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View Full Version : Marriage: why do so many (40%) of all marriages fail



actsnoblemartin
02-24-2009, 09:07 PM
What pitfalls (if i do ever decide to get married) can i tackle before I get married, and how I prevent divorce?

manu1959
02-24-2009, 09:13 PM
What pitfalls (if i do ever decide to get married) can i tackle before I get married, and how I prevent divorce?

i would get that some just picked badly and did not discuss important things.....some had to get married......and some people are just pigs.....

i married my best fried and we discussed everything beforehand.....

glockmail
02-24-2009, 09:28 PM
Spend a lot of time thinking and discussing things before, then at least as much effort once you're hitched.

April15
02-24-2009, 09:58 PM
Both must know it is a partnership. Trust is perhaps the biggest element.

Abbey Marie
02-24-2009, 11:33 PM
We became good friends before we ever dated. Everything kind of flowed easily from there.

What works for us:
We do almost everything together.
We laugh all the time.
We are both pretty devout Christians and have the same core values.

DannyR
02-25-2009, 12:25 AM
My wife and I dated/were engaged for 5 years before we actually got married. Its pretty safe to say we knew each other pretty well, but even then there have been rough spots we've had to weather. People can change as they age and priorities in life mature. We'll have been married 17 years this April.

There are no guarantees any marriage will work. Its ultimately up to the individuals and their willingness to work through problems rather than walk away. Being able to talk about problems and work through them is important. If you find while dating that discussing problems is hard, its only going to get worse later on.

But my own rule of thumb is not to rush it. Being married is supposed to be a lifelong commitment. If you can't wait at least a year to get to know the person, then how do you expect to last a lifetime with them?

Second, don't bring children into the equation too soon. I've seen a lot of marriages fail because it became more about the kids than about being together, most often when the kids were born before the parents even had a chance to really learn how to be a couple on their own.

Third, keep a little honey on the side you can tap every once in awhile so you don't have to nag your wife for sex all the time. Ok, thats really not a good piece of advice. Just testing you. :laugh2:

Psychoblues
02-25-2009, 01:40 AM
Learn to say, "Yes Ma'am", marteen. It helps.

The GOP,,,The Party Of Fear And Loathing,,,sad,,,,,,,

:beer::cheers2::beer:

Psychoblues

Trigg
02-26-2009, 01:46 PM
I've always wondered if those divorce rates take into consideration the people who've been divorced 2-3 times???

I suspect they include those people (serial divorcers), and that's gotta mess up the numbers.

60% of all marriages work out......not too bad.



I don't think people take into consideration that marriage can be a lot of work at times. They tend to plan for the "big day", and think everything after that will be rosy.

Nukeman
02-26-2009, 02:03 PM
I've always wondered if those divorce rates take into consideration the people who've been divorced 2-3 times???

I suspect they include those people (serial divorcers), and that's gotta mess up the numbers.

60% of all marriages work out......not too bad.



I don't think people take into consideration that marriage can be a lot of work at times. They tend to plan for the "big day", and think everything after that will be rosy.
You mean its not??????????:eek:

Trigg
02-26-2009, 02:12 PM
You mean its not??????????:eek:

Well ours has been perfect for going on 20 years.......:dance:

Nukeman
02-26-2009, 02:23 PM
Well ours has been perfect for going on 20 years.......:dance:

WOOT......WOOT........:beer:

glockmail
02-26-2009, 02:35 PM
Well ours has been perfect for going on 20 years.......:dance: 21 here babe. (Everything's a competition. :dance:)

Noir
02-26-2009, 03:31 PM
I think it's jsut a part of our society now, we all want stuff fast, fast food, fast cars, fast women ect. People assume that if they are not doing something their life is dull, ergo why so many people are living together, with a baby on the way and have plans to be married after only going out for 12-18 months, then they are surprised when it all comes crashing down.

Abbey Marie
02-26-2009, 03:40 PM
I think it's jsut a part of our society now, we all want stuff fast, fast food, fast cars, fast women ect. People assume that if they are not doing something their life is dull, ergo why so many people are living together, with a baby on the way and have plans to be married after only going out for 12-18 months, then they are surprised when it all comes crashing down.

I'm sure that is a real part of it.

emmett
02-27-2009, 09:14 PM
Hmmmmmmm............. Marriage...... Hmmmm...... NO COMMENT!

Mr. P
02-27-2009, 10:21 PM
What pitfalls (if i do ever decide to get married) can i tackle before I get married, and how I prevent divorce?

There is no answer nor guarantee. Ya pays yer money and takes yer chances.

Classact
02-28-2009, 06:38 AM
I've always wondered if those divorce rates take into consideration the people who've been divorced 2-3 times???

I suspect they include those people (serial divorcers), and that's gotta mess up the numbers.

60% of all marriages work out......not too bad.



I don't think people take into consideration that marriage can be a lot of work at times. They tend to plan for the "big day", and think everything after that will be rosy.I've been through two divorces and remarried and we will celebrate twenty years of marriage this year.

The thing that killed my first two marriages were that we had communication problems... we never discussed our dreams enough before getting married... Finances coupled with differing goals resulted in one partner always feeling like they were getting screwed out of a one life attempt to see their dreams come true. Be sure you both have a common dream or close enough that you both can finish the race on the same track without crippling the other.

Lizabeth
02-28-2009, 01:09 PM
I disagree with most of you on this one. I don't think you can ever really know the other person totally. Something always seems to come out of left field.

I believe it depends on how hard you are willing to work at being a couple. It has been made much too easy to walk away. A me, myself & I attitude seems to take over. I have several friends who have divorced and the conversation is usually, what is best for "me"; I need to find "myself"; "I" am not "in" love with you any more. I must say I hear more of the last one than anything...what the heck does that mean?

People need to realize you cannot be selfish in a marriage....it is not just about "you"

Classact
02-28-2009, 02:08 PM
I disagree with most of you on this one. I don't think you can ever really know the other person totally. Something always seems to come out of left field.

I believe it depends on how hard you are willing to work at being a couple. It has been made much too easy to walk away. A me, myself & I attitude seems to take over. I have several friends who have divorced and the conversation is usually, what is best for "me"; I need to find "myself"; "I" am not "in" love with you any more. I must say I hear more of the last one than anything...what the heck does that mean?

People need to realize you cannot be selfish in a marriage....it is not just about "you"You left out "people grow"!

Lizabeth
02-28-2009, 02:52 PM
Yes, that one is fun too...that is code for I'm doing someone else.

I had a friend who went through it real bad...his wife cheated, got caught then used all those wonderful lines including but not limited to: It's not you, it's me.

last time I checked those vows meant something. I guess that is why people choose to write their own. Avoid the pitfall of promising to love & honor each other so long as you both shall live. Now it is I promise unless something better comes along.

DragonStryk72
03-02-2009, 01:45 AM
Actually, 40% isn't a true figure. yes, 40% of all marriages, fail this is true, but many of these are repeat offenders, people who have been have been married before, or have even 3-4 marriages tank under them. Then of course, we have the BS marriages to consider, where there was no intention to stay married in the first place. Then there's drunken weddings in Vegas to consider as well on that count.

As to why?? there's nearly an infinite number of reasons: Women who are being abused these days are far more likely to leave the marriage than they were 20-30 years ago, which is a positive sign. Others convince themselves, I think, that they NEED to be married, and settled for far too little from their partner.

Marriage is hard, and honestly, if it wasn't, we wouldn't value it so much when it does go right.

crin63
03-02-2009, 03:13 AM
Don't go into marriage expecting it to bring you happiness that you don't already otherwise have. You will be sadly disappointed.

Plan to work harder than you have ever worked at anything before in your life.

When you feel you have given 110% give it another 110% and then maybe you will be reaching the actual 50% of giving of yourself. Its not all about you, but that doesn't mean to bow down to her either.

Love her, honor her and respect her. Treat her as though she counts and really matters to you because she does and she should.

Go ahead and play the game. When she says nothings wrong go ahead and try to get her to tell you. She wants you to ask but probably isn't going to tell you. If you don't play the game she won't think you care. I ask once, maybe twice and then leave it at that. I don't play that game very well.

Don't marry her thinking she has potential to be something other than what she already is.

Take time and get to know her, theres no rush.

Decide if you're looking for a mommy or a wife. A wife is your partner and mate not your personal babysitter.

Take time to talk to her when she wants to talk regardless of what you are doing at that moment. Turn the game off and give her your undivided attention, for however long she needs or wants it.

Send her flowers occasionally with a simple note that you were thinking of her.

Remember to tell her that you appreciate her and all she does for you as well as the family.

Don't be afraid to apologize when you are wrong. Give her the benefit of the doubt that maybe she knows you better than you know yourself when it comes to some things.

I'm the leader. I lead, she follows. You will have to decide that or figure that out on your own.

You pay the bills, she doen't need that stress. Man up on this one even if she is better with accounting than you.

If you ask her opinion, either use it or make it clear in advance that it is just for planning purposes and may not go that way.

Plan to take her out, put some thought and effort into it.

I'm sure theres more but those were off the top of my head. These are the things I try to do for my wife and my marriage. Sometimes I'm hardheaded and forget but when I realize that I did I will ask her forgiveness.