Recently I
was asked the secret to the longevity of our marriage. I quoted something I saw that I thought was
catchy but also true, “You just don’t get divorced.” I wasn’t trying to be trite or evasive. It is the truth. We’ve had times of extreme marital difficulty
and yet we are still here making it happen.
We didn’t get divorced. I could
say it was our faith in God, our commitment, or our love for family that got us
through the messiness of life. I can
call out the evidences that made me know God brought us together. We can site our belief that God intends
marriage to last a lifetime. But the
truth is, we just stayed together through those really yucky times.
In every
marriage there are seasons of difficulty: sickness, overworking, neglect by one,
the other or both, disagreement on finance, family operations or
discipline. Sometimes for one reason or
another a person becomes less physically attractive than they once were. This last statement is a curiosity though,
because I’ve seen attraction last though deformity, extreme obesity, and
disfiguration. I’ve seen men and women
loose their hair, health, shape, limbs, body functions and vital spark without
loss of devotion or attraction. I’ve
seen old people find each other exciting all the way to the grave. It’s odd the things that make them attracted
to one another –I think they call it love.
But this
couple was in the early stages of their marriage – that first rough year when
you have so much attraction and so many obstacles to overcome, the first year
when she lights up at the thought of him calling her and then snaps a few
moments or hours later and knows it will not work and what were they thinking
to get into this relationship? The first
year when he rushes home to find her in some frantic state and soothes it over
and then asks himself “what have I gotten myself into?” The first year of
marriage is a year of finding out who we really married and who we really are,
regardless of the age of the couple.
It’s a year of excitement, desire, frustration, fun and adjustment.
I think
back to a couple I knew who was so enthralled with each other. Their eyes lit up just catching a glimpse of
each other. Each was amazed at the
wonder of the other. He took her breath
away; she messed with his mind. This
went on well beyond the fifth year of their marriage, but today their
relationship is an empty shell of separate pursuit and enjoyment and occasional
trivial sharing. But they are still
together. I think they would say the
secret is that they just didn’t divorce. And I hope that they still believe it
could be better again somehow.
I knew one
couple who screamed and fought from the first night of their marriage
–literally. These two were either crazy
in love or infuriated all the years of their marriage –over 60 years of bliss
and tumult. But they stayed together
throughout life. Their secret? They didn’t divorce. They talked about it. They thought about it, but they just didn’t.
I’ve
watched people live through sickness and financial distress and the death of
children and the disappointment of children gone astray as well as a host of
wonderful times. When they stayed
together, the secret was they didn’t divorce.
Even people of strong faith in God have times when they cannot stand the
other person in the marriage, when their mate does something so wrong that it
scars the marriage from that time forward, when small offenses are blown out of
proportion, when the things that brought them together have become forgotten or
have lost value. Sometimes they separate and divorce. Sometimes they find someone else to
love. But always if they stay married,
it is because they just didn’t divorce.
I’ve heard
couples say “Divorce was never an option.”
I doubt that. In our world, in
our society, divorce is a very real option.
But you can choose not to take that option. You can walk away from that option for this
day, for this night, for this troubled time.
You can stay and stay until life changes again and staying makes sense.
I’m not
saying all marriages will repair themselves.
That would be a foolish statement.
I offer no condemnation to anyone whose life dream ended in an ending
before death by your own choice or the choice of the other. You have enough to deal with getting your
equilibrium back. You don’t need another
fallible human telling you what you should or could have done. No one else is you or has lived your
life.
What I am
saying is that many more marriages could repair themselves if people didn’t
choose the option of divorce so easily and quickly. When a couple celebrates their 60th or 70th
anniversary, it is not because they were perfect or better matched people; it
is because they just didn’t get divorced.
One friend of mine had a father who was a bad alcoholic as was most of his family, but found AA when he was in his early forties. On his 80th birthday, someone asked him how he stayed sober being around his hard drinking family most of the time.
ReplyDeleteHe replied; Well, I didn't drink, and I didn't die!
I think much of life is like that. I stay married because I am married, and do married things.
I went through a divorce. It was not nice, but that experience isn't really the credit of my marriage to Louis. We just stayed together when things were hard. I don't know that we even always had hope it would work out or get better, we just didn't divorce that day and the next. I'm not suggesting that God doesn't make a difference, but sometimes you just stay because you stay. And I suppose that is for the former addict or alcoholic or any other part of endurance. You get through the moment and go to the next moment with it's trial or joy. That said, most days I'm overjoyed at the choice to stay and the others, I just stay. I think the same is true for my Mr.
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