The Love Goddess | 04/30/2009 11:00 pm
The Forever Marriage?

Editor’s Note: Who is the wisest of them all? Who is more dedicated to your pleasure than anyone on earth? Who can help you when you’re going online for the first time to find love; or when your lover’s children hate you; or when you want to strangle your husband? Why, the Love Goddess, of course. She promises nothing less than celestial wisdom, heavenly sex, divine dating. Read on …
In her book review of Andrew J. Cherlin’s interesting book, The Marriage-Go-Round, the first question The New York Times book reviewer, Dinitia Smith, asks in her review is: "Do Americans get married too much?"
She asks this because Americans have one of the highest rates of marriage of any Western country — and also a divorce rate that’s been rising since the 1960s and now rests at about 50 percent. How can this be? she wonders. How can we idealize marriage so much — and run from it so quickly?
The question has a rather easy answer, despite the complications of marriages and divorces. Idealizing marriage and also being unable to stay in it don’t seem to me in conflict with one another.
It’s a psychological truth that we put on a pedestal everything that we imagine to be wonderful but that we have lost or are in danger of losing — like, say, "The Cowboy"; "Pastoral Life"; "Childhood Innocence"; "The Good Mother." That’s what idealization IS — making someone or something bigger than life, usually because he or she or it is unattainable. (I’m a goddess. I KNOW about being put on a pedestal!) The more we experience that good thing or person as having been lost to us, somehow — obsolete for whatever reasons, no longer ours for the keeping — the more we idealize it. (Hence, our reverence for the dead — even the dead we never liked one bit.)
The Perfect Domestic Wife (Donna Reed; June Cleaver) now lives on a pedestal we almost can’t even see, it’s so high up there. Ditto the Loving, Provider Husband ("Father Knows Best"; "The Bill Cosby Show"). We increasingly idealize the notion of Family (not our real ones, of course, but the NOTION of it) since, as a nation, we’re less and less inclined to live in one.
And so forth.
You idealize Marriage most of all, though. Why? Because, you dear earth creatures, you no longer are really a nation of married people! Oh yes, yes, you get married. That won’t stop just because you also get divorced. But the idealization is of the concept; the ongoing, lifelong state of safe, secure, loving union … and that permanence, my friends, is lost to you. However often you get married, in other words, the brutal truth is: For the first time in American history, the majority of households in America are unmarried households.
Which means one thing and one thing only, and it’s not that Marriage is in jeopardy. It’s an institution, and institutions don’t change. The people in marriage have changed, is all, and the loss of Marriage as we imagine it, that Forever Marriage, makes us yearn more than ever for what no longer exists. So, despite the number of times we run away from it, recreate it, hope for it and hate it, Marriage as an ideal will live on in our subconscious minds as the place to be — and will become increasingly desirable as it is increasingly hard to attain.
So of course most of you will marry — again and again and again. Because the ideal lives on. And you will keep trying, not just because you fall in love, but because, as its permanence becomes a fading possibility, as happily ever after becomes harder and harder to attain … it is absolutely certain to become that much more hungered for!
Like all savvy goddesses, the Love Goddess has her own blog, which you can visit by clicking here.























60 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
Forever marriage? What has our world become? Let’s be honest here. It is a disposable world. Remember the treasures that were passed on through generations? Those are all but past. Forever friends? Again, they too change over time for most. But the topic is marriage . . but every other portion of our lives, too, is easily disposable now. Off with the old, on with the new.
Remember the word "devotion, the word "caring", the wonderful feeling when you had discovered true love that actually lasted? No longer is divorce a stigma, but instead something people chalk up as just another landmark in the course of life.
Are we happier to go from one relationship to another? Dropping friendships, hurting others in the process? Where is the depth in life … as it seems so much surface? We don’t even interact face-to-face anymore - e-mails, texting, myspace and all of its clones - make us more alone. Less happy with ourselves and our lives? I would guess so though there are those who would deny it.
There is no substitute for a committed partner - one who loves you through thick or thin — and a secure marriage has become a slippery thing instead, oh so easy to get out of at the first sign of "trouble". Working things out? Who has time? There is always someone else around the corner — or so the hope is.
I am one of the lucky ones that has that so-called "forever marriage" and I would not trade it for the world or all the money in it. Together we believe we have it all — and our friends look on in envy and tell us so. In life, you only get out of it what you put into it … and that goes for work or pleasure or love. The others make their own choices and often suffer the consequences … as the right one never comes along.
And the world turns …
not only that, but you need a 5 yr course in child rearing. I have witnessed so many kids that are neglected, abused, thrown away…orphanages are full of throw away kids.
I too have a forever marriage, and proud of it. We have been through thick and thin together, but things always worked out. We had five great kids, and a broken marriage would have devastated any one of them. so 54 years later I am so happy and contented with my life now and before. I think I can safely say my husband feels the same way. Divorce isn’t just about a couple, it involves many people, and their hearts are broken. I feel so sorry for children from a broken home.
Pat … I would say that you and I have been extremely fortunate. Speaking for myself, it would be hard to put the finger on what each of us did to give us happiness together so many years later. But around me, among my friends, I see long marriages like ours that are empty shells if truth be told. Way back then, we were told that we marry for life … and so people stuck. My mother-in-law left her husband of 60 years in the only way she knew how: by saying she was sick and needed the hospital. We had no idea. A good front had been put up, but it was too much. We ran up, and for the first time in her life, she told what her life had been. She asked us to take her away and we did, and she lived many more years, well and content. Other friends I know are not that brave — for there are security and money issues that crop up in the later years as well as earlier that are the only glue that hold them together.
I guess I have found first hand that we must not, can not judge others. We try … and extenuating circumstances abound in some marriages that say "apart" is the only chance for happiness. You and I would like the world to be "us" - the forever marriages where love is the glue, but we have to thank God that we are the fortunate ones who chose well, and continued to do that not explainable "something" right all the way along the years. So, Pat, you and I have this bond — and that is neat!
I am a different person in many ways from the woman I was at 18, 21, or even 35.
It would take a pretty special man to have been the perfect "one" for me at all of those ages. I was married once, and would be open to marriage again, but again, he’d have to be a pretty special man, one capable of growth and communication.
I haven’t found him, but I’m not giving up yet!