This is awesome.
I have been with my partner for 20 years now and am both glad I found her and committed myself to her at such a young age.
We talked extensively everyday for 3 years, then lived with each other for a year before getting married. So we knew and understood each other *extremely* well before getting married, including our life plan together, entire histories, feelings, fears, upsets, how we were both raised, knew everyone in both of our families, etc.
While every relationship has conflict at times, listening to each other and loving each other and respecting and understanding and constantly communicating with each other and being gentle and non-judgmental with each other and open and honest with each other and forgiving each other go a LONG way in a relationship.
It's really not that hard.
People add way too much complexity to relationships and let the thoughts and opinions of other people interfere too much. A relationship is about two people. Not what anyone else thinks.
I’m glad your marriage has worked out so far.
I did much the same: started dating at 20, lived together for a few years, got married at 24. We talked about all the things. Knew each other intimately. Spent extensive time with our families. Talked about about how we would never get divorced. Very on the same page about all the things that were important to us.
And we got divorced at 30. We changed. It wasn’t working. Because of the stigma of divorce, I tried to make things work for a year and a half (ridiculous). Divorce is AWESOME. We were both so much happier.
I wish we could get rid of the stigma. I was honest, I did my due diligence, and it didn’t work out long term. No big deal. I’m not a lesser person because of it.
I don't blame you at all or look down on you. You're not a lesser person at all. People do change, all the time, and sometimes the best option is to go separate ways in life.
I think part of the problem is the stereotypical divorce we see on movies and TV shows is always bitter, and full of hatred.
But that doesn't have to be how separations occur. Two people can simply realize they want different things in life, or desire different circumstances, and amicably part ways. We don't need to think of it as some hateful event.
Two people can simply realize they aren't good for each other and part ways in a peaceful manner. I wish that amicable separations were portrayed in TV shows and movies more often.
Both of your posts are coming off as judgemental.
You are saying it's both simple to have a great marriage and simple to have a respectful divorce.
I have a great, happy marriage that has thrived through profoundly difficult times, and I don't, for a second, think that because it's been easy for us that it's simple or easy for folks to weather these kinds of storms.
A LOT of people would understandably struggle in a marriage that has gone through what ours has. And it's not that we're "better" at marriage than others, we're both just uniquely suited to manage this kind of shit together.
That said, we dated for a few years and then broke up for a decade. Had we stayed together back then and gotten married, there's no way those two people in that relationship could handle what we've been through for the past 4 years.
Also, I had NO CLUE when I got married that it would turn out this well, and I had known him for 13 years by that point. Lol.
So it's not even that we're the right combo of people. We're the right combo at the right stage of life with the right set of skills and experiences to be able to handle our specific crap much, much easier than most. But I will never say that I magically could have predicted that.
Also, you've shared quite a bit about your marriage, and there are aspects of it that I would find incredibly difficult and not be able to manage, but you seem particularly equipped to handle because of your particular personality and background.
People who succeed at things tend to give themselves more credit than is due. Yes, a good, thriving marriage takes making a good choice, being loving and patient, having good communication, all of those things.
But it doesn't mean that people whose marriages don't work out just sucked at all of those things and could have made "simple" changes to make it successful.
Yes, some marriages have obvious weak points where a bit of effort could have prevented a ton of hardship. But a lot of marriages are very complex. People are complex. Previous traumas are complex.
Human beings are complex and multiple human beings interacting is even more complex. None of this is simple.