Friday, April 21, 2017

To Stay Married, Embrace Change - Note for a discussion, "E Pluribus Unum? What Keeps the United States United."


 Ada Calhoun, New York Times [original article contains links]; see also re change as a suggested "unifying" factor in American life.

image from article

A couple of years ago, it seemed as if everyone I knew was on the verge of divorce.

“He’s not the man I married,” one friend told me.

“She didn’t change, and I did,” said another.

And then there was the no­-fault version: “We grew apart." [JB emphasis]

Emotional and physical abuse are clear-­cut grounds for divorce, but they aren’t
the most common causes of failing marriages, at least the ones I hear about. What’s
the more typical villain? Change.

Feeling oppressed by change or lack of change; it’s a tale as old as time [JB emphasis].  Yet at
some point in any long­-term relationship, each partner is likely to evolve from the
person we fell in love with into someone new — and not always into someone cuter
or smarter or more fun. Each goes from rock climber to couch potato, from rebel to
middle manager, and from sex crazed to sleep obsessed.

Sometimes people feel betrayed by this change. They fell in love with one person,
and when that person doesn’t seem familiar anymore, they decide he or she violated
the marriage contract. I have begun to wonder if perhaps the problem isn’t change
itself but our susceptibility to what has been called the “end of history” illusion.

“Human beings are works in progress that mistakenly think they’re finished,”
the Harvard professor Daniel Gilbert said in a 2014 TED talk called “The Psychology
of Your Future Self.” He described research that he and his colleagues had done in
2013: Study subjects (ranging from 18 to 68 years old) reported changing much
more over a decade than they expected to.

In 2015, I published a book about where I grew up, St. Marks Place in the East
Village of Manhattan. In doing research, I listened to one person after another claim
that the street was a shadow of its former self, that all the good businesses had
closed and all the good people had left. This sentiment held true even though people
disagreed about which were the good businesses and who were the good people.

Nostalgia, which fuels our resentment toward change, is a natural human
impulse. And yet being forever content with a spouse, or a street, requires finding
ways to be happy with different versions of that person or neighborhood.

Because I like to fix broken things quickly and shoddily (my husband, Neal, calls
my renovation aesthetic “Little Rascals Clubhouse”), I frequently receive the advice:
“Don’t just do something, stand there.”

Such underreacting may also be the best stance when confronted by too much
or too little change. Whether or not we want people to stay the same, time will bring
change in abundance.

A year and a half ago, Neal and I bought a place in the country. We hadn’t been
in the market for a house, but our city apartment is only 500 square feet, and we
kept admiring this lovely blue house we drove by every time we visited my parents. It
turned out to be shockingly affordable.

So now we own a house. We bought furniture, framed pictures and put up a
badminton net. We marveled at the change that had come over us. Who were these
backyard-­grilling, property­-tax­-paying, shuttle-cock­batting people we had become?

When we met in our 20s, Neal wasn’t a man who would delight in lawn care,
and I wasn’t a woman who would find such a man appealing. And yet here we were,
avidly refilling our bird feeder and remarking on all the cardinals.

Neal, who hadn’t hammered a nail in all the years I’d known him, now had
opinions on bookshelves and curtains, and loved going to the hardware store. He
whistled while he mowed. He was like an alien. But in this new situation, I was an
alien, too — one who knew when to plant bulbs and how to use a Crock­-Pot, and
who, newly armed with CPR and first aid certification, volunteered at a local camp.
Our alien selves were remarkably compatible.

Several long­-married people I know have said this exact line: “I’ve had at least
three marriages. They’ve just all been with the same person.” I’d say Neal and I have
had at least three marriages: Our partying 20s, child-­centric 30s and home­-owning
40s.

Then there’s my abbreviated first marriage. Nick and I met in college and dated
for a few months before dropping out and driving cross-­country. Over the next few
years, we worked a series of low-­wage jobs. On the rare occasions when we discussed
our future, he said he wasn’t ready to settle down because one day, he claimed, he
would probably need to “sow” his “wild oats” — a saying I found tacky and a concept
I found ridiculous.

When I told Neal about this years later, he said, “Maybe you found it ridiculous
because you’d already done it.”

It’s true that from ages 16 to 19 I had a lot of boyfriends. But with Nick, I
became happily domestic. We adopted cats. I had changed in such a way that I had
no problem being with just one person. I was done changing and thought he should
be, too. Certainly, I thought he should not change into a man who sows oats.

When we got married at the courthouse so he could get his green card (he was
Canadian), I didn’t feel different the next day. We still fell asleep to “Politically
Incorrect” with our cats at our feet as we always had.

We told anyone who asked that the marriage was no big deal, just a formality so
the government wouldn’t break us up. But when pressed, it was hard to say what
differentiated us from the truly married beyond the absence of a party.

When I grew depressed a few months later, I decided that he and our pseudo-marriage
were part of the problem. After three years of feeling like the more
committed person, I was done and asked him to move out. When he left, I felt sad
but also thrilled by the prospect of dating again. A couple of years later, I met Neal.

Recently, I asked Nick if we could talk. We hadn’t spoken in a decade. He lives
in London now, so we Skyped. I saw that he looked almost exactly as he had at 22,
though he’d grown a long beard. We had a pleasant conversation. Finally, I asked
him if he thought our marriage counted.

“Yeah,” he said. “I think it counts.”

We were married, just not very well. The marriage didn’t mean much to us, and
so when things got rough, we broke up. I had been too immature to know what I was
getting into. I thought passion was the most important thing. When my romantic
feelings left, I followed them out the door. It was just like any breakup, but with
extra paperwork.

Nick now works at a European arts venue. He’s unmarried. I wouldn’t have
predicted his life or his facial hair. I don’t regret our split, but if we had stayed
married, I think I would have liked this version of him.

My hair is long and blond now. When Neal and I met, it was dyed black and cut
to my chin. When I took to bleaching it myself, it was often orange, because I didn’t
know what I was doing.

Now I weigh about 160 pounds. When I left the hospital after being treated for a
burst appendix, I weighed 140. When I was nine months pregnant and starving every
second, I weighed 210. I have been everything from size 4 to 14. I have been the life
of the party and a drag. I have been broke and loaded, clinically depressed and
radiantly happy. Spread out over the years, I’m a harem.

How can we accept that when it comes to our bodies (and everything else, for
that matter), the only inevitability is change? And what is the key to caring less about
change as a marriage evolves — things like how much sex we’re having and whether
or not it’s the best sex possible?

One day in the country, Neal and I heard a chipmunk in distress. It had gotten
inside the house and was hiding under the couch. Every few minutes, the creature let
out a high-­pitched squeak. I tried to sweep it out the door to safety with a broom, but
it kept running back at my feet.

“Wow, you’re dumb,” I said to it.

“I got this,” Neal said, mysteriously carrying a plastic cereal bowl. “Shoo it out
from under there.”

I did, and the chipmunk raced through the living room. Neal, like an ancient
discus thrower, tossed the bowl in a beautiful arc, landing it perfectly atop the
scampering creature. He then slid a piece of cardboard under the bowl and carried
the chipmunk out into the bushes, where he set it free.

“That was really impressive,” I said.

“I know,” he said.

To feel awed by a man I thought I knew completely: It’s a shock when that
happens after so many years. And a boon. That one fling of a bowl probably bought
us another five years of marriage.

Ada Calhoun, who lives in New York, is the author of a forthcoming memoir, “Wedding
Toasts I’ll Never Give,” from which this essay is adapted.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Life is good when you have your love ones around you, I am saying this because when i had issues with my lover i never seen life as a good thing but thanks to Dr. AGBAZARA of AGBAZARA TEMPLE, for helping me to cast a spell that brought my lover back to me within the space of 48hours. My husband left me for another woman after 7YEARS of marriage,but Dr.AGBAZARA help me cast a spell that brought him back to me within 48hours. I am not going to tell you more details about myself rather i will only advise those who are having issues in there relationship or marriages to contact Dr.AGBAZARA TEMPLE through these details via; ( agbazara@gmail.com) or call him on WHATSAPP: +2348104102662?

Unknown said...

I NEVER BELIEVED IN LOVE SPELLS UNTIL I MET THIS WORLD’S TOP SPELL CASTER. HE IS REALLY POWERFUL AND COULD HELP CAST SPELLS TO BRING BACK EX LOVER, I’M HAPPY & A LIVING TESTIMONY COS THE MAN I HAD WANTED TO MARRY LEFT ME 2 WEEKS BEFORE OUR WEDDING AND MY LIFE WAS UPSIDE DOWN COS OUR RELATIONSHIP HAS BEEN ON FOR 2YEARS… I REALLY LOVED HIM, BUT HIS MOTHER WAS AGAINST US. SO WHEN I MET THIS SPELL CASTER, I TOLD HIM WHAT HAPPENED AND EXPLAINED THE SITUATION OF THINGS TO HIM..AT FIRST I WAS UNDECIDED,SKEPTICAL AND DOUBTFUL, BUT I JUST GAVE IT A TRY. AND IN 3 DAYS WHEN I RETURNED TO MY COUNTRY, MY BOYFRIEND(NOW HUSBAND) CALLED ME BY HIMSELF AND CAME TO ME APOLOGIZING FOR EVERYTHING HIM AND HIS MOTHER HAS DONE TO ME..I DIDN’T BELIEVE IT COS THE SPELL CASTER ONLY ASKED FOR SOME VITAL INFORMATION WHICH I FORWARDED TO HIM…I AM HAPPY TO SAY WE ARE HAPPILY MARRIED, IN CASE ANYONE NEEDS THE SPELL CASTER FOR SOME HELP, HIS EMAIL ADDRESS IS; [DR_MACK@YAHOO.COM]…… HOPE HE HELPS YOU OUT