So, it finally happened. Deep down I always really felt like I would get married, but sometimes it was hard to hang on to that belief. I was determined not settle even if I didn't get married until I was 80. Now that I've been married for 15 months, I think t the wisest commitment I ever made and to some extent, I wish more people would be so committed.
But let's have a moment of honesty. Part of me was terrified to get married. My parents have a wonderful marriage. To this day, I've never met a woman more in love with her husband than my mother. She is still giddy and you can still feel her love for my father. But it seems that most people love to complain about their marriages and so many people express that marriage is so HARD. Not my mother, of course, but pretty much everyone else.
I was surprised that I absolutely loved it. Having someone to share my space with and time with was so much more fun than anyone made it sound (besides mom). The first week of marriage, I really felt like the awesomeness of marriage is the best kept secret around. Like a conspiracy of all married people to only talk about the hard parts and gloss over how great the great parts are.

The unexpected ball that did drop was that after we got married Jeremy's mother was very ill - so much so that we had to postpone our honeymoon to take care of her and Jeremy's father. We got married in Boston and Jeremy's family had to return to Seattle, his father would not leave his wife's side. Jeremy had to arrange dialysis for his father and we honesty were not sure if his mother would make it. But what I did love was just the feeling that I was married to the right guy, to someone who fit. I loved the assurance via this experience that Jeremy would never ditch me for Australia (part of where we were going to go on our honeymoon) and that I had married the kind of person who was unselfish. He never complained that we could not go and there was never a question that he would take care of his parents. Despite the stress of it, he did not complain or slink into a pity party.
(Someone had presented in the emergency room that his mother was in with measles, so we had to wear masks for a day when tending to hear as a precaution. These are the marks the elastics left on our faces.)
Jeremy moved to Missouri in November, about a year ago. The weirdest thing about living together was that we now had to share life's grind and not all time spent together was quality time. That realization was not a fun one for me to swallow. We had to meet our life obligations in a way that we had both done separately, but not together. I remember one evening I had court in the morning I needed to prepare for, Jeremy wakes up at 5 a.m. and starts work early. We had to focus on life, not just our time when we were together and I did not love that at first. But after adjusting to living through life's grind together, it has been nice to share it with someone. When you are single, the grind is a cross you mostly shoulder alone. We grocery plan together, shop together, cook together, and do all the normal life things that were done independently with someone we enjoy.
Probably my favorite thing about sharing the grind with Jeremy has been cooking dinner together after work. I do not independently like cooking, but I like cooking with him. We eat better and we cook more adventurously than either of us ever did alone.
There are factors that I think help make our transition a good one. Jeremy is very kind and mature. Spiritually we are equally committed. Intellectually he is someone who reads lots of articles like I do. These traits were incredibly hard to find all in the same person. Jeremy's soft skills - such as communication, his emotional control are skills that he has developed well. He is not financially irresponsible and he knows how to plan. Mind you, he is human. He is not so fun to be with when he is sick. He can get overly sensitive when he is under the weather, but I'm not perfect either. Overall, he is a pretty great guy.
So taking in all of those factors into consideration - I think the single biggest practice that we have adopted that makes our marriage better is called The State of the Union Meeting. It is the single best hour invested in our relationship each week. We read about it while we were dating and started it then. I think it helped me discuss the issues I would have otherwise swept under the rug (like I typically did) while dating. In marriage, it has still reaped large rewards. Here is how we do it:
(1) Express 5 things you appreciate about each other. I am a words of affirmation person so this part feeds my soul. Also, expressions of gratitude are the greatest single predictor of marital bliss. We try to appreciate each other for EVERYTHING. He does the dishes - thank you. I make the bed - thank you. We try to make this a habit. So this built in start of our weekly State of the Union Meeting is key. It makes a safe space. It creates a stronger bond. It is a buffer for the days when one or both of us isn't feeling well and has less energy to give to the other.
(2) Discuss the things that went well that week. I thought this one was somewhat pointless, but Jeremy made the point that we naturally spend lots of time ruminating over what doesn't go well and why, but do we put equal energy into discussing what went well and why? This is still the weakest part of our meeting, but I do see the value in it.
(3) Calendaring. This practice sidesteps so many potential conflicts. We go through our days, write out what we are each doing between work and our other commitments. We determine when we are doing the things we need to do. Last week we were a day late in doing our weekly State of the Union Meeting and our wires crossed. There was a little frustration on both ends, but we made the observation that if we had done our calendaring, it wouldn't have happened. This weekly practice is a huge potential-fight preventer.
(4) What we need to work on. One thing that I absolutely believe is that this part must focus on the behavior or events that did not go so well - and very conscious effort needs to be made not to ever make blanket character statements such as - you are a jerk, you are an idiot. Talk about the behavior that needs to change (one week Jeremy said he doesn't like sticky things. I was leaving stickiness all over when I used the honey every morning. This discussion was about my behavior, it did not label me as a messy person). This distinction is very important. I've known people who would use this opportunity to tear into the other person and demean them. Obviously, that is not constructive. The focus here is - I love you, I'm on your team, and here are things we could do better, or here are the things that hurt my feelings, or things I need you to work on.
Obviously, so many things can still go wrong in a marriage. There needs to be follow through on both ends for this to work. There is no substitute for a strong set of matching values. But this practice is one that can help okay marriages evolve into something stronger. Our first year relationship has been relatively problem free and this practice has contributed a lot to it.
Jeremy and I are both huge advocates of State of the Unions. So for what is worth, this is my marriage advice to everyone after my first year of marriage.






