Archive for January, 2012

January 29, 2012

The Marriage Project, Reflection 36:“I’ve had to dig deeper to understand myself, so that I can make myself understandable to this other person who shares so much of my life with me.”

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(photo from offbeatbride.com)

J is a graduate student in New York .

Why did you decide to get married? 

We loved each other and wanted to spend the rest of our lives together. It was actually a very easy decision.

What did you think marriage would be like?

I don’t remember what my expectations were going in. I was very much in love and very excited. I knew that every marriage comes with challenges, but I also thought I would be happy – and I am. Whatever my expectations were, I certainly haven’t been disappointed.

Where do you think you got your ideas/concept/narrative about marriage?

Mostly from my parents. I am very lucky, my parents have a wonderful marriage and so I’ve had a great example set for me about how a marriage can work and what it could look like. I have always believed that taking cues on love and marriage from TV and movies is a recipe for disaster. It’s just unrealistic.

Why did you make the decision you made about your name?

After 4 years, I’m on the verge of adopting my husband’s name and keeping my maiden name as a middle name. I have definitely procrastinated and resisted making this decision. It was tough. In the end, it mostly came down to what’s easiest. I want it to be clear that I’m married and to whom I’m married. If we have the same last name, we go together. The same will be true when we have kids. I can maintain my individual identity in many other ways. And of course, I’m not dropping my maiden name entirely.

What are your feelings on the word “wife”?

I don’t have strong feelings about the word. I don’t think it has the same connotation it may have had in the past. “Wife” is only one of the many identities I have in my life.

Do you think your relationship with your partner has changed since you got married?

Of course. We’re closer, and our relationship is deeper. We continue to learn more about each other all the time.

What have you learned about yourself since you’ve been married? 

I think marriage has made me more self-aware. When you’re always accountable to someone else, when your partner notices every small change in mood or action, you can’t just stay in your thoughts. I’ve had to dig deeper to understand myself, so that I can make myself understandable to this other person who shares so much of my life with me. I think that overall this has been a very positive process.

January 26, 2012

The Marriage Project, Reflection 35: “I am unlearning some of my habits of independence in favor of interdependence.”

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(photo from offbeatbride.com)

 

This project interview is with Karen G. Johnston. (Full name used with permission.)

Why did you decide to get married?

After a decade of dating and being a peace while being on my own, I met someone who felt so right, even when he confounded me.  There is a deep groove into which we both fit, one that surpasses all my intellectual and psychological arguments.  Plus, we had been together for a year and a half, had asked each other to marry on two occasions before, had decided yes, and then quickly changed our minds.  This time, it stuck.  A year and a half seems like a short amount of time were I younger, but given our ages (me in my mid-40s, he in his late 50s) it seemed right.

What did you think marriage would be like?

Not much different than it is.  We were living together for a year before we actually got married.  So we felt we were already spiritually married, had made the commitment to each other and to my children.  There’s a quiet joy in each others’ company, there’s a deep reliance on each other that grows as time goes on.  This is a bit unsettling for me, because I spent a decade on my own, raising my kids on my own (with help, but still on my own) so I am unlearning some of my habits of independence in favor of interdependence.

Where do you think you got your ideas/concept/narrative about marriage?

Well, certainly I got my ideas about marriage from my parents and family of origin.  Of course, there are stories in the media, in Hollywood movies, but I think we find ourselves in the same meme that our family of origin creates — either the same one or in reaction to it.  Against my intention, I fell in love with a man significantly older than I (17 years) and married him.  My mother’s 2nd husband — the one who raised me — was 19 years older than she and my aunt’s only husband is 17 years older than she.  Hard to deny there’s a pattern there.

How do you feel about the word “wife”?

Whereas I use the word, “husband” and find myself using it, as a sign of affection and with an ironic tone, I am careful about where I use it.  I feel less okay with “wife” — I do not use it to refer to myself.  I know my husband does and that’s okay, though I wince sometimes when he does.  In communities where there is less visibility for queer couples/life, I would not use “husband” or “wife” easily, because it seems to flaunt heterosexual privilege and invoke a distinct and bifurcated sense of gender that I do not believe.

Why did you make the decision you made about your name?

In my community, it is uneventful that women keep their name.  I kept my name because of my feminist beliefs, because of my religious beliefs about the individual worth and dignity of each person, because I am in middle age and have created a life for myself that I do not want erased or confused, because I continue to share my children’s last name.

Do you think your relationship with your partner has changed since you got married?

The first time I was married, it was a commitment ceremony and I felt a significant change as a result of the ceremony/ritual.  The witness of our community – both friends and family — deepened our commitment to each other.  There was no legality involved, since it was a lesbian relationship before marriage equality.

This second time of marriage was both legal and heterosexual, so a change on both parts.  The ritual/ceremony itself was deeply spiritual for both of us and there was a long moral/political/intellectual conversation about whether our union should take on the legal vagaries or not.  We decided to do so — for my husband, it spoke deeply to him of commitment and approaching permanence, as much as that can happen in this human life.  For me, it was a mixture of honoring his need/desire for it, while unfair, heterosexist practicality played its influence: access to health insurance, social security survivor benefits.

The morning after the wedding, I awoke in our hotel room, before my husband did.  I was frantic.  The legal aspects of the marriage felt like a horrible weight, I felt trapped in a way I never had experienced before.  It took a barefoot walk in the early morning hotel parking lot, some texting with dear friends, and eventual mindful breathing to move me out of that state of mind/heart.  I have not felt it since, though I do not rule out the possibility.

There are times I feel guilty and hypocritical for having chosen legal marriage.  There are so many people in this country and world who are barred from legal marriage because of homophobia and the power of hate integrated into our nation’s laws.  That is not a force with which I want to be allied.  Getting legally married to a man has reconfirmed my commitment to marriage equality, as well as made it a common conversation in our household.

What have you learned about yourself since you’ve been married?

I’m kinder and more laid back than during my first marriage.  Though my values may be consistent, how I interpret and express them changes as I age.  That love is a persuasive energy.

January 22, 2012

The Marriage Project, Reflection 34: “There is a difference, though, in that when you’re together and unmarried you both decide every day to be with the other person. Being married removes some of that decision-making story, but the feelings are really the same.”

 

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(Photo at offbeatbride.com)

K is a 27 year old data analyst in Burlington, VT.

Why did you decide to get married?

I think we decided to get married when we both agreed that we didn’t want to be with anyone else, and that we really enjoyed living together.  But then, when we realized we agreed on those two important points, we just went on living together for a few years after that.  We got cats, and bought furniture, and shared bank accounts and tiny apartments.  Then we realized that filing two whole sets of tax forms is a real drag.  Also, my husband started grad school (he’s about halfway through his PhD now), and we made the discovery of the real limits of student health insurance plans.  So we gathered some friends and family in our living room, said some words, signed some papers, and ate a nice big dinner together.  And we’ve been married ever since!

What did you think marriage would be like?

I had a feeling our life as married people would be pretty similar to our life as living-together people, and for the most part that is true.  There is a difference, though, in that when you’re together and unmarried you both decide every day to be with the other person.  Being married removes some of that decision-making story, but the feelings are really the same.

Where do you think you got your ideas/concept/narrative about marriage?

I’m sure I got most of my early concept of marriage from 1980s-era television.  I didn’t have a very large family, so most of my childhood pictures of married couples were from All in the Family, the Simpsons, Family Ties, all those TGIF shows…and those are all your basic traditional views of marriage, family, and gender roles.  Even though second wave feminism was totally underway and women in the ’80s were becoming closer to equals in the workforce, men weren’t becoming equals at home in exchange.  These fictional families I grew up with all expected women to take the roles of housekeeper and caretaker, and then hold down a job if they wanted one, and that was pretty true in reality as well.  Fortunately I’m part of a generation that is realizing the absurdity of this, that we need to not only teach our daughters they can do anything including fix their own car, but we also need to teach our sons they can do anything including fix their own dinner.

What are your feelings on the word “wife”?

Actually, I don’t mind it at all.  I much prefer it over “girlfriend”.

Why did you make the decision you made about your name?

I actually haven’t fully decided on my name yet.  I like his last name better than mine because it’s half as long and doesn’t have as many easily-confused vowels.  When I make restaurant reservations, I always give his name because it’s quicker and easier.  I did that long before we were married, though.  But when I expressed the possibility of legally changing my name to his, some girlfriends of mine reacted really strongly against it, like I was betraying the sisterhood!  Odds are, though, I’m just going to take the lazy way and not change anything, because wow it’s a lot of paperwork.

Do you think your relationship with your partner has changed since you got married?

I think we’ve changed in that we’ve both learned to be more patient, not just with each other but also with the world in general.  We’ve learned to talk about things that are keeping us from having a good day, instead of ignoring them and hoping they’ll just go away or get better magically.  It’s hard, because we’re both slightly shy and awkward when it comes to “let’s talk about our feelings now!” but it’s definitely something that we’ve learned to do together.

What have you learned about yourself since you’ve been married?

I’ve learned that it’s okay for me to be a little selfish.  In fact, it’s pretty necessary.  It’s really easy to give in a relationship, but at some point you have to recognize what you need to keep yourself happy.  You need time apart, you need your own friends, you need to be able to say “I need to do this now please go away” and not have it be a big deal.  I’ve learned a lot more about my own preferences and my own opinions, and that even though we share a lot of the same ideals, I don’t have to shrink away from something if it’s obvious we feel differently about it.  I’ve learned that I like to debate in a way that’s productive and interesting, so we can have real conversations together and learn things from each other.

January 20, 2012

The Marriage Project, Reflection 33: “To me it shows that this is a partnership, but I’m still complete in my own identity.”

 

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Avital Norman Nathman is 31 and lives in the Happy Valley. You can find her writing at The Mamafesto.com, along with the interview series, “This is What a Feminist Looks Like.”

Why did you decide to get married?

By the time we walked down the aisle, my husband and I had already been together almost 7 years. Of those, we had been living together for 3. In my head and heart, we were already “married” – already tied together in an inextricable way, regardless of what a piece of paper, or the government, had to say about it.

Our reason for finally getting married was two-fold. One, my husband was finishing up a doctoral program, and I was the one with the kick-ass, union-backed insurance benefits. He was still stuck with paltry university-provided benefits, which really weren’t much. The fact that a simple piece of paper could allow him to hop on my benefit wagon was simultaneously amazing and frustrating (as it clearly points to the inadequacies and biases of our health care system).

The other reason for getting married was that we really just wanted a big party. Our wedding wasn’t anything extravagant in any way, but it was a fun night full of good friends, family, amazing food, fabulous music, and lots of dancing. Plus, not only was it a guilt-free way to have a party focused solely on us and our love, but nobody batted an eye when we then traipsed off for a 2-week adventure in Costa Rica right afterwards.

Also, while this didn’t really impact our decision in any way, I was still aware of the social gaze surrounding marriage. I was a high school teacher at the time, and most of my colleagues were married. There was something that felt slightly youthful or juvenile using the term “boyfriend,” while others tossed around “wife” or husband in a carefree manner.

What did you think marriage would be like?

Since we had lived together for a while before getting married, I had a pretty decent idea of what marriage would be like, and for the most part, I was right. I assumed that marriage would be much like when we were “living in sin,” except for the whole “now we’re legal” aspect – and it was. I still nag him about hanging back up his damn bath towel, and he still cleans the kitchen better than I do.

Where do you think you got your ideas/concept/narrative about marriage?

I’ve gotten the majority of my “real-life” notions of what marriage is like from my family. My parents have a very egalitarian marriage, so I had (in my opinion) a pretty healthy example growing up of what it takes to make a marriage work. While both of my parents worked outside of the house, both of my parents took on an equal share of domestic duties. My father cooked breakfast on weekends (as he was at work before 7AM during the week) and he was the one that was at the helm when it was time to clean the house. It was clear that major financial decisions were mutually agreed upon, and looking back they shared the majority of childcare as well. 

I would also say that a lot of my ideas of what marriage *isn’t* has come from the media. Somehow, growing up, I was able to figure out that what I was seeing in movies and television was not the litmus test for what an actual, functional marriage was. Well, that’s not entirely true… I did sort of feel that Roseanne was on to something…

How do you feel about the word “wife”?

Meh. Is that an answer? I feel that the word has such a heavy history that is has so many negative associations with it that make it hard for me to take it on and proudly exclaim – I AM A WIFE, HEAR ME ROAR! (or vacuum? or cook? hm…). I love being my husband’s wife, in the sense that I’m down with this role in my life, but it is not my sole identity, nor does it solely define me.

Why did you make the decision you made about your name?

I ended up keeping my last name and adding on my husband’s last name after it, so I have both. I thought it was fair. I had (and still have) my own identity, but I have absolutely no problem making a (pretty big) statement that I share my life with another person by taking on his name as well. I don’t feel it means he “owns” me, that I’m not my own person, or that it’s stifling me in any way. To me it shows that this is a partnership, but I’m still complete in my own identity.

Do you think your relationship with your partner has changed since you got married?

Somewhat. We’ve been together now almost 14 years (married for 7 this summer). The real big changes occurred when we had our son 5 years ago and we needed to learn how to live as a family of three. Otherwise, the significant changes occur as we, as individuals, change. Whether we would be married or not, I would anticipate that any long-term relationship would ebb and flow (and continue to redefine itself) as the participants aged.

In some ways, as we’ve been together this long, it’s gotten easier. We each know each other intimately, and know what makes the other one tick. This makes dealing with disagreements much easier (and faster/less painful to deal with), and it also makes the sweet moments really special, because we haven’t lost the spark that we started with either.

What have you learned about yourself since you’ve been married?

The biggest lesson I’ve learned about myself since I’ve been married is that I’m able (and even sometimes willing) to give up a bit of control. I’ve learned that sometimes it is okay to let somebody else take the reins.

January 15, 2012

The Marriage Project, Reflection 32: “I have come to learn that true romance is in the everyday little gestures.”

 

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L lives in Washington DC.

Why did you decide to get married? 

I decided to get married because I met someone who made every day life “fun” and “interesting”. I initially was more interested in just being “friends” with my current husband…but one day, something just changed. It was the feeling that I didn’t want to live without him, day to day. We just made sense together and things were really just easy. There was no drama, we were 100 percent ourselves around each other, and it was a very peaceful existence.

What did you think marriage would be like?

I definitely felt that marriage would include more “romance”…but I have come to learn that true romance is in the everyday little gestures. I’ve still never received flowers or anything traditionally “romantic” from my husband…but when he brings home milk when I need it, or runs to the store to buy heartburn medication at weird hours, that is more special…it’s more real.

Where do you think you got your ideas/concept/narrative about marriage?

I got my ideas/ concepts about marriage from my parents, who have been married for over 40 years…also my grandparents on both sides were married for over 50 years, before one partner passed. I always had very positive role models for what a healthy marriage looked like.

What are your feelings on the word “wife”?

I definitely feel that it is an archaic word…we rarely use the terms “husband” and “wife” anyway…I think it’s just assumed…although my husband never wears a ring, so sometimes we do need to say “this is my husband” , when introducing each other. Wife kind of is a strange word…doesn’t mean much really. I do think “partner” is stronger in connotation.

Why did you make the decision you made about your name?

It took me almost a year to change my name…it’s hard to have the same name for 32 years, and then all of a sudden “poof” you’re someone else. Honestly, it was mainly changed for logistical reasons…it’s easier with bank accounts, finances, and joint assets…also, we knew that we wanted to have children and thought it would be best to all have the same “family” name.

Do you think your relationship with your partner has changed since you got married?

Yes, absolutely! Our relationship has had many ups and downs in the short time (year and a half) that we’ve been married…we’ve gone through a lot of family drama together, that have caused lots of hardships. I changed jobs and got pregnant, which are two huge life changers. We’ve learned to be patient with one another and to communicate better, through adverse situations.

What have you learned about yourself since you’ve been married? 

I’ve learned that I am still the same exact person I was, before I was married. I am still introverted and need my “alone” time. My husband knows this. We sleep in different rooms and always have, just because it is more comfortable to us. We get a better night sleep! I still see my friends, just as much, if not more, than before we were married. My husband and I don’t actually have a lot in common, aside from our love of dogs.

January 12, 2012

The Marriage Project, Reflection 31: “Being a married person that believes marriage shouldn’t be some exclusive club is quite powerful.”

 

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Ashley Lauren is a high school English teacher and freelance writer in the Chicago suburbs. She writes about modern marriage and gender roles at Small Strokes  and about global gender issues at Gender Across Borders.

Why did you decide to get married? 

Quite simply, I decided to get married because I fell in love. 

But why enter into a patriarchal institution that has been some form of ownership since… forever? That’s a different question. And a good one, at that.

Personally, I believe in marriage. And I believe in partnership. I believe that a strong and supportive marriage can not only make two separate lives feel whole, but can serve as an example of grace and love and strength and social consciousness and devotion and individuality and support. Of course, I am not able to ignore centuries of oppression in the form of marriage. However, I can work to subvert those notions and redefine what the term “wife” means to me. 

We toyed with the idea of waiting to get married until everyone had the right to do so, but then, after much thought and much reading, I realized that so many people who continually vote, speak, and work against marriage equality are married. They talk constantly about “protecting the sanctity of marriage.” Quite literally, the Defense of Marriage Act defends the sanctity of marriage by keeping LGBTQ people out of it. Considering the rhetoric that beats us over our heads day in and day out, being a married person that believes marriage shouldn’t be some exclusive club is quite powerful.

What did you think marriage would be like?

I’d like to say that I didn’t have any preconceived notions of what marriage would be like, but that would be a lie. Honestly, I had the worst ideas of marriage. I feared I would turn into the nagging wife; I feared I would lose myself completely; I feared my husband would want me just to have a family rather than to be married and foster a relationship; I feared I’d never be able to trust him with my hard-earned money; I feared getting stuck in a big house with pearls and a vacuum; I feared living in a suburb with the same job my entire life.

I was totally wrong, thankfully. My relationship with my husband has made me more secure in myself, and my creative pursuits. In fact, if I hadn’t been so worried about finding someone to love me, and if I hadn’t been so busy molding myself into what I thought (or was told) men wanted me to be, I might have started living my life this way much sooner. And, while we’ve decided to stay in the suburbs and not make the move to the city, we are so happy starting other, new adventures. Together.

Where do you think you got your ideas/concept/narrative about marriage?

I definitely got my ideas about marriage from pop culture. Growing up with shows like Everybody Loves Raymond and Friends, and going to undergrad with shows like Sex and the City, I wasn’t sure it was ever going to be for me. The single, city life looked so glamorous and I wanted to pursue that. When I moved to a small town to start my first job, and then moved home and started grad school and my second job (and met my husband), my life took a totally different path, and I started to realize that this path could be glamorous, too.

How do you feel about the word “wife”?

Some believe that the word “wife” is archaic. Oddly enough, I was a bit queasy about using the term “wife,” but was never all that bothered by the term “husband.” As stated above, I’ve made my version of the term “wife” into what it means to me, and that’s all that matters, plus it’s made me feel better about it. Once I was able to realize that, I became much more comfortable with the word.

Why did you make the decision you made about your name?

I didn’t change my name, nor do I use his name socially. I just kept it the way it is, and I correct almost everyone who assumes otherwise. It’s mostly because I’m a writer, and I never dreamed of seeing “Ashley Lauren SomeOtherName” on a bookshelf.

Honestly, I never wanted to change my name, and once I realized (probably from watching to some TV show or listening to some radio program) that guys had certain “deal breakers” that could end the relationship in a flash, I realized it was probably OK for me to have one, too. So when I started meeting guys that I thought I really liked, I’d tell them that keeping my name was my deal breaker. Every single one broke up with me almost on the spot. (Who knew this was such a problem!) Even my husband was angry with me. He didn’t talk to me for a few days after I told him I was keeping my name, and that was non-negotiable. I figured it was over. But then, he called me and we went out and talked, and he offered to hyphenate his name if I would hyphenate mine. I told him that was very sweet, but then asked if he would really like to go to the Social Security office and the DMV and then change all of his credit cards and billing statements to match his new name. When he said no, I said, “So why don’t we both just keep our names the way they are then? Much easier.” And he agreed.

Out of curiosity, I asked him what changed his mind. He said, “I thought about it, and realized that if I wasn’t willing to change my name, why should you be willing to change yours?” That was when I knew I would marry him. That was two months into our relationship.

Do you think your relationship with your partner has changed since you got married?

Oh yes. In the best way. We spent the first year of our marriage oscillating between delirious happiness and some of the worst fights I’ve ever had with anyoneNow, we have become more comfortable together and are starting to function as a unit. We talk things out, and figure it out together. And I’m working on no longer being afraid of all that stuff I was afraid of when I entered this marriage. It’s a work in progress.

What have you learned about yourself since you’ve been married?

I’ve learned that I am all of the things I was always afraid I wasn’t. That I am smart. That I am passionate. That I am beautiful, and that I have really great legs. That I’m funny. That I can do whatever I set my mind to. That we can do something spectacular together.

January 11, 2012

bell hooks, on marriage

 

 

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(Courtesy of Fat and the Ivy)

“I still think it’s important for people to have a sharp, ongoing critique of marriage in patriarchal society — because once you marry within a society that remains patriarchal, no matter how alternative you want to be within your unit, there is still a culture outside you that will impose many, many values on you whether you want them to or not. ”

“We fear that evaluating our needs and then carefully choosing partners will reveal that there is no one for us to love. Most of us prefer to have a partner who is lacking than no partner at all. What becomes apparent is that we may be more interested in finding a partner than in knowing love.”

“To love well is the task in all meaningful relationships, not just romantic bonds.”

January 9, 2012

Emily Gould: On Rings and Hand-Wringing

 

I read Emily Gould’s book, And The Heart Says Whatever, this weekend, and now I can’t let it be more than a foot away from me. Here’s an essay she wrote about some recent books on marriage.

http://moreintelligentlife.com/content/emily-gould/marriage

 

 

 

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Fewer Americans are getting married, yet the institution itself has only become more fascinating. Emily Gould considers some recent books on women and marriage …

Special to MORE INTELLIGENT LIFE

Marriage, in America at least, is an institution in decline. The Pew Research Centre recently reported a significant drop in the number of married couples between the ages of 30 and 44: 60% in 2007, down from 84% in 1970. This erosion in legally bound partners has been steady: 77% of this demographic was married in 1980, down to 65% in 2000. During this same period another dramatic change was taking place: the expansion of economic and educational opportunities for women. As the Pew report points out, female college graduates now slightly outnumber male ones. And while the wage gap still exists, women are, for the first time, slightly more likely to be employed than their husbands.

You might be tempted to conclude that the new economic caste of well-employed, highly educated women is responsible for marriage’s decline; it’s not. Female college graduates, like their male counterparts, are now more likely to be married than their less-educated sisters, whose drop-off has been the most precipitous: from 78% in 1970 to 43% in 2007.

What does all this mean? The short answer is, as with most statistical findings: pretty much whatever pundits want it to mean. But the most basic assumption I might make, based on this report—were I, say, an anthropologist visiting from another planet—is that given the steady decline in the popularity of marriage, the institution itself must be becoming less significant in our culture.

Then, I suppose, I would put down the Pew report, scan the bestseller list, turn on a marathon of “Say Yes to the Dress”—a TLC reality show set in a venerable New York bridal shop, in which women are shamed for budgeting less than $5,000 for a single-use garment—and reconsider America’s inscrutably perverse relationship with marriage. To this end, “Committed: A Skeptic Makes Peace With Marriage” by Elizabeth Gilbert, and “Marry Him! The Case For Settling for Mr. Good Enough” by Lori Gottlieb would top my reading list.

Both of these recently published books aim, via disparate strategies and wildly different motivations, to make a case for the primacy of marriage in modern heterosexual American women’s lives—including, in both cases, the authors’ own.

Gottlieb, who has never been married, had a son via sperm donor at age 37. Now 41, she wishes that she had been less picky about her romantic options in her 20s and 30s, mostly so that she, like her married friends, could have someone around to help shoulder the responsibilities of child-rearing. Even her friends with “less-than-ideal marriages” and “less-than-ideal spouses”, she claims, are “in many cases happier than they’ve ever been.” To them, she says, she is “a mildly tragic figure, if not a cautionary tale.” It may be true that Gottlieb’s married friends are happy, and that their marriages have contributed to their happiness. Yet here and elsewhere Gottlieb’s pronouncements are as grand as they are unverifiable. Gottlieb’s life may indeed be a cautionary tale, though perhaps not in the way she thinks it is.

Her book is filled with stories that are meant to chill the blood of young female readers, presumably in order to send them running into warm male arms. For example, we have Jessica, whose story can be found in the chapter titled “How Feminism Fucked Up My Love Life”. Jessica’s medical-student boyfriend Dave proposed to her at the tender age of 23, but she rejected him—not because she didn’t love him, but because she wanted to experience something of youth, work and life before committing to a life-long contractual bond. Cut to Jessica, woefully unmarried at 29 (though it’s mentioned in passing that she’s become a the communications director of a museum). Turns out she is still in love with Dave, who in the intervening years has become Dave MD, while Jessica has been living “the so-called empowered single girl life,” “ordering takeout” and so forth. Jessica finally gets up the gumption to ignore the advice of her girlfriends (those harpies) and call Dave. Alas, after pining for Jessica for years, he moved on to a marriage-minded fellow resident. “Dave is now married to this woman and both are pediatricians,” the story concludes.

It’s not clear what the word “feminism” means to Gottlieb. It seems to be interchangeable with an amorphous idea of “empowerment”, as in, “we empowered ourselves right out of a mate.” To Gottlieb this “feminism” is not incompatible with a worldview in which all men’s peccadilloes, short of explicit psychosis, are to be accommodated by women, who must stop being so damn picky. It is okay, in other words, for a married man to tell Gottlieb that most men know right away whether they’re going to marry their girlfriends—”it’s a very visceral feeling,” he says—but that they stay in relationships with unmarriageable types anyway, for the “perks”. He’s just being honest! Whereas a woman who breaks up with a man because she “just wasn’t feeling it” ought to reassess her priorities or risk winding up alone forever—the worst fate imaginable, or at least, the worst fate Gottlieb can imagine: “How bleak it felt…to have nobody to talk to in those intimate moments before bed except for girlfriends on the phone. It was so boring!”

If Gottlieb had paid closer attention to those conversations with her girlfriends, she might have written a more useful book. Too-pickiness might be a legitimate problem for Gottlieb, who spends 322 pages detailing her struggle to overcome it (spoiler: her book is nevertheless dedicated to “my husband, whoever he may be”). But for most of the women I know—among them a woman who spent five years with a man who Blackberried his way through her mother’s funeral and another whose live-in boyfriend gave away their dog without warning—the problem seems perhaps to be that they’re not picky enough. Maybe the current crop of women in their 20s and 30s is fundamentally different from Gottlieb in this regard. Or maybe, just maybe, there is a fundamental flaw in the assumption that one can extrapolate what all “women” do, and what they ought to do, based on one’s own experiences. Drawing from her own loneliness, Gottlieb encourages others to embrace perfunctory marriages for fear of being left husbandless. But this is only good advice if you believe, as Gottlieb does, that some intangible but necessary benefit automatically comes with marriage.

Elizabeth Gilbert, a mega-bestselling memoirist, begins her book with the opposite assumption about marriage’s inherent goodness, at least in regards to herself. On finding out she must marry her Brazilian beloved in order for him to live legally with her in America, she feels “mournful and sucker-punched and heavy and banished from some fundamental aspect of my being.” Having been through a rough divorce, she has real doubts about the institution, finding it sexist and oppressive; she will spend the next 285 pages detailing these doubts, she tells us at the outset of her book, and then at the end, reader: duh.

One imagines Lori Gottlieb and her marriage-minded ilk narrowing their eyes here: Gilbert is essentially telling us that she has, after years of therapy and well-documented soul-searching, finally found the man of her dreams, an articulate gem trader who will not try to force her to have the children she doesn’t want (he has been there, done that) and who, she says, is constitutionally faithful—”meant to mate for life.” This is a man so good-natured, so mature and so obviously besotted with Gilbert that he does not balk at spending a ten-hour bus ride across Laos hashing out the terms of their pre-nuptial agreement. And now she has to marry him! Oh, cry us a river!

The great achievement of this book, then, is that Gilbert succeeds in making us sympathise with her ambivalence—and, not incidentally, better understand our own (assuming we are not in the Gottlieb camp). As she assesses statistics, literature, pop culture and her own life to piece together the socio-cultural history of marriage, she concedes that her anxieties are of a privileged sort. Worrying over whether or whom to marry is not something the Hmong villagers she interviews seem to spend much time doing; they are too busy farming and cooking and sleeping 12 to a one-room hut. But for many women in the West, the matter of marriage is deeply vexed. Despite her folksy methodology, Gilbert demonstrates that examining the necessity of marriage, for oneself and for women in general, is actually not self-indulgent or frivolous. For this, she deserves thanks.

“It was slowly becoming clear to me that perhaps there was never going to be any tidy ultimate conclusion here,” Gilbert announces, tongue firmly in cheek, on page 201 of “Committed”. She knows, presumably, that the reader had a similar suspicion on page one. Having expertly piled up evidence for and against marriage, Gilbert ultimately dismisses most of it. While maddening, this makes emotional sense. In the end, she never really explains why she finally ends up embracing such a flawed institution. But the cumulative effect of her book is to convey that she probably did so for the same reason that anyone falls in love with another flawed human being.

It is time to return to the alien anthropologist—the one who examined the Pew report and wondered why marriage, in its death throes, still holds such sway over our imaginations. Why would a single woman write a whole book admonishing others to marry whomever they can? Why are those who are barred from the institution clamouring to swell the dwindling ranks of the legally bound? Why, when most marriages end in divorce, are weddings more fetishised than ever? To these niggling questions, Gilbert provides a kernel of an answer. Describing the decision to take a solo trip to Cambodia after a few particularly tense weeks of travel with her fiancé, she acknowledges that it is a mistake to believe we can have “equal parts intimacy and autonomy in our lives.” “Marriage has a bonsai energy,” she writes. “It’s a tree in a pot with trimmed roots and clipped limbs. Mind you, bonsai can live for centuries, and their unearthly beauty is a direct result of such constriction, but nobody would ever mistake a bonsai for a free-climbing vine.” After spending so much time with Gottlieb’s unequivocal endorsement of marriage and horror of singleness, it was a relief to read such a perfect evocation of the virtues and drawbacks endemic to both states.

But the real collective import of these recent books about marriage may just be that it’s impossible to read them and not think about how lucky women are to be able to live in a time when marriage is no longer compulsory. Now that women have a real choice about whether or not to enter the institution, statistics reveal the results of practical cost-benefit analyses. In this light, even the exhortation to “Marry Him!” reads like progress; implicit in it, after all, is the suggestion that, unless hectored, we very well might not.

January 8, 2012

The Marriage Project, Reflection 30: "I was born on the patriarchy train, but I don’t have to keep it running on the same tracks.”

 nytrunk5

A is a 28-year-old writer from Texas.

Why are you choosing to get married?

A mix of reasons, both personal and practical: because it feels like the right thing to do to solidify my relationship with P in the eyes of our community. Because I’ll pay more reasonable taxes as a married person. Because I’ll get to join his health insurance plan. But also because it is both a deeply patriarchal “thing people just do” and a remarkable opportunity to demonstrate to a lot of people all at once that patriarchal institutions don’t necessarily have to be that way in execution or practice. I like trying to solve the question: how do you make something deeply problematic into something beautiful that’s based in mutual respect and equality? How do you “further the conversation,” as it were, with regard to marriage and weddings? For me, the answer is not to toss out the tradition but to change and morph it into something more welcoming for all people, if that’s what they want. I get to live the “personal is political” thing for one very important day when it’s going to be hard for people to ignore what I’m saying.

If I hadn’t known feminist married friends and read a lot of feminist writers talking about their own struggles with marriage, I might have felt kind of powerless in the face of an institution that seemed oppressive and offensive. As it is, I feel like it’s neat to have the opportunity to be part of a vanguard of people saying, you know what? Fuck that old kind of marriage, we are doing a new thing and guess what, it’s still an amazing and righteous commitment.

Is there anything so far about being engaged/wedding planning that you find remarkable or surprising?

I am surprised at how much I hate wedding planning. I really love to plan parties and I don’t mind being the center of attention (super understatement), but honestly, planning a big emotional to-do with a mix of friends, family and total strangers who have certain cultural expectations for me and P is incredibly stressful and I don’t take much pleasure in it at all. I’d much rather elope and send folks a postcard from Vegas. Which is why my future husband has pretty much taken over the entirety of planning. That seems to surprise other people (as we know from all sit-coms, Super Bowl commercials and Maxim, all men hate marriage and weddings and only put up with this bullshit so they can get sex forever), but not me. To me, P’s willingness to step up and plan this giant party is one of the reasons I’m so happy to be marrying him. He carries me where I stumble, and I try to do the same for him.

How do you feel about the word “wife”?

I’m surprised to say that I have no opinion about the word wife. I cannot imagine it applying to me, but I guess it will, won’t it? Huh.

What do you expect marriage to be like? Are you expecting your relationship with your partner to change?

I hope that my relationship with P does not change significantly after we’re married. I can’t imagine that things will be markedly different just because we threw a party and went to Hawaii. My married friends often tell me that they don’t feel much different post-wedding, and that is fine by me. What I want is to have a forever activities partner to travel through life with, whether that’s the lame nights on the couch watching Futurama, drunk nights stumbling home from the bar or long Sunday afternoons eating every single sample on offer at Central Market. I want to grow old with P doing what I’m doing now: laughing at the dumb shit we do, making fun of our crazy cats, lending each other emotional and physical strength, etc. That seems like the best thing I can think of.

What decision are you making about your name? Why?

I’m not changing my name, and neither is P. Haha, funny joke! No one expects P to, just me. It really makes me sad when women change their names these days. The tradition is based in coverture, which is a truly disgusting practice, and completely outdated besides. I don’t intend to have them, but kids-wise, I don’t see any reason to favor a patriarchal line over a matriarchal one, and in a world of blended families, who is really crapping their pants over a kid with its mom’s last name instead of its dad’s, or a hyphenated name, or a totally new one? Sure, some men hyphenate or change their names, but it’s the vast, vast minority–women are totally expected to do this, no questions asked, and it just grosses me out. I can think of many feminist ways to get married or be a stay-at-home mom or participate in sex work, for example, but I just can’t really think of a feminist way to change your name to a man’s when the origin of the tradition is wholly about taking rights away from women and the modern execution of the practice (in heterosexual relationships) serves to privilege a man as the most important, defining member of a family. Especially when the current practice is not even close to being gender equal! Agh! It simply doesn’t work for me. I’d rather stick with the patriarchally based name I was born with, which takes absolutely no effort. I was born on the patriarchy train, but I don’t have to keep it running on the same tracks.

What do you see the role of a wedding to be?

For me, a wedding is like when you think you hear a door slam or a cat meow, but you’re not sure and maybe you’re a little nuts? It’s a way for me to say to my friends and family, about my relationship: “Did you guys just hear that?”

January 4, 2012

The Marriage Project, Reflection 29: “One day, I fully expect to be that adorable old lady holding hands with her tiny stooped husband, kissing in the streets and cuddling on the subway.”

E is the first engaged women I’ve interviewed. She’s getting married in November. 
 
 
Why are you choosing to get married? 
 
I feel like I am not “choosing” to get married, so much as it feels like a natural progression in our relationship. G and I started dating my sophomore year of college. I felt ready to date, and G just happened to show up at the right time with dark eyes and a loud laugh.  My attitude was, “I’ll date you until it doesn’t feel right any more, and then I’ll drop you”  However, G illustrated to me over and over again what a thoughtful, caring, giving, loving, and dependable person he was. He slowly won me over, heart and soul, and eventually, after a challenging first year living together, I realized that it was time to commit without looking back. After that, I knew that whether we married or not, we would be together, and it was just a matter of time and life circumstances until we got married.  So, why get married at all?  I think it just feels like the next right step–proclaiming our committment in front of our families, and becoming each other’s families in an official way.
 
 
Is there anything so far about being engaged/wedding planning that you find remarkable or surprising?
 
I think the most surprising thing to me is the captivation of my friends and family both in our engagement and the wedding process. My friends are constantly asking me about it, my parents are very involved and helpful, and it was like my birthday on facebook when we changed our status!  People I didn’t even know were congratulating me.  I remember calling my friends to tell them I was engaged, and it was like we’d had a baby. They screamed, congratulated us, and asked us for all the details. G and I have been dating for four and a half years, so it really shouldn’t have been a huge surprise. It certainly wasn’t a surprise for me!  And yet, based on the reaction from those around us and the continued fascination with wedding planning, this is a Big Deal.
 
 
What do you see the role of a wedding to be?
 
I see the role of the wedding to be stage marker, like a bar-mitvah or graduation; it a momentious and symbolic event that signifies transition from one stage of life to another in front of the community. For me, it is a transition from a personal relationship to a relationship that the community is witness too, cementing the concept of commitment. It is also a transition from simply being in a relationship, to G officially being my family.  Lastly, to me, it is a ceremony that gives me the green light to begin a family when I so choose.
 
 
How do you feel about the word “wife”?
 
I feel uncomfortable witht the word wife. There are too many connotations with the word “wife” that I dislike, including the idea of the “little wifey” who cooks, cleans, and cares for her husband, all with an apron on and a perfect coif.  G and I are partners–the end.  We don’t have different roles. We split responsibilities based on what we like. For example, I like to plan dinners, but if I forget an ingredient, G is great at improvising and throwing a delicious meal together. He is also much better at scrubbing down a kitchen counter than me. So, in conclusion, I definitely rebel against being called a “wife” and prefer the term partner.
 
 
What decision are you making about your name? Why?
 
I am changing my last name.  The reason is quite shallow. I don’t like my last name at all, and I like his much more. If I felt a connection with my last name (or didn’t have two brothers to carry it on) perhaps I would feel more strongly about it. But, as it is, I am excited to join his family–I admire and like his sister and mom–and to take on his last name.
 
 
 
What do you expect marriage to be like? Are you expecting your relationship with your partner to change?
 
While I know there will be challenges, I think overall marriage will be wonderful! G and I are both really excited to be able to traverse life’s adventures together. As he is an academic, we might be moving around a bit. We both know there is no one we’d rather move with because we support each other in making friends, exploring new places, and creating a home. I also think our relationship will get even better with time. I base this on the fact that, in our short time together, our relationship deepens and improves every year. One day, I fully expect to be that adorable old lady holding hands with her tiny stooped husband, kissing in the streets and cuddling on the subway.
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