Life Kit - 5 questions to ask your partner for a healthy, lasting marriage
Episode Date: November 28, 2023These conversation starters get at the heart of your values, including how you deal with conflict, your attitude toward gender roles and your relationship with money.Learn more about sponsor message c...hoices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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You're listening to Life Kit from NPR.
Hey everybody, it's Marielle.
So Thanksgiving's over and it is the holiday season.
You know what that means.
Will you marry me?
Absolutely.
Will you marry me next Christmas?
We barely know each other.
I've never been more certain of anything in my life.
Yeah, that's right.
Love is in the air.
I see you watching all those Hallmark Christmas movies and dreaming of an elaborate proposal
in a small New England town.
The snow falling lightly on the ground outside.
Your whole family watching.
Or not with the whole family thing.
A lot of people choose this time of year
to propose to a significant other.
But if you are actually considering marriage, there are some questions you should ask yourself and your partner.
On today's episode of Life Kit, reporter Andy Tegel walks through five of them.
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And thank you. Romantic relationships can be full of questions at every turn.
Whether you've been together for five minutes or 50 years.
You know, like, do I go in for the kiss?
Should we be exclusive?
Are we spending the holidays with your family or mine?
If you're on or seeking a path to marriage with your partner,
there's probably one big question at the top of your list.
What does it take to be and stay married?
Or perhaps put more simply, how can we make this thing last?
Carol Brees has been working to answer that question for years.
One of the things I like to remind couples is that marriage is a lifelong conversation.
Carol is a professor emeritus of marriage and family communication from the University of
St. Thomas in Minnesota, an author and, get this, a marriage social scientist.
I agreed to do this interview when my husband was not home so that he could not pop in.
Husband of 31 years. So he would say that he is a great human communication guinea pig
and that our marriage is a petri dish.
All right, question number one of Carol's five questions
to ask before you get married.
Is there anything that you or I are not willing to give up
once we're married?
And this question gets at something essential
in every healthy relationship.
It's a thing called boundaries, right?
We know that the most compassionate people are also the most
boundary people and in marriage being compassionate with each other including
respecting what each person needs to thrive is key to co-creating a thriving marriage mini culture.
Can you give me some examples of what that might look like?
Yeah, I'll actually use one from my own marriage.
So my husband, his only real hobby, as he'll tell you, is fishing.
And early, when our kids were little,
when he would go off on these fishing trips for a week or 10 days,
it was really, really hard. One of the things that I had to do was become much more compassionate
as I reflected on this core reality that him going fishing with his father and his nephew, it was not as much about the fishing, but it was about what filled his soul.
Right?
And so that notion of saying this is something that is essential for my long-term well-being, it helped us come to an understanding that we had to make that a priority. Just like for
me, going to yoga once a week, even when we had two little kids, right? It was something essential
for an hour or two of reflection, moving my body, right? So that gets at this question, what am I willing or not willing to give up once we are a couple?
Is it the same as non-negotiables?
Yes. No, I think we could also call them non-negotiables.
I like to encourage couples to use what's called the egg model of core need identification. So the yolk is where you
write and identify what your non-negotiables are. And then that white space is where you can put
what's called areas of flexibility. So for instance, in your core non-negotiable, it might be that I need to get
time every week away from the house and the kids to care for myself, right? So that might be that
yoke. The white space might be when that hour happens.
It doesn't have to be on a Saturday afternoon or a Monday night.
It might even be that it's not an hour, but it needs to be some time.
So it's flexible, but it's still a need.
Next up, question two.
Can you handle me doing things without you?
This question gets at the core truth in every relationship. And that is this truth that all relationships, whether it's marriage, family, friendship, any kind of relationship has two sets of simultaneous needs that are often in what we call dialectical opposition.
And one of those core needs is for both connection, togetherness, and autonomy.
You will always be managing those opposing needs.
There's always calibration. There's always going to be some
calibration. Beautiful word, right? Yes, there's always going to be calibration in your relational
system. So there's this longstanding myth that autonomy, right, having some spaces in your
togetherness is the death knell of a healthy marriage. In fact, the opposite is the truth that there will always be varying needs
for autonomy and connection. What if you're at really opposite poles though? You know,
like what if someone is someone who needs to have that partner for every step of the way? What if
the answer is like, no, I'm not okay with you doing things without me. I want you to be where
I am. Is that relationship doomed for failure? What do you do in that case? Yeah, I wouldn't say that it's doomed for failure if both people are willing to, one, compromise.
You have to be able to give a little.
You have to be able to give and take. Some people are not good takers. So they give a lot. They
compromise so much that they starve their own needs. And so that's not good over time as well, right?
And so it's about a conversation. of emotional abuse in a relationship is that a person wants to control that other person's time.
And so this notion that your partner is not willing to say,
wow, I want you to have autonomy.
Unyielding.
It should be a red flag, a warning sign.
Question three.
When conflict arose, did your family use the silent treatment, calmly discuss disagreements, or slam doors?
So third question gets to the issue of how we are going to engage in productive conflict.
Conflict is inevitable.
The way couples handle conflict is the single best predictor of if their marriage, if their
relationship will flourish or if it's going to need to hit the eject button.
Our first conflict classroom was the family that we grew up with. And so much of the way that we as a member of a
marriage come into the actions and expressions of conflict, unless we otherwise intentionally
work on them, we'll fall into those default modes from our respective families of origin.
And so it's absolutely essential that couples have the meta conversation about how they want to engage in conflict when they disagree and to do so when they are not in the conflict.
Right.
You got to talk about it when you're not fighting.
Exactly. they are not in the conflict, right? You got to talk about it when you're not fighting. Yeah, exactly. And one of the myths about marriage and conflict is that you should be able to solve the
majority of your problems, right? Interesting. Not true. The best marriage science in the world
from the Gottman Relationship Institute at the University of
Washington revealed so clearly that two-thirds of marriage conflicts are what they call perpetual.
They're unsolvable. I think this is the best news, right? What you do is you learn how to manage it and not necessarily solve it.
I feel insecure about finances because of my family of origin. You're very secure and money
doesn't have the emotional undercurrent that it does for me, right? Examples like that. So where we encourage couples to focus more of their energy is identifying how
they can solve the solvable problems by engaging in conversations where neither person leaves the
conversation, or I should say usually series of conversations or fights, feeling like they are less than,
feeling like they have been put down. Because that, Andy, is a sign, if it happens over time,
that the marriage is not going to make it. Yeah. Could you speak to that? There's more,
the indicators, there's indicators of divorce, right? Exactly. And one of those is this expression of what they call contempt. So like rolling your eyes. It's expressing a kind of disgust about the other person as a human being or what they think or believe or value. No one wants to feel that way, and even less so with the person we've committed
our life to being with. And so that's one of the behaviors, these micro behaviors that you
want to make sure does not show up when you are in conflict. One of the other ones is what's called defensiveness.
But the antidote to defensiveness is a powerful shift in mindset and stance.
And all of us can do this. It's called the mindset of curiosity. Instead of getting defensive,
it's like, well, I didn't mean to leave my shoes on
the floor, or I didn't intend to come home an hour late. If we shift and say, wow, I'm curious about
why this is really upsetting to you. Tell me more. And it tends to set a what could be a fight that's on a trajectory or what we call a negative spiral.
It can shift it to a conversation that is a positive spiral.
Tell me more.
Question four.
What is the most you'd be willing to spend on a lamp, a pair of shoes or a pair of jeans?
So the fourth question is about finances, right? Because
money is often not about money if you have enough to meet your basic needs, right? Safety, food,
water, shelter, right? It's about emotions. And so the fourth question, it opens the door. It
tends to like reduce some immediate defensiveness because it's like, oh, well, let's talk about,
right? I wouldn't want to spend more than $600 on a lamp. And your partner might go,
well, I've never bought a lamp that wasn't from the Goodwill, right? I don't believe
lighting is that important for a healthy, happy family? And so what this gets at is the truth that we
need to have open and ongoing discussions about our approaches to finances and about our emotions
about money. Because most of the conflict around money and marriages is about the emotions and what money means or doesn't mean and not about the actual spreadsheet.
Dollars and cents, right?
Yeah.
And finally, question five.
Are you willing to change diapers at 3 a.m. and miss an important meeting if our kid is sick? And this gets underneath an important set of conversations that couples will need to have over time.
We know that in the happiest of all marriages where both partners feel valued and their marriage is flourishing. That both partners share over time equally their talents and their time.
And they share in the mundane tasks that need to get done in life.
They wipe down the counters.
They scrub the toilets.
They do what needs to be done.
And it's not that at any point in a marriage is there ever going to be equality
or that we're all going to be contributing equally. That's a myth. It's that over time,
each partner feels respected. Because, Andy, the other piece of research that I want everyone to know about is that if we are to map marriages over time and draw in a line their happiness, it is going to look like a U.
Your happiness is going to start high.
It's going to dip low.
And then it's going to come back up again for the majority of couples
we've done this research over decades and decades and it almost always looks the same
and you know what's happening for the majority of couples at the bottom of that you
little kids right it's parenting right yeah and anyone who's a parent out there listening you're
like yep they're nodding their heads. Yep, I get it.
Right.
Because you're doing all the things you were doing before, but you're doing it a little bit exhausted, a little bit distracted.
And so what happens for most couples is that conflict increases, stress and anxiety increases.
You start to have more conflict, new kinds of conflict. And so some of them
get put off because you don't have any time together. So I think it's absolutely essential
that couples know when they hit the bottom of that U, it doesn't mean that their marriage is
not a strong one or a good one. It's that this is a time when you might need some new strategies, right? You might need to intentionally create,
might be a Sunday night, 10 minute conversation ritual with your partner right after the kids
are asleep, where you do a check-in. So institute those rituals. It's important to get rituals as
part of the program. Absolutely. No matter when you do it or how often you do it, what's important is that you intentionally do it.
Because when you don't do it, for most couples, what happens is that they will do it during a fight.
Right?
So they're not proactively having the conversation of like, wait, where are we at
in this relationship? How are we doing? What needs aren't being met? Those things are going to show
up with irritation, with criticism, with all the stuff that takes more time and emotional energy to
navigate. Carol, you've given us a lot to think about. Thank you. Before we let you go,
any last thoughts on how to make a marriage work? Someone once shared, you can either be right or
you can be in relationship. So when we are committing to this lifelong conversation with
our spouse, coming into the daily conversation of marriage with humility, by taking off the armor,
it is probably one of the most powerful things we can do over time.
That's because it's so difficult, Carol. It's because it's a very tall order you're asking.
Exactly. And I also like to remind couples that when we think about every day in our marriage or every conversation in our marriage as a practice, right, it's like, oh, I might not get it perfect this time, but I'm going to keep coming back and I'm going to practice at being better.
Those are the building blocks of a flourishing, thriving marriage.
That was Life Kit reporter Andy Tegel. building blocks of a flourishing, thriving marriage. love Life Kit and you just cannot get enough, subscribe to our newsletter at npr.org slash Life Kit newsletter. Also, we love hearing from you. So if you have episode ideas or feedback
you want to share, email us at lifekit at npr.org. This episode of Life Kit was produced by Mia Venkat.
Our visuals editor is Beck Harlan and our digital editor is Malika Garit. Megan Cain is our
supervising editor and Beth Donovan is our executive producer.
Our production team also includes Andy Tegel, Audrey Nguyen, Claire Marie Schneider, Margaret Serino and Sylvie Douglas.
Engineering support comes from Rebecca Brown and Joshua Newell.
I'm Mariel Seguera. Thanks for listening, lovebirds.