Ten Tips For Those Considering RemarriagePremarital steps to avoid another divorce
Oscar Wilde wrote: “Marriage is the triumph of imagination over intelligence. Second marriage is the triumph of hope over experience.” Although Wilde wasn’t a fan of matrimony, the statistics do bear out his assertion. It’s common knowledge that the divorce rate for second marriages is roughly 67%; for third marriages it hovers around 73%. Nevertheless, people continue to legally join forces. Why? Because: we like the feeling of being in love; we can’t stand being rejected; we have a need to rebuild our self-esteem via another commitment as soon as possible; we don’t like being alone…or lonely; we crave emotional and financial safety and security; it’s easier for most of us to have sex with someone we feel comfortable with; we live in a couple-oriented society and we don’t like to feel left out or discriminated against; and, if we have young children we still think it’s best to have a spouse.
For these reasons alone the institution of marriage is still quite popular regardless of the challenge it presents. It is in this spirit that I offer 10 tips that might help you to avoid becoming a statistic…again:1. Don’t rush into anything — Many people, men in particular, try to buffer their pain with a new relationship. They simply don’t give themselves enough time to grieve their losses.
2. Learn how to be alone before you remarry — I recommend that people live alone for at least two years post-divorce. During this time you should practice handling your own bills. Cook, clean, sew and learn how to cope with emergencies. These skills can help to prevent you from choosing a new spouse simply to be taken care of.
3. Assess whether you want to be a step-parent — If your new partner has children, you must be willing to take on new responsibilities.
4. Consider whether you want to be a part of your new partner’s family — When you marry someone you marry their family as well. If your partner is overly closed or enmeshed with his/her family you will need to accept this rather than try and pry your partner away. If your partner hails from a distant or disengaged family you may have to live with a lack of support.
5. Be emotionally and physically attracted to your partner — It’s important that you have shared interests and find your partner physically appealing. It will eventually show if you remarry without these key ingredients.
6. Only remarry if you really want to be married — I know this sounds simplistic, but I’ve seen a number of couples that have remarried because they felt the pressure from family and friends. Don’t give in to these pressures or your new relationship will run a short course.
7. Accept your partner as is — Your second partner will probably be older than your first was when you initially married. Therefore, the odds on changing him/her will be slim to none. Weigh your new partner’s pros and cons and decide whether the cons are deal breakers. For the most part, what you see is what you get.
8. Consider your partner’s past — Your partner’s relationship history is usually an indication of what you’ll experience in your future together. For example, if your partner has a history of cheating, buyer beware.
9. Think about what you learned from your previous marriage — Knowing yourself is the most foolproof way of avoiding another divorce. Most people replicate the problems in their first marriage because underlying issues are hidden in their unconscious. For example, if your initial partner overspent and your second is a chronic gambler, you’ve unconsciously chosen two people who are irresponsible with money.
10. Let go of the past — Bringing unresolved emotional issues into your second or third marriage is a recipe for disaster. If you’re a widow or widower, make sure that you’ve fully processed the death of your previous partner(s). Nobody likes to compete with a ghost.
The Least Appreciated Perk of Living Alone
What you don’t have to do will free you
If you love your solitude and your own space, no one needs to persuade you of the joys of living alone. There is one particular perk of going solo, though, that seems to get less recognition than it deserves.I realized this as I was reading a book that is more than 30 years old, Dolores Hayden’s “The grand domestic revolution: A history of feminist designs for American homes, neighborhoods, and cities.” One of the themes is that isolated homes and a gender-based division of labor leave women stuck with a lot of household drudgery. I hadn’t known that there was a whole history of ideas and advocacy for ways of reducing chores. One of the chapters, for example, is titled “Homes without kitchens and towns without housework.”
Enlisting men to do their share of the housework has been a goal of many women for a very long time. Even as traditional gender roles have lost much of their dominance, battles over household chores have not subsided. Popular writings and scholarly articles continue to address this source of conflict and stress.
If you live alone, though, you are blissfully free of such discord. Sure, you might wish that someone else would swoop in and clean your mess, or you might wish that you were more organized or that you had the money to hire a cleaning service. But you are not keeping tabs on what the other people living with you are doing and stewing when you think it is not enough. Nor are you feeling guilty when your own sense of acceptable orderliness falls below the standards of a spouse or roommate.
The freedom to be as neat or as messy as you like is not the most important perk of living solo, but it does deserve its due.
God bless, Kendra Young
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