| Stages of Married Life
While every union is unique, there are
certain phases that most marriages go through. Each has
the potential to either help a couple's relationship
grow closer and more solid, or to pull it apart. What's
important to keep in mind is that there is no perfect
marriage and no relationship without conflict.
The Newlywed Bubble: The First Year of Marriage The
Honeymoon's Over (The Early Years) From Lover to Mother
(And Baby Makes Three) Life Changes — New Job, Moving,
etc.
The Newlywed Bubble: The First Year of Marriage begins
with a period of excitement. Negative feelings are swept
aside by the optimism of both partners as they begin to
share a future. These positive feelings help a couple
face the often daunting issues of the first year. Money
— who handles it and how it's allocated — is a key issue
for many couples. Time apart versus time together,
division of household responsibilities, even who
controls the television remote, are among the issues
couples must begin to hammer out. This is complicated by
the fact that almost everyone enters marriage with
preset ideas of what a marriage relationshipshould be,
and often unconsciously tries to recreate their parent's
marriage.
Danger: Ideas of what a marriage should be get in the
way of true intimacy, forcing you to reenact roles
instead of relating honestly to each other.
Opportunity: Acknowledge and let go of your learned
ideas of what a marriage should be. Face down your
preconceived notions of marriage and you can decide what
really works for you, forming a good foundation for the
next phases of marriage. Try this exercise.
The Honeymoon's Over (The Early Years) The early years
of marriage can put both parties to the test. What
simultaneously ambushes us and gives us opportunities to
reach a new level of commitment is when we have
expectations we're not even aware of. When that doesn't
happen — because it can't happen, the past is past — we
may feel let down. The struggle to get him to conform to
that desperately cherished fantasy may be initiated at
this point — and lead to a battle without ending, for he
wants to be accepted as the person he is. Letting go of
that ideal and accepting the person you married is
essential to a healthy marriage. Danger: Locking into a
bickering, critical relationship; holding your partner
responsible for your needs.
Opportunity: By taking responsibility for your own needs
and desires and trying to realize them through your own
efforts instead of projecting them onto your spouse,
you'll have more chance of getting what you want and
avoiding the resentment that goes with unrealistic
demands.
From Lover to Mother To go from being a person to being
a mother is the major psychological shift for a woman.
And to go from being a couple to being a family is also
big. With the arrival of a child, the possibilities for
conflict increase. Your needs zoom, so the chances for
disappointment are great. The changes and adjustments
that come with a baby can be overwhelming. In addition
to the time-consuming demands of changing diapers and
feeding, questions of who should shoulder which
responsibilities, parenting styles, not to mention the
issue of making room in the relationship for this
seemingly all-consuming new priority, can all become
battlegrounds. Becoming parents triggers new sets of
unconscious expections, both about child-rearing and
about yourselves. Unless both partners try consciously
to create their own parenting style, there is a tendency
to re-enact the same roles as their parents. Most men
don't have fathers who cared for them when they were
babies, and it's often easier to fall into the role of
"workaholic" while the mother assumes the "nurturing"
role. The child may also become an unwitting partner in
an emotional triangle as resentments and unresolved
problems slink out in strange forms.
Danger: Pre-programmed ideas of parenting roles
interfere with forging a marriage and family style that
works.
Opportunity: Create a strong healthy family that
encourages all members to grow as individuals in a
loving, supportive setting. Try this: Read and discuss
childrearing books to break out of scripted roles and
find effective ways to deal with your children's stages
of development. Agree on family rules (never let
children play one parent against the other) and consider
having a weekly family meeting to discuss problems.
Life Changes — New Job, Moving, Etc. Children heading
off to college, a woman's return to the workforce,
retirement...even happy changes can shake up the
equilibrium of a marriage. Probably the toughest changes
to assimilate in traditional marriages (male as
breadwinner; woman as homemaker), is when the roles
shift. When a woman goes back to work after being a
homemaker (especially if she becomes very successful),
or a husband loses his job or retires, the couple has to
readjust their expectations of each other. "Zack's heart
attack meant it was time for him to retire. It's not
always so easy to accept shifts in the status quo. It
can be a howl of outrage from one partner when the other
changes the fundamental agreement. This is especially
true if the change is voluntary.. But without the
distraction of the children, they may be forced to
confront themselves and their own relationship.
Danger: Faced with stress and change, couples often
withdraw from one another or blame each other for their
own dissatisfaction. Opportunity: Change can stir a
relationship into a new phase of intimacy as well as
free each individual to develop in new ways: A
traditional breadwinner who retires may be able to be
closer to the grandchildren; a homemaker who returns to
the workforce may enjoy achieving in a new arena. Try
this exercise! |