8 things no one tells you about marriage

Love secrets revealed
Ylonda Gault Caviness

Rate this Article:
Max 5 stars
83
My Rating

Take a look at the surprising, enlightening, and sometimes hard truths we all face after we walk down the aisle - and how they teach us about what love really means.
Disgruntled Housewife wearing Wedding Dress

"...And they lived happily ever after."

You're smart. You know life is no storybook. But admit it: Somewhere deep in your subconscious lurk romantic visions of Cinderella, or maybe Julia Roberts. The images may be sketchy and a little outdated, but you can stillmake out the silhouette of the bride and Prince Charming riding off into the sunset.

In real life, sometimes your Disney fairy tale ends up feeling more like a Wes Craven horror flick — and you're the chick who keeps falling down and screaming for her life. I've been there. Let's face it, marriage is not for the faint of heart. You want to believe your pure love for each other will pull you through. And it does. But it ain't always pretty.

That may sound grim. But here's a secret: Sometimes it's the least romantic parts of marriage that have the most to teach you about yourself, your partner, and the nature of love. Read on for some simple truths that will unlock the surprising treasures and pleasures in your imperfect, unstorybook, real-life love.

1. You will look at the person lying next to you and wonder, Is this it? Forever?

When you get married, you think that as long as you pick the right guy — your soul mate — you'll be happy together until death do you part. Then you wake up one day and realize that no matter how great he is, he doesn't make you happy every moment of every day. In fact, some days you might wonder why you were in such a hurry to get married in the first place. You think to yourself, This is so not what I signed up for.

Actually, it is. You just didn't realize it the day you and your guy were cramming wedding cake into each other's faces, clinking champagne glasses, and dancing the Electric Slide. Back then you had no idea that "for better and for worse" doesn't kick in only when life hands you a tragedy. Your relationship mettle is, in fact, most tested on a daily basis, when the utter sameness of day-in/day-out togetherness can sometimes make you want to run for the hills. That's when the disappointment sneaks in, and maybe even a palpable sense of loneliness and grief. It's not him. It's just you, letting go of that sugarcoated fantasy of marriage that danced in your eyes the day you and your beloved posed in all those soft-focus wedding photos. You're learning that marriage isn't a destination; it's a journey filled with equal parts excitement and tedium.

Waking up from a good dream to face the harsh morning daylight may not seem like a reason to celebrate. But trust me, it is. Because once you let go of all the hokey stories of eternal bliss, you find that the reality of marriage is far richer and more rewarding than you ever could have guessed. Hard, yes. Frustrating, yes. But full of its own powerful, quiet enchantments just the same, and that's better than any fairy tale.

Read more on the next page >>>

Continue »


Comments
By michele Dec 7, 2009

NO NO NO!!! Going long periods without (a couple weeks or more) is something you should always worry about - trust me, I know, especially if your husband isn't bugging you for it if you haven't done it for more than a few days. I always thought my husband had a lower drive than me because he never seemed to ask for it as much as me, or he would never complain when we weren't having it for awhile - turns out he was getting somewhere else all along. Don't bury your head in the sand about this one area of your marriage - guys ALWAYS want , and to not ask you for it or to always turn you down with excuses like tiredness, stress, etc, is a sign that he may be getting it on the side.

By Megan Nov 16, 2009

Another thing they don't tell you: There is never an end to the many issues that will come up. http://stephanieklein/2009/11/he-said-she-said-respec.html

By florence Nov 9, 2009

thank u 4 dis page. i hv bn married 4 about 7yrs now and still find it difficult to understand some things about marriage. marriage truely is waking up to face harsh reality!

By Ashley Mar 11, 2009

Thanks for posting this. I've been married for less than a year now and I'm so stressed with some things being talked about it's ridiculous. I feel like I cry too much but I'm so frustrated, it's the only thing I can do at the moment. This last one helped me out too. I've got big time issues with trust and control and he's having a hard time with this. I just don't know what to do anymore. Marriage is so different than I pictured it. I never saw it like this. I wish I knew then what I knew now. Things would be so different.

Reply:

(required)