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    9 Marriage Rules You Should Break

    By Denise Schipani

    The two of you should do everything together; work out every disagreement (without actually fighting); spend every night in the same bed; and never, ever be bored. Say what?! These and other so-called "rules" for marriage need some serious debunking. And it's not just because rules your mother may have passed on are outdated; some may be downright damaging. In fact, "breaking some marriage 'rules' may be the best thing you can do for your relationship," says Barbara Bartlein, RN, MSW, psychotherapist and author of Why Did I Marry You Anyway? Here are 10 rules you can break with confidence.

    1. Never go to bed angry.
    Where did this one come from? Turns out, it may go as far back as the Bible, which advises not letting the sun go down on your anger. But trying to work through a problem when you're tired and stressed won't get you anywhere, says Elizabeth Lombardo, PhD, psychologist and author of A Happy You: Your Ultimate Prescription for Happiness. "Agree to disagree for now, and to revisit the issue when you're rested."

















    2. Always be 100% honest.
    In marriage, no-holds-barred honesty is not always the best policy. For example, "you don't need to share details of past relationships," says Bartlein. "That invites comparisons, and when you compare, someone comes up short." The bottom line: You need to be polite and caring when it comes to your partner's feelings.












    3. Never vacation without each other.
    The received wisdom here is that if you have time off from your jobs and lives, you should naturally prefer to spend it together. One problem with this rule is that you and your spouse may not have the same definition of a great getaway (you like to ski, he's a beach bum). The other danger, says Dr. Lombardo, is the belief "that you have to be each other's everything, and that's just not realistic." Sometimes, you need a spa weekend, and he may want to go camping (or vice versa). Just be sure that you don't always take off without each other.











    4. If you fight, you're headed for divorce.
    Actually, says Bartlein, research shows that couples who never fight-assuming that means they're holding back to avoid conflict-are more likely to split. You need to find ways to fight healthily and productively (without blaming, name-calling and the like), but that said, being committed to respectfully airing out conflicts is a far better rule than "keep your mouth shut."















    5. Once you have children, they come first.
    "So often, I see couples who have put their relationship on hold in order to be good parents," says Dr. Lombardo. But those couples, she says, have it exactly backward. Making your relationship top priority is better not just for you, but for your children, who need to see you in charge and who feel safer and more secure with parents who have a loving relationship. "Create couple-only time during which you do not discuss bills or children, where you do fun activities and enjoy each other's company." The kids'll be all right.











    6. You should never sleep in separate beds.
    Um, snore much? It's a myth that couples always sleep better and more cozily together than apart. One partner may be a toss-and-turner, or one may hit the hay early while the other keeps a reading light burning till the wee hours. So if one of you occasionally decamps to the guest room, don't sweat it. "Getting a good night's sleep is crucial to the health of your mind, body and marriage," says Dr. Lombardo. Just be sure a separate-bed habit isn't about avoiding intimacy.












    7. Partners should sync up their hobbies.
    Though spending every free moment you have training for a marathon while your spouse works on his classic car isn't good for your marriage, neither is subscribing to the notion you should quit doing what you love just because your husband doesn't love the same things. Giving up your passions is akin to forgoing your independence, and "without independence in a marriage people feel trapped," says Bartlein. Pursue your separate interests and find activities you both enjoy.












    8. If there's no spark, you're doomed.
    Many married couples understand intellectually that they won't always experience that I've-been-drugged-by-love feeling in a long-term relationship. "But many still believe that when the spark dies out, it means they're in the wrong relationship, and seek something new," says Bartlein. Long-term relationships survive on commitment and trust, out of which grows love. The mistake here is to believe that you can live forever on fireworks, or even just love, alone.














    9. Boring is bad.
    The problem with this so-called rule, says Bartlein, is when couples confuse a calm, predictable union with a bad one. A drama-filled relationship may feel exciting, but in the long run it's not likely to be healthy. Isn't it better, she says, to "boringly" know where your spouse is every night than to be "excited" by constant ups and downs? "Better to have a safe, relaxed, 'boring' life together in the everyday. You can always inject excitement with vacations and activities."







    All photos by Shutterstock.

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    647 comments

    • Sonia  •  11 months ago
      I agree with you Amy, I can't believe the nonsense that men and woman are being told about relationships and although you did write quite a bit there I still continued reading as you tackled the issues that need to be raised. I think firstly woman have stopped respecting themselves and put up with way too much just to keep the peace or to keep the man! I don't believe that a partner is there to fulfill you or to make you happy but they are also not allowed to be the source of your unhappiness. My major gripe at the moment is that when a man thinks that he does not have to behave in a proper, respectful manner because his friends don't. Mix with monkeys and act like monkeys and it is for the woman in the relationship, especially when it comes to abuse to stand up and say I deserve better than this!
    • A Yahoo! User  •  8 months ago
      Wow, sound like Amy has some issues of her own to get busy on! Maybe a Dr's appt?
    • NELLY  •  8 months ago
      hi...im so confused and need an advise. I've been married for 13 goin for 14? When i meet my husband he wuz one loving-caring-always there wit me-etc.But once we got married everything changed. He accted single and married when he wuz hungry-sleepy-and needed a woman. At first i thought it wuz a big commitment dat he needed time to adopt so i tried to give him everything a man wanted! Evrything! I didnt visit wit friends just family. I wuz wit my girl at ALL times and enjoyed it. Had food done- bathroom and clothing ready for when he got home and showered. Took my girl to da park so he could take a little nap. Came back showered me/girl then put my girl to sleep early. Finally i wuz all his. But on da weekend==Friday-Sunday==I didnt hardly see him cuz he would go drinking wit cuzins and bro. and friends. All dis time i would stay alone wit my daughter. I had lots of admirers but i didnt have eyes for them other than my husband.This went for a year+year+year+year....in beetween i would hear stuff but diddnt believe...then see it but i would think i wuz doin something wrong? I got very depressed and started gainig weight....i started bein mentally /emotionally abusssed...i tried to take my life away but thank to God/Angels it didnt happen. Then out of no where an ex called and i got shoked. But started talin by phone cuz of long distance. We talked as friends cuz da past wuz da pased and he really respected dat. I started to change when my ex told me..."Ur a valuable woman and u should value urself and ur kids!" Cuz by dis time i hade 2 kids. I started focusing in my kids first then me in time till now. But now im confused cuz 2 yrs ago we had an acccident and i meet dis guy. Since then iv noticed iv been diffrent. Now i care more bout myself than ever! Before i didnt care to be wit my hsband wit out dat spark(5 yrs wit out da spark)but now i do?????? I care for him but i ddnt feel dat emotion when hes close? Wat
    • Casey  •  9 months ago
      It's really good to go to bed angry actually. During your REM sleep you actually figure out solutions to your problems. Trust me this really works, my dreams lately have really helped me.
    • PS  •  11 months ago
      Hey Amy....Cant express how I feel after reading your thoughts..I had lost faith in Love few years back after I had a very terrible break up..Since then picking myself up..After reading what you wrote I get a boost ..a hope..that love does exist..
    • princess  •  11 months ago
      Amy The third world country thingy you said is not right!!!! Back then arranged marriages were how things worked, but they gave you the time to grow to know your husband, you are not told to commit before love, I am from a third world country and my Mother always told me Love first!!!!! You are wrong
    • Michael  •  11 months ago
      Gotta love these idiots. 10 lessons about everything BUT the sex, and sex is why men and women tolerate one another.
      Face it, once the old lady is tuning your BJ needs out, it's all over.
    • Anna  •  11 months ago
      I've been married for 34 years, and it's probably because we have never followed any kind of rules about what married people are 'supposed' to do,think or feel. We both decided what we wanted, and we've stuck to being faithful to one another, which was 1 of two things we commited to. The other was that our marriage would only be broken by death. We both know that adults are never happy 100% of the time, and we coast through the boring times, but for the most part, we're pretty satisfied. I was 16 when we started dating, and people thought I couldn't possibly know what I wanted. When I married at 20, after dating for 4 years, my family thought I was nuts. If people are realistic, and understand that marriage isn't all fun and games,and respect the marriage vow as a contract, it survives .
    • Allison  •  11 months ago
      I agree with all of them and have been married for 10 years with two children. I think both couples are consantly changing for each other and for the children. We need to change because our children are chaning as they grow too. Amy this article is not about just women and are you or have ever been in a long term relationship.....and I mean LONG TERM or are you just a activist??
    • Sylvia B  •  11 months ago
      I have my reservations on this advice, as this sounds like stuff that really should have been discussed BEFORE marriage, not after the fact. It makes sense, but I was left feeling like the cart was put before the horse.

      As for #4, I dislike the word "fight" in this case, mostly because I had witnessed the extreme of this: parents who did exactly that, fight, and it resulted in a number of bruises, hurt feelings, and destroyed property. The irony of this was that my mother had parents who never argued with each other, but her dad died from complications from ulcer surgery when she was 12. Oh, and afterward, then they would try to talk to each other (#1), pretend to be like civilized peple, staying up almost all night to "discuss" the issue that made both of them go psycho in the first place. Looking back, nothing was ever resolved, only put back to status quo until the next blowout. Sorry, but if the other person has to resort to intense emotional manipulative crazy-making behavior to get what they want, then count me out. Been there, done that.
    • RobertsonM  •  11 months ago
      Interesting article, but Number one and number eight are both off the mark and my book "The Minds of Men" explains why, and how to turn those around (spnadvantage dot c o m). One thing about disagreements has to do with values- and weighing time arguing, versus resolving to find an answer. It's not easy to sleep in disagreement, but a couple can agree on resolving to find the answer to the issue- and they will with this attitude. Next, in number eight, mediocrity has to be washed away in relationships and "The Minds of Men" is a key toward ending boredom, though it's written for women, and next will be a book just for men. Have a great day....
    • slm  •  11 months ago
      I agree with most of this article. I got married very young & have been divorced now for almost 9 years. I am in a very happy relationship & planning to marry again. (so I have a little experience!)

      The only one I think could be clarified- because I do understand what the writer is saying, is #2. I believe that past relationships should definately be talked about with someone you are interested in having a life long partnershipwith. I think the issue is that many of us have not been taught HOW to talk about them in a healthy manner. Because so many people enter into sexual & live-in relationships before marrying- which, whether we choose to admit it or not leads to emotional trauma, many times these conversations about our past can become emotionally heated or hurtful.

      Perhaps (just my opinion) if we aproach this conversation in a more adult or even 'professional' manner & share the topline view (example: "Kevin & I dated for 6 months & lived together for 2 years, we broke up because we realized we just didn't share enough of the same core values in life...) and then sharing what we learned about relationships & ourselves from that relationship (how I grew as a person OR how this effected my life, my growth) would be more healthy & constructive & beneficial. It's also true that the way a person speaks about someone they shared part of their life/ body/ mind/ heart with speaks VOLUMES about the kind of person they are & how they will treat YOU. So I think it is a good idea to share about past relationships; but in a loving & respectful, beneficial way. I do agree that more times than not there is this "obligation" to share intimate details of past relationships (sex & so forth-MINUS teh abuse, that's completely different) & honestly, that's not usually what's important about the past if you are a mature adult. You want your partner to understand why you do what you do or think the way you think in life- and people we have been involved with have shaped & effected those things. BUT this doesn't mean we should bring up our ex's all the time! Have a conversation & share but remember that they are your PAST, focus on the PRESENT & the future! Daily conversations about them aren't necessary or healthy.

      A mentor of mine when I was younger once said, "Remember that every woman before you helped shape him into the man that you love today." That perspective changed my thinking forever. It's so much easier to accept that my future husband has a past & not hate those women or him for anything that happened between them. Anytime I feel a little jealous of some experience he shared with someone before me I remind myself that he is who he is because of the things he learned in those relationships, & now I get to benefit from it. :) Again, just my opinion based on my life expereinces.
    • Carlos  •  11 months ago
      If I ever get divorced, I will just shack up. It is too much of a hassle with all the legal aspects nowadays. Get a prenup, if you do. They all want to take you to the cleaners, if you break up.
    • Hunter  •  11 months ago
      Wow Amy. Never imagine a vacation without him?? Hmm, what if he imagines one without you?

      Kids are right up there at #2
      100% honesty? doesn't exist. Sometimes omitting is a wise choice
    • austin  •  11 months ago
      why is there only 9, you couldnt of added 1 to make it 10 ?
    • LAS  •  11 months ago
      Not sure I completely agree with this stuff. My work day from the time I leave until I get home is 13 hours - 5 days a week. If I made time for all of this I would never see my significant other. But of course we are in conflict because he believes in this ... his friends are more important, he starts fights that never end because avoidance is not the best answer.
    • June  •  11 months ago
      My father taught me to be independent, be my own person, he said, when you marry, you lose yourself, you are no longer your own person - and that you have to be fit for marriage. I never quite understood what all he meant. But that's the way I have lived all my life - I never considered marriage like most girl's do. I never felt you should look to human beings for happiness because you will always be disappointed. There is no security in marriage for women - a man will die, leave you even with children, gamble, drink or run around on you - I've seen what happens to women. I can't understand why women want to marry. As far as I can determine, men are more trouble than they are worth. Marriage is unnatural - it's a man made institution. It's no longer relevant. As for LOVE, its just a temporary thing - it's nature's little trap for procreation. That my take on life and I am happy with it. Know the truth and the truth will set you free!
      '
    • nycqt  •  11 months ago
      What's your sister's number? I'll sync activites with her :)
    • raul  •  11 months ago
      Better to be alone than having bad companies!
    • Mark  •  11 months ago
      I was married for 18 years, and #5 was the cause of the split. I am surprised more comments here dont list that one, as we, as a society, generally regard that myth as gospel, lol, which, btw, states that the marriage is more important too.

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