love sucks, but you can’t beat it

Frida & Diego

Frida & Diego

WARNING: if you're a hopeless romantic, searching for Prince Charming or Miss Marvelous, you better leave now. Because I'm about steamroll any Disney-drenched happily-ever-after scenarios. I'm starting my engine. Go now while your ideals are still in tact. You can get yourself some Danielle Steel on Kindle.

Okay...I warned you.

"What's with everyone going on about the 'hard work' of marriage?" I used to think. "If it's so hard it musn't be true love. True love has a meant-to-be-ness about it that's gotta make everything easier. Like, if it's THAT hard, then it just ain't right. Right?" Uh huh.

My relationship with my own self is complicated, how could I expect it to be simple with another? But I was single at the time. My panties matched my bras, my principles matched my big hair, and I my astronomical phone bills matched my knack for getting involved with men who lived on the other side of the country. {The long distance fed my romantic longings. Longing. Always lonnnging.}

I've done some homework since then. Home. Work.

THE SHITTY FACTS MY RELATIONSHIP RESEARCH HAS SURFACED:

: I don't know a single couple with an easy, let alone blissful, marriage. Okay. ONE couple: Donna and Brad. But they met when they were in their late forties. Brad's wife had passed away. Donna was just out of a long termer. Within months of declaring their total and utter devotion, Brad discovered that he had cancer. They fought it with every alternative therapy known, and every dime and ounce of faith they had. They're still going strong. It really is the stuff of love stories.

But back to the rest of us normal, non-Buddhist schmucks who got hitched earlier in life...

: Most of my married friends have seriously considered leaving their mates more than once. {Note to the hubby of my friend: I'm not talking about you. Really, you're the total exception dude.}

: Within just the first year of marriage, at least half of my married friends and acquaintances thought to themselves, "What the hell have I done?"

: Of all the longtime wed folks I've surveyed, each reported long, hellish periods in their relationship where they were merely enduring each other to get by.

Bubbles burst. Dreams steamrolled. Imperfections and cruelties of life glaringly clear. Crap facts noted. Love stinks.

And love keeps going in spite of it all.

THE DELIGHTFUL, SWEET AND RADIANT FACTS MY RELATIONSHIP RESEARCH HAS SURFACED:

: I have friends whose confessed infidelities cycloned through their lives. And they sorted through the wreckage to build something better than before. "The affair was the best thing that ever happened to us."

: Couples who rallied to beat addictions, who sweat and toiled to over come them like farmers fight blight - tirelessly, without rest, because everything depends on victory.

: One of my wisest friends figures that it took about thirty years for him and his wife to simply be nice to each other. Now there is a euphoria in their familiarity. A grace has settled in. He says that sometimes it's magical.

So if you're out there thinking that the smoochy hot couple has got it easy, ha! Think again. If you're down to a teaspoon of hope, envying the love stories on the other side of the fence, remember that while they were smiling for the cameras, Joanne Woodward was putting up with Paul Newman's boozing in the early years. Fridah Kahlo's beloved Diego chased skirts all through Mexico and New York. Cleopatra waited a long time for her man.

Love and doubt aren't exclusive. In fact, they can be the most fantastic dance partners. Give and take. Trust and turn.

Bliss requires sweat.

. . . . . . . .

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  • I am currently divorcing. I do not think all marriages are doomed, however. I have come away with some good lessons, and I will share some of what I have learned.

    "Till death do us part" is misleading. The correct version of this is "as long as our love shall last." If you set yourself up to think that a marriage has to be forever, of course any talk of breaking up will be so traumatic to think about that it is, by default, forbidden. IF a breakup is imminent at some point, it will be totally awful, because even talking about it has been turned into a taboo.

    The best partners in a marriage learn how to stop and listen to their partner... how, as much as possible, to control "knee-jerk" reactions. How to be ok with talking about the "awful" things. Over time, this develops trust. You wade through difficult subjects together, and you acquire a feeling of "if we can get through this, we can get through anything," and you exude that trusting energy to your partner, who feels that and in turn responds more favorably.

    Obviously, there will be times when you can't just hold it together, on both sides. One of you will break down and need the other to just be there for them. And that's normal, and if both of you are truly trying hard to not have a knee-jerk moment and have a well-established trust developed around that, then when one of you breaks down, the other will know that it must be serious and will respond fully.

    That's why we are able to say to some people, "anytime you need anything, give me a call"--because we trust that they won't abuse this pledge of ours. Do you and your spouse have that? If not, why not? Better figure it out...

    Your concept of white hot truth will serve you well in your relationship, especially if your spouse follows it to the degree that you do. Within the context of trust, you can share anything--but if for some reason that trust is threatened, some unvarnished truth along with a LOT of simple listening with an open mind and without judgment makes the difference between those who break down further and those who resolve things positively.

    Developing trust is key. I wrote a post on the methods I use to develop trust, as I feel as though some of the most gut-wrenching moments in my life have been when my trust backfired on me.

    I wish you well in your marriage, you seem like an amazing person and your spouse is blessed to have you in his/her life.
  • I got thanked profusely for sharing this with dozens of girlfriends the past week so I'm coming back here to give that thanks to you. This is one of my favorite articles in a long time. It should be required reading for anyone getting married.

    I read a related (though considerably less sassy) piece in the Globe & Mail today which I think you'd like, so I also came back to share that: "When love hurts you know it's good" http://tinyurl.com/nd4u9q When I first read the title, I thought they had stolen your piece!
  • good finkin'. I used to give copies of John Gottman's 7 Secrets to Marriage as wedding gifts. but i think i'll just laminate this post and put a bow on it. thanks for the inspiration.
  • I always knew love was complicated. Kind of expected it. I took a lot of crap. I had faith though. I watched my mom and dad through some crazy times and they are still married. But, I knew my marriage was over when I watched my mom hold my dad's face and say ... "That's why I love you Paul." I knew I couldn't say that to my then husband and be honest. I went into the bathroom and cried and planned my departure.
  • kara
    Hello there,
    I couldn't help but to reply to your comment because I sorta feel the same way in my marriage could you possibly write me and tell me how u got through it? And what was happening in your marriage? Kara182@comcast.net
  • Friendship, shared politics, liking the same TV and films and laughing at each other's awful humour and jokes has got us through twenty five years together. I think your passionate, smart, honest, funny take on life will keep you guys strong for years to come.
  • this was so sobering i just had to post. better to accept it sooner than later. as a young person you see all these sucky relationships and think "i never want to be like that", but what will set you apart isn't avoiding the misery but confronting it.

    there was a great scrubs episode that concluded with a statement on exactly this. it was a nice change from the typical drivel you see on tv, which does an amazing job of warping people. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IINn0UatJPE

    i guess relationships wouldn't be so awesome if they didn't compel the human spirit to be indomitable. lovely, essential post. gonna spread the word.
  • This is something that alot of people really need to read! The ideal of love that is portrayed by most of tv and movies is just that, an ideal. But ya gotta have hope that you will be the next Donna or Brad.

    BTW, this is going on my site.
  • Olupero
    Finally, someone with a big enough pair to admit to us what we're afraid to admit to ourselves.
  • would that be a big enough pair of balls or ovaries...or tits...or a pair of theories? ... ah ... never mind.
  • Traci
    Truly, I think that couples who don't struggle aren't really together. Because if you don't struggle once in a while, you're probably not all in. Because to be ALL IN, it includes putting in the crap you'd rather pretend you don't have. Romance is lovely and fantastic and I don't want a life without it, but it is merely the spice. And spice a meal does not make.
  • Brilliant :) It's so true. Being with someone is no walk in the park. It's work and it's screwed up and it's beautiful. I love my dude more than anything, and he can drive me nuts haha But that comes with the territory. I can guarantee I do stuff that drives him crazy too ;)
  • 2nd day in row (and I've had to hold myself back from more) that I've had to post your blog on my Facebook page. SO fantastic. Made me think, muse, remember, hope, and laugh. Thank you! 'Can hardly wait to meet you in Portland next week!!!
  • ga'head...spread the word...I love you for it.
  • I love hearing stories of couples who get through rough patches and come out stronger than they were before. I think THAT is the beauty of marriage: two people who make a commitment to each other no. matter. what. And then honor that commitment to make things work.

    Granted, there are times when divorce is really the best and only option. And there are times when people shouldn't have gotten married in the first place. But, there are times when the sheer effort that people can put into making a marriage work (and the great results that are sometimes possible) that keep me dreaming for a happy ending. To find someone willing to commit to a life with ME and to say, we'll make it work, is love.
  • Well said and totally on the money. This from someone who married for the wrong reasons and now lives the life of a happy single woman because I didn't believe that the affair my husband had was the best way to deal with problems in our marriage.
  • Love & Doubt are dancing partners-OMG Yes...Not to get too heavy here but I totally see the parallel with faith/God too. I firmly believe that our human relationships are a guide for connecting with the divine and vice versa. On the God front, I am sure s/he is totally cool wtih doubt and knows the road is rocky. It is the divine's way of telling us-this is the way it is sweetie-just stay in the game an "Oh the places you'll go"
  • re: "I firmly believe that our human relationships are a guide for connecting with the divine and vice versa." Ditto. It's like Ram Dass said, "Relationships are the yoga of the West."
  • I love that "Relationships are the Yoga of the West." Always resist yoga, but am a serious love junkie; we used to call it, Baby Boomers I mean, "serial monogamy." I was married two and a half times; I'm over 60 and in love again and it's still a daily slog, even on the best of days when we get along great in every way; there's always a crack, always a wrinkle, and yes, always a DOUBT.......... I believe that means we are ALIVE to one another; as my partner says, no "ho-hum" for him!
  • Kristin
    I'm getting married in three weeks. I'm 35 and have been through the torturous passion- and bullshit-based LTRs, and am now blissfully a whole me - and found a guy who likes the whole me. I'm a lucky lassie, but he's a lucky man. We both know this. So far, this has kept us together through the unexpected hiccups that life tosses our way.

    Thanks for this post, Danielle.
  • Candis Hoey
    I want to see what is next-
    But I must say, that Love has shown me a committment that I knew nothing of before my marriage. I ditched jobs, friends, cities, whatever whenever it didn't suit me. I called it freedom- now I see it was running scared.
    Now- I'm in- I love my man- he is amazing he drives me crazy and I'm not leaving the theatre early on this one.
  • My husband and I came up with a phrase that helped us through a really rough patch in his health. It pertains to relationships, too: sometimes you've just got to go with the ebb and fucking flow!
  • Sometimes, I think I'm the only single person in the world who "gets" this. People always seem to think that there is a magical relationship out there with the perfect partner that won't have any problems, any disagreements, or any troubles at all. The fact is, anything worth having is worth working for, and sometimes, even the best relationships need a little "fine tuning" every now and then.

    In one of your previous posts, you said something about "the one is the one only because I say it is". I really loved that line (which explains why I remember it). I think it's so true, and represents a thought which is often neglected: We choose our fates and our mates. it's like a more romantic version of the Terminator tagline: No fate but what we make. If we want "so and so" to be our soulmate, then they can be...we just have to keep choosing them (and they, us).
  • Shelly
    Jay,
    "we just have to keep choosing them (and they,us)" I love that. It really isn't just choosing once to get married or declare when you've first met and the hormones are going crazy that this is forever. When the going gets tough.. and even though we've only been married for three my husband and I have been together for seven years and let's say sometimes it's tough and I think you are exactly right that we have to keep choosing that person.
    That really resonates with me.
    Thanks.
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