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The Truth About Expectations
After Marriage
Jeff and Debbie are dating, and things are going very well. So
well, in fact, that they are seriously discussing marriage.
There’s just one thing. Debbie does a lot of volunteering with
troubled teenagers. Her apartment has become a “home away from
home” for some of the girls, and she wants that to continue
after she’s married, as well. While Jeff admires Debbie’s
volunteer work and her dedication to the teenagers she helps,
he values the privacy of a home, and doesn’t want his to turn
into a halfway house.
Jeff is sure that, once they’re married, Debbie will see how
beautiful it is when a couple saves their time at home for each
other and guards their privacy, and will curtail her
“open-house” policy. Debbie, for her part, is sure that once
she and Jeff are married, he will see how beautiful it is when
a couple gives up some of their privacy in order to help those
who are not as fortunate, and will be more than happy to adopt
an “open-house” policy for her teenage friends..
Jeff and Debbie get married.
Four months later, they’re in counseling.
Why?
Because they didn’t know the truth that could have saved
them:
Never get married expecting your partner to change.
One of the major reasons people are unhappy after they get
married is that they expect the person they are dating to
change after marriage. Therefore, the most important question
to ask yourself when you’re dating someone is: “Can I live with
this person the way they are?” If the answer is no, then don’t
get married. If there’s something that you don’t like about the
person, something that you wish would change in the future,
then you’d better ask yourself some serious questions because
you’re setting yourself up for a potential mistake.
People have to be accepted the way they are. If there is
something about your dating partner that you dislike or
disagree with, and the issue is an important one, realize that
whatever it is it’s here to stay. Don’t fool yourself into
thinking that you’ll be able to change them after you get
married. That’s the mistake that Jeff and Debbie made, and
that’s the reason why, just four months after a beautiful
wedding, they found themselves in a marriage counselor’s
office.
Does that mean that you and your potential spouse must agree on
absolutely everything? Of course not. But you do need to agree
on the basics, on the important things that are going to make a
difference in your life – things like values, lifestyle,
religion, your ideas about home and family. If the person
you’re dating really seems to be the one for you except for one
issue, then you can try to reach a compromise that both of you
can live with. But if you don’t, and you disagree on major
issues like these, then you’re setting the stage for major
conflicts, which are obviously not conducive to a loving
marriage.
So remember the sentence that could save your life: Never get
married expecting your partner to change.
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