August 16 was my 40th anniversary.
It is often said that making a marriage work for a long time is "difficult," but the fact is, I don't do difficult very well. If it wasn't easy, I would have bailed sometime in the past 40 years.
Among my living siblings, my marriage is the "newest." My sister got married in 1960, and older brothers in 1966 and two in 1968. One brother is deceased and the rest of us are still married to the same people.
My marriage has lasted so long for the following reasons, in no particular order:
I married a young woman who had no experience in dating or playing relationship "games," due to a very restricted upbringing (e.g., picking a meaningless fight so that I would have to apologize). Indeed, our first official "date" occurred after we were engaged. Since the games were eliminated, so was much of the unnecessary emotional turmoil that goes with the early stages of a relationship. We had a common enemy: my mother-in-law, and that helped to keep us united.
We exchanged significant compromises in totally different areas of our existence. I put up with her family's bullshit (spending every holiday with them and being "pleasant," attending weddings, birthdays, funerals, first communions, and graduations for people I didn't know and sometimes didn't like). She was willing to try everything I wanted to do. Having done NOTHING while growing up, she, at my prodding, learned to swim, ride a bike, play tennis, and play golf. She began and continues to exercise with me, ride my motorcycle, go to church, and vacation pretty much wherever I want. I occasionally can be talked into taking dance lessons.
Despite having family traditions to the contrary, she has been willing to work full time throughout our marriage, thus ensuring an income that pays for all of my indulgences and we never have to fight about money. We live modestly and have more money than we need.
We both have major faults and we have significantly different attitudes and approaches to a lot of things, but we pretty much accept what we now know will never change.
I often find myself reminding people that one never knows whether a marriage will end in divorce until one of the people is dead. Regardless of how long you have been married, it is a work in progress.
Celebrating a Lifetime of Marriage
Re: Celebrating a Lifetime of Marriage
Congratulations on 40 years. I'm 18 years behind you in terms of our relationship but 38 behind you in terms of our marriage 
- Econoline
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Re: Celebrating a Lifetime of Marriage
Congratulations, Dave! (& the long-suffering Mrs. DGS too, of course!
)
Well said; I've been married since Dec.31, 1967, through a lot of ups and downs, and I agree completely. Keep on working on that work-in-progress, it's worth it!
We both have major faults and we have significantly different attitudes and approaches to a lot of things, but we pretty much accept what we now know will never change.
I often find myself reminding people that one never knows whether a marriage will end in divorce until one of the people is dead. Regardless of how long you have been married, it is a work in progress.
People who are wrong are just as sure they're right as people who are right. The only difference is, they're wrong.
— God @The Tweet of God
— God @The Tweet of God
Re: Celebrating a Lifetime of Marriage
I didn't get married until I was 43, I had to wait a long time to find someone good enough. 
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
Re: Celebrating a Lifetime of Marriage
Marriage is a wonderful institution, no family should be without it.
Your collective inability to acknowledge this obvious truth makes you all look like fools.
yrs,
rubato
Re: Celebrating a Lifetime of Marriage
Good enough meaning willing to put up with you.Gob wrote:I didn't get married until I was 43, I had to wait a long time to find someone good enough.
Okay... There's all kinds of things wrong with what you just said.
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Re: Celebrating a Lifetime of Marriage
Congrats dgs - I am now convinced there are saints in this world. So please congratulate St. mrs-dgs too, eh?
For Christianity, by identifying truth with faith, must teach-and, properly understood, does teach-that any interference with the truth is immoral. A Christian with faith has nothing to fear from the facts
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Re: Celebrating a Lifetime of Marriage
Congrats dgs49. We're working on our 29th year. It's good to hear of people with many years married. I think now a days, people are too quick to jump ship.
Re: Celebrating a Lifetime of Marriage
All the best Dave; we just passed our 37th anniversary, but you're still ahead.


