Photo by: Renée Peterson Trudeau

Relationships Are Hard?

Photo by: Renée Peterson Trudeau

I was nervous about writing this post.

While I’m quite forthcoming and like to “keep it real” when I share about the challenges and ups and downs in my life, talking about my relationship with my husband is very different terrain.

My parents divorced at age 48 after 26 years of marriage and 7 kids. Both sets of my grandparents have been through a divorce, my brother—who I am very close to—divorced after 14 years of marriage. And, the couple I idolized in college also divorced after 20 something years of marriage and 4 kids.

My internal dialogue throughout my twenties and much of my thirties was “Relationships are hard and you don’t really have any great models for how to be in relationship so you’ll probably never be very successful in this area."

Can anyone relate?

A week ago, my husband and I took our first extended trip alone together since our son was born to celebrate our 10th wedding anniversary. We went to Big Sur, CA and the trip was really phenomenal (you can view our photos here).

The scenery was stunning, but what was most amazing to me during this trip, was my realization of how much I have changed in the last 10 years – around how I view my husband, myself, our partnership and the whole concept of marriage.

One morning we were hiking down a beautiful sandy trail at Andrew Molera State Park on the Central Coast of CA. We were headed towards the ocean and were the only people on a beautiful, quiet, sandy path.

As I often do when hiking in nature and contemplating life, I asked my husband some “thinker” questions about his current life stage. He paused for a while, shared and then I waited a bit to see if he’d reciprocate and ask me the same questions.

He didn’t.

And I was fine. Really, I was quite OK.

Ten years ago, I would have been irritated, hurt and probably angry for hours at his “perceived” insensitivity.

Today, I know three things that changed how I viewed this experience:

1. My beloved is an introvert. He likes to really sit with and chew on things. His internal world is vast, rich and when I throw out an introspective question, he needs time and space to digest it.

2. We don’t need to talk about everything OR go back and forth around a topic to enjoy intimacy. Often our most intimate moments are found in silence.

3. I don’t need my husband to make me feel complete or whole. I know who I am. I am in touch with my needs. And, if something is really important to me, I have no problem bringing it up and exploring it with him. And, he’s always receptive to listening.

I almost felt giddy at this realization as we continued along in silence towards the waves and I let John sit with his thoughts, while I sat with mine. (I did share this ah-ha moment with him later and he felt horrible for not creating more of a dialogue with me until I explained that I wasn’t upset.)

Relationships are hard? Yes, sometimes they are. But how well equipped are we when we show up at the dance? One of my mentors used to say we’re all going to face our same issues over and over again no matter who we’re married to, so just pick your partner and do-si-do!

I’ve noticed as I have become more self-aware, more compassionate, more loving towards myself and more attuned to my needs, my partnership has evolved and shifted.

Showing up in the relationship with a full cup rather than a half-empty one seems to significantly change the dynamics.

I certainly don’t have the answers when it comes to making a marriage work.

I still find that cultivating a deeply, evolved, committed relationship is not for the faint at heart and it takes everything I have to be present with my partner day in, day out. And, it continues to be the single most challenging aspect of my life, hands down!

But I also know it’s worth it. And being in a close, connected partnership where you support and hold the highest and best for each other, has been rewarding beyond compare.

I just read a wonderful new book by relationship therapists Linda and Charlie Bloom called Secrets of Great Marriages. It’s an anthology of personal stories from 27 couples, all of whom have been married for 15 years or longer. One of the insights many couples shared that stayed with me, is the reoccurring theme that one of the best things you can do to deepen and strengthen your marriage is to know and love yourself. And to make sure your needs are met before trying to support your partner.

Sounds like I just might be on the right track. Or at least beginning to create my own model for what a meaningful, healthy relationship feels like to me. I’ll keep you posted.

P.S. If you want to explore this theme some more, I’ve listed a few of my favorite relationship resources at the end of the chapter on Staying Connected to Your Partner in my book The Mother’s Guide to Self-Renewal.

Renée Peterson Trudeau is a nationally-recognized career/life balance coach, president of Career Strategists and the author of the award-winning The Mother’s Guide to Self-Renewal: How to Reclaim, Rejuvenate and Re-Balance Your Life. Thousands of women around the U.S./Canada are joining and becoming trained to lead Personal Renewal Groups based on the Guide, as a way to enhance balance and well-being in their lives.

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45 Comments

This is a great article -- but the book advertisement still leaves me worried. The couples in her life that she cites divored after decades together, so my (cynical) thinking says, "what tells us these amazing couples in the book won't be divorced 5 years from now?" I hope our generation figures out more of how to stay the course in marriage -- for better and for worse.

Marriage is work and marriage is hard. I enjoy my marriage and I'm happy even on our worst days. We've been through some tough situations, but we always knew we had each other. The easy way out is what a lot of people take, but I chose to work on my marriage daily. I am who I am and he is who he is....I love US individually and together and sometimes it's hard to love me, him, or us, but it's worth it!

Great article. I too had horible role models growing up---mom married 3 times, dad 5 times!!!!
I just celebrated 9 years of happy (although sometimes involving compromise) marriage. We were both in our late 30's when we got married. We each had some long-term relationship experiences, and we each had a pretty good idea who we were and what we wanted for our lives. We never had children---looks like too much of a challenge for me / - :
Who knows what the next 9 years+ will hold...

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Thank you, thank you, thank you!

I'm not married and I have never been. I believe I'm not married because I never want to be divorce. What I mean is....the contract of a marriage, I take very seriously.

I believe love/marriage is a beautiful thing and at age 48....I'm not giving up. I've come very close a (couple of times) but thank God (at that time) that I didn't say, "I do."

I love your comments about the faint heart and having a connected partnership...

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i find this write up very interesting and encouraging thanks for sharing it

The key is you! Successful relationships are about the individuals involved and not the actual relationship. You can have as many deep conversations or date nights as you want, but if the individual is not developed, honest and self aware, then the relationship is hard to maintain. Good for you for loving yourself and accepting your husband as an individual!

Right on, Right on!!! What a phenomenol well written post / article. I'm so glad I took the time to read this. My daughter is 25yrs and on her own and though I've contributed with my experience much of what's written or shared doesn't always apply to me. This article gives me hope that love is there, it does change and the best I can do is be the best person that I am and I will attract the best person for me.
Thank you!!!

When my husband and I were going through a rough time, I read something like, "Love is not an act, it is an ocean, with ebbs and tides."

I have tried to keep this with me, that love and self are always changing, with ups and downs to savor. And sometimes I just go outside and scream:)

Seriously, Valerie: a pedicure? Don't get me wrong; I love pedicures and get them regularly. I'm afraid, though, I haven't found any answers at the nail salon to soul-searching questions such as, "Who am I?" and "Why did I spend the last quarter century with this person?"

Thanks once again for treating marriage as a parenting issue and the married state as integral to parenthood. We single moms don't get enough reminders of how little you all think of us, how much our families don't count in your world.

Hubby and I were married straight out of H.S...and started having children right away. Now that we've been together 31 years, we've figured out that we have nothing in common except the kids.
I had a real bad case of empty-next syndrome last summer when the last son left, but then became a Grandma.
My parents were deeply in love, but I honestly don't think we are. It's more of a matter of convenience than anything...

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Thank you for this honest, insightful and well written article. My husband is like yours, but I am a topic. Over the years I have grown to understand him more but at times still want something that he isn't doing, even though he really is giving me everything in his own way.

Your words are just what I needed to read and will undoubtedly refer back to it again when I think I really need to see the big picture again. Thank you!

i really love the thought and the lesson for it opened my mind and my heart to organize my life first and make it a priority to be a great person. from this day on i will be more responsible and appreciate the things in my life even there are bad times :)

I enjoyed your comments about relationships. I have been married for almost...48 years to the same man. I,too, experienced a lot of divorce issues in some family members. I opted to stay married to the same man. I guess he's not perfect. I just can't see anything to complain about. God has been good to me. I saw my parent's mistakes. I loved them both with all my heart. I chose to live my life differently...

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Dear friends, I just finished reading most of your comments and was very touched by our collective deep desire to connect, be heard/seen, be validated and loved unconditionally by our partners.

I thought it might be helpful to share that I have also arrived at a place where I finally understand that this deep desire for connection is not always something my husband can give me. So, the need for me to "find my tribe(s)"
has become more crucial than ever...

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