After being married and observing married people, here is marital advice from a non-authority to keep the union happy.

Before you get married, before you plan the wedding, write down all the reasons why you want to be married in the first place and why you want to marry this particular person.

When you get in an argument, share those lists with each other. Review and update the lists on your anniversary.

Get Divorced

If people understood how difficult and devastating emotionally—and often financially—divorce is, they would think more seriously about marriage. So, have a pretend divorce. Who gets what? Talk to people who are divorced. Accept their marital advice. Got a lawyer friend? Get a cost estimate.

Start with the End in Mind

If your goal is to be married for life, then take divorce out of the equation. Vow that every disagreement end in a solution for going forward, not a “get out” voiced by either of you.

Develop Common Interests

I’m a writer. I’m well-versed (pun intentional) in solitary pursuits and quite happy with them. My husband is not a reader. However, we both love traveling. Having a variety of things in common that you enjoy doing together is essential—even if it’s sitting in the same room with one of you reading A Year in the World by Frances Mayes and one of you watching the travel channel. Along with this tidbit of marital advice, here’s another: Develop separate interests.

Be Social Together

You’ll each have friends you bring to the marriage, but somewhere along the time, get friends together. Keep your world wide by always introducing new and unique people into it.

Agree on the Big things like Kids, Religion, and Pets

Politics, who cares? But kids—make sure you either both do or don’t want them. Religion—if you aren’t practicing the same beliefs, set rules on how you will support each other’s perspectives. Pets — dogs, cats, fish, birds, reptiles —which do you prefer and which are your absolute no-can-do critters.

Move

Okay, for me that’s actually meant relocating house and home multiple times, but I mean get physical—get up and get out of the house. Go for frequent walks, take up neighborhood bike riding or river canoeing. Do something, anything, but get moving and get into God’s great outdoors and breathe the awesome air together. Stroll, hike, heck toss a worm on a hook and go fishing, but enjoy the sunshine as a couple.

Drinking in that Vitamin D together will go a long way toward keeping you whole for a long time.

Couple holding hands--marital advice is go to Tuscany
Stepping out – Volterra, Italy

Keep Laughing

Have go-to humor on hand for when things get too serious. It could be classic films like Young Frankenstein, or childhood-loved TV shows like The Three Stooges, or—who can resist laughing with the little girl in Monsters, Inc.? It could be comics. I’ll eternally be a fan of “Calvin & Hobbes” and “Garfield.” Maybe for you it’s a comedian who is always sure to make the two of you chuckle.

Husband and I spent brisk autumn nights binge watching Doc Martin and laughing our behinds off. Sharing laughter, you develop inside jokes and aren’t they a great way to keep you side by side? 

Have a Place you Always Enjoy Visiting 

For us, a short road trip to Washington, D.C. is steadfastly perfect. History, adventure, beauty, great food … our nation’s capitol has it all. Including an easy metro system so you don’t have arguments about driving around in the hectic city. You might want to decide and agree on what to see before you get to your favorite place. If it’s anything like DC, the choices can be overwhelming.

Perhaps you’re lucky enough to have a place like the Clayton—Henry Clay Frick’s Pittsburgh mansion–in your city and you declare it a couple’s date to tour the opulent home each Christmas while its decked in holiday splendor.

Set Respect-Boundaries

Know how far you can each go expressing your opinions and feelings without crossing into the evil land of disrespect.

Realize, Always, That Marriage is Difficult

Living with another person is a challenge. No matter how joined-at-the-hip your union is, you are unique people. You were raised differently and life has formed you into distinct individuals. It is asking a lot to expect to always match up on every issue. Look at those dissimilar things as opportunities to broaden yourself instead of argue with your other half. In the end, you need to find ways for your marriage to win, not for you, as one, to defeat the other.

With friends in the newly married realm to friends married over forty years, I am looking forward to hearing what you will add, critique or debate with me about the above. I’m open. I want to learn from you, so comment away!

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Read: It’s Our Parents’ Fault