing it away, it all would not just disappear. You wouln't be you if you had not experienced all that you have experienced. It is what made you the way you are today and next week you will be slighty different person again.
I find it very comforting as I myself have found myself from many places that were not good for me in the past, but it all got me here. I like myself the way I am today, the location I have ended up, the life I lead. The path I'm on is looking beautiful at the moment and I'm really enjoying the views. I do know that there could be - well, there will be - a pothole or a branch or a person I don't notice coming up and I will fall or hit my head and hurt myself again. I might have obtained the skills to not break any bones when I fall or to duck just in time to not hit my head at all. Time will tell.
There's also the thought that if you decide to part ways you could still have a person in your life that knows you, really really well. They probably wouldn't be very close to you for a while but as the months and years go on you have a chance to build a different kind of beautiful relationship, one like a brother and a sister could have, or best friends.
Jane Mulberry wrote: I think the challenge for those who marry young is that personality and sense of self weren't fully developed. Who a person thinks they are and what they think they want from life at sixteen may not be the same at thirty. And that means making marriage work means choosing to grow in the same direction as one's partner, which also demands flexibility, negotiation, growth, and change from both.
There is one extra challenge marrying young, and that's an idealised vision of what a relationship "should" be, thinking things could/should be better, and having nothing else to compare it to. Though changing partners chasing the "ideal" relationship affects people of any age, I think for those who've only had one romantic partner it might be harder to shake.
The questions around whether the relations can be saved and is worth saving might be: do you have shared values? Do you want the same things from life? Are you pulling in the same direction, or opposite directions? What does she want from the relationship and from life she feels she's not getting? What about you? Are there areas that can be negotiated, or have things got to the point where all that's visible is a pile of non-negotiables? Can you both let go of past hurts in the relationship and discover whether you can build something new and better together, even though it will be hard?
It sounds as if she has big serious fears around committing, and maybe is at a stage where it feels to her like she has to make a choice between being all-in at a deeper level in the relationship (terrifying!) or getting out while she can. Do what you can to help her feel safe. Even though you're likely afraid your heart will be broken again, work to keep your heart open to her.
I pray whichever way things go you both find healing for this painful situation.
Maybe Life is always like being on a trapeze or a tightrope at the circus...
Eric Hanson wrote:Brody, I am only speaking my own thoughts here so take them for what you want.
It is totally normal to look at your long experience with your wife and think of it almost as an investment that you don’t want to lose. You did have good times and a part of you still wants to experience those good times again. And a part of you doesn’t want to loose these experiences forever. Moreover, if you leave, and if you are still interested in romance, you have to start over. Understandably, these are things you would rather not do. This is all a perfectly normal set of emotions and there is nothing wrong for feeling the way you do. Moreover, children, a house and debt all tend to weigh against separation.
With all that being said, I certainly can’t tell you what to do. Only you can decide what is best in your situation. I do wish you the very best in your difficult position and uncomfortable decision you may have to make.
But to your specific question—does marrying your high-school sweetheart make you prone to problems later? That one I just don’t know. I can say with certainty that I fell for my wife at exactly the right time in both of our lives—any younger and we (mostly me) would have been too immature for marriage. And my wife was too career focused to get seriously romantically involved. So speaking personally, my specific experience dovetails very nicely with what you suggest.
I do wish you the very best in whatever decision you end up making in the near future.
Eric
Maybe Life is always like being on a trapeze or a tightrope at the circus...
Ben House wrote:My wife and I got married when she was 18 and I was 22. We have been married more than 15 years, and we've known each other since I was 13 or 14. Marriage can be hard sometimes, we have certainly had our ups and downs, fights and hard times.
Nothing in life that is really worth doing is easy.
My wife and I are different people, we have different interests, and different personality types, she is a night owl, and I am a morning person. There are a few things that keep us together, we absolutely love each other. We are both Christians. And both of us give more than 50%, and what I mean by that is this: when things are tough and you are both fighting like cats and dogs do you cross to the other side and forgive, do you apologize when you are actually wrong.
I have learned the hard way to go the extra mile and extend the olive branch in peace, and so has my wife. I was not always the person I am today. Nobody is perfect, and I was much further from perfection when I was younger.
As long as you are both working together, to love each other and care for each other, you do not need to be the same person. In fact I cherish that my wife has an apposing viewpoint, many times her advice has helped me to see clearly on an issue that was cloudy to me.
I hope you make it.
Ben
Maybe Life is always like being on a trapeze or a tightrope at the circus...
Christopher Weeks wrote:
Brody Ekberg wrote:“High school sweethearts” and similar romantic relationships that start out in adolescence are much more difficult to maintain than romantic relationships formed as mature adults. And although they are more difficult to maintain and therefore probably more likely to fail, they are also probably stronger than adult formed relationships, so long as they survive.
I don't know. I'm cautious about drawing general rules out of anecdotes, and even more so out of a single anecdote, but the theory seems reasonable enough. I'm also not sure what "stronger" means, unless it's just a measure of staying power. I'm not finding anything that looks precisely at age of courtship initiation. However, check this graph out (found here):
If you look at the women who get married at 18, they sort of have to be marrying something equivalent to a high school sweetheart. They have a pretty high divorce rate for ten years, then a moderate one for another ten, and then low for the rest of their life. And like, you have to get married young if you want to have fifty years of marriage, so it would be easy for the stats to over-emphasize those successes.
I saw another article that said getting married at 28-32 seems to be a sweet-spot for long term success, but it didn't much explore why and doesn't say anything about whether the partners were long-time romances before marriage...my guess would be not usually.
(Me personally -- at 52, I'm rounding the corner on 26 years of marriage and I think we've decided to stick it out. But I'd emphasize that even now it's work (and joy) every day to stay comfortably glued together.)
Good luck to you both on figuring out what's best for you and making it happen. It takes work, but I'm pretty sure it also takes luck.
Maybe Life is always like being on a trapeze or a tightrope at the circus...
kay fox wrote:As someone else said, I can't tell you what to do but I do think my story could shed some light on your situation.
I don't think there is a marriage that has not been tested. Sometimes what you are running from is the problem, the stress of that life, the rat race, the hope that there must be something better out there besides work and paying bills. Heck some people go through numerous marriages before they figure it out. You have to be happy with you before you can be happy with anyone else so look inside before you look to the marriage as the problem. Forgive the past mistakes, learn to communicate by saying calmly what you mean and mean what you say. Then, try not to over-react when she shares her thoughts. You want her to feel safe to tell you what's on her mind. I'm glad you are both going to therapy where you will learn how to work together. In the end, if you stay it will take hard work but if you leave, it will take hard work and then you will have to start all over again. Short of addictions, abuse, or lack of love, I think most any marriage can be improved. Please keep us posted on your progress. We are all hoping for the best outcome, whatever that may be.
Maybe Life is always like being on a trapeze or a tightrope at the circus...
Heather Staas wrote:
I wonder if the discrepancy between youthful relationships and mature relationships is influenced by relationship role models while growing up. It's a long hard path to learn it all for yourself starting from a foundation of poor examples and misunderstanding of what love looks like. Those youthful feelings are pretty strong though, and not easily tempered by the lense of experience and maturity. Then, we know what we are ATTRACTED to, but I don't think we know how much more it takes. Love is great, but there needs to be trust and respect and genuine care for the experience of the other person too. Love and attraction alone can't get it done. Couples who grow into it on the same timeline and share the journey maybe are more successful?
Still figuring this stuff out. I did just recently come across a video discussion the 7 foundation tenets of what TRUST actually is, and how it's built and maintained. That was a really needed lesson for me to delve into and take a hard look at. It explained a lot of things relating to "I love you but I don't trust you" problems.
Interesting disscussion. Timely and helpful for me ;)
adding a link to the text version of the 7 components of building trust in case it's useful to someone else too: https://brenebrown.com/resources/the-braving-inventory/
Maybe Life is always like being on a trapeze or a tightrope at the circus...
Trace Oswald wrote:
I used to think relationships were hard. Now I tend to think relationships are hard if you are in the wrong one. Don't get me wrong, I don't think things are always easy, there will be disagreement and sometimes hurt feelings, but if the overall feeling of a relationship is that it is a struggle most of the time, I think it's time to move on. You probably want different things and would probably both be happier with someone else. As others have said, I think it's a mistake to count this as a failure. People grow, change, want different things in life. Not being in the right relationship now doesn't mean it never was. It just means you want different things now. I think it's wrong to try to fit someone into a role they don't want, aren't suited for, or aren't interested in. People have every right to follow their own path, whatever it may be, no matter how hard that realization is.
Maybe Life is always like being on a trapeze or a tightrope at the circus...
Jane Mulberry wrote:
But for some people, the differences are too great and to "fit" one of both would need to compromise on core values. As I said before, commitment to the relationship shouldn't mean giving up our core, positive, most deeply held personal values or staying in a situation that is destructive.
That's when wisdom says it's time to leave, and not a failure but an act of maturity.
Maybe Life is always like being on a trapeze or a tightrope at the circus...
Jeff Bosch wrote:Knowing how to deal with conflict and challenges is a skill. With any skill what age a person learns it will differ based on many factors.
From reading that the conflicts and challenges have resulted in trauma, my guess is both of you could use help improving your skills for handling conflict, challenges, and how to heal trauma.
Maybe Life is always like being on a trapeze or a tightrope at the circus...
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