Experts say for a happy relationship, it’s important to heighten and reinforce your sense of oneness, then guard and protect it.
Make your relationship a priority.
The mental
shift from me to we can be startling: You’re a team—responsible to
someone else in a new and profound way. Claudia Arp, who with her
husband, David, founded Marriage Alive International and co-authored
marriage books including 10 Great Dates to Energize Your Marriage,
comments, “We see a lot of husbands and wives who never, ever
reprioritize their relationship after marriage.
They’re still entwined with their family of origin, putting their
parents and siblings first. Or they’ve been on their own for years and
don’t realize that their friends or job or other interests no longer
take precedence. You need to be able to say ‘My spouse comes first.’
This is your anchor relationship. If you establish this now, it will be
easier to hold on to when life becomes more complicated later in your
marriage.”
Marriage and sex therapist, Pat Love, Ed.D., says, “In our culture,
we don’t do ‘we’ very well. We’re better at autonomy: I can take care of
myself, I can give to you. But being a real unit means taking another
step: making the relationship itself a priority. Other cultures do this
much better—the Japanese have a concept called amae, which loosely
translated means the delicious experience of interdependence. It’s a
goal worth striving for.”
Create couples rituals.
Establishing a healthy
boundary around your union isn’t always easy: When University of
California, Los Angeles, researchers interviewed 172 newlywed couples,
problems with in-laws and other relatives ranked with communication,
money management, and moodiness as top challenges. Do something
regularly that bonds you, such as 10 minutes to chat before bed, always
having morning coffee together, listening to music, or saving Saturday
for date night. Give yourself permission to cocoon.
Check in daily.
Marriage experts recommend
couples do something that big business has employed for decades to keep
workers happy, productive, and in the loop: hold regular team meetings.
Luckily, yours will be more fun than listening to Bob from accounting go
over the last month’s sales numbers. One version of the daily check-in
helps couples keep communication flowing freely with an agenda.
Start by appreciating something about each other.
Offer up some new information from your day.
Ask your spouse about something that has bothered or puzzled you (or something about yourself).
Make a nonjudgmental, complaint-free request (“Please fold the towels
when you do the laundry. I couldn’t find any this morning after my
shower.”).
And end with a hope that could be small (“I hope we can go see that
new movie Friday night”) or lavish (“I’d love to retire at age 50 and
sail the Mediterranean with you.”)
Ask: Is it good for our relationship?
When you
bump up against any important decision in your marriage, don’t just talk
about whether it’s good for you and for your spouse. Make it a point to
talk about and think about whether it’s good for your marriage. “You’ll
know the answer almost intuitively if you stop and ponder it,” Dr. Love
notes. This may come down to how much time something will take away
from your time together, whether it will make things stressful between
you, or if it involves people who in some way threaten your relationship
(lunch with your ex, for example).
If you don’t even want to ask the question, that’s a red flag that
whatever it is—from working late to “surprising” your spouse with an
expensive new living room sofa to making individual plans on your usual
date night—isn’t going to be good for your marriage.
Create a code word for love.
Remember the
elementary school joke about “olive juice” — say this silly phrase, and
your mouth automatically makes the same movements as when you say “I
love you.” Find a secret way to express your love that only the two of
you understand. It comes in handy if your spouse calls when the boss is
standing beside your desk, and creates that “just us” feeling anytime
you use it.
Build healthy boundaries.
Marriages need what
experts call a semi-permeable boundary that allows friends and family to
connect with you but that doesn’t interfere with your own desires and
plans. This can be especially complicated when it comes to your families
of origin.
The biggest challenge is often deciding how you’ll
handle the holidays. Will it be his family’s house, yours, or will you
start a new tradition in your own home?
How often will you talk on the phone or visit—and how much will you
share about the details of your marriage? “Parents can work with or
against a new couple,” Claudia Arp says. “They need to be getting on
with their own marriage, going from being child-focused to
partner-focused. Your marriage can be a transition time for them as
well. Don’t cut them off—you really need that love and support. Do
communicate your decisions about your needs in a kind, calm way.”
Cheer each other on.
“One of the most important
things to me is that my wife, Rebecca, is for me and I’m for her,” says
Lee Potts, a retired computer programmer from St. Louis, Missouri. “It
sounds simplistic, but it’s really important. I’ve been married twice
before, and I don’t think we had each other’s best interests at heart
like this. We had our own agendas.”
Arp suggests that encouraging your partner is one of the most
important things you can do for your relationship. “If we don’t, who
will? Our bosses and co-workers? Don’t count on it! Our children and
teenagers? Ridiculous!” she says. “Our mates need our encouragement.”
Three strategies she and her husband recommend in their workshops: Look
for the positive in your new spouse; develop a sense of humor; and give
honest, specific praise—describe what you appreciate about your spouse.
Schedule time for your marriage first.
Don’t
relegate your relationship to scraps of leftover time. “In mapping out
your schedule for the next several weeks, why not start with writing in
date times for you and your mate?” suggest Claudia and David Arp. “Then
add discretionary things like golf, shopping, and community volunteer
activities.”No time? Wonder why? Do a calendar review.
You’re overcommitted if friends, visits with your parents and
extended family, hobbies, clocking overtime hours on the job, or
volunteer and community commitments have crowded out the three kinds of
time you need with your beloved: casual catching-up, scheduled dates,
and intimate encounters. Same goes if your evenings are TV marathons or
Internet extravaganzas. “Unless you’re willing to make your relationship
a higher priority than other relationships and activities, you won’t
have a growing marriage,” notes Claudia Arp.
Disconnect from the 24/7 office.
Heavy use of
cell phones and devices can mute your happiness and dial up stress in
your home, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee researchers found recently.
The study tracked the technology use and moods of 1,367 women and men
for two years. Those who sent and received the most calls and messages
were also most likely to say that this “work spillover” left them tired
and distracted at home. “Technology is really blurring the lines between
home and work,” says lead researcher Noelle Chesley, an assistant
professor of sociology at the university. “That’s not necessarily a bad
thing. It may give you more flexibility.
But your boss doesn’t tend to call you with the good news—you don’t
hear that you’ve done a great job on the project; you do hear that
suddenly there’s a deadline crisis.”Setting limits could lift on-call
stress: Check e-mail once in the evening. If a call’s not urgent, muster
the courage to say, “I’ll look into it first thing in the morning.” And
simply turn off your cell phone or laptop at a certain time in the
evening.
One of the most common problems among married couples is the lack of time for each other. To avoid marriage counseling, making time for each other is very critical. Don’t say that you both do not have enough time because, if you will just schedule everything, you will see that there is actually plenty of time for you to have some bonding with your partner. Doing a calendar review would definitely help. Sit down and plan the spare time you have. This way, you’ll discover more things about each other that you should have discovered before.
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