ML:BW

The two-year itch: a look at celebrity divorce

I hate admitting this, but when I heard about Zooey Deschanel filing for divorce from Ben Gibbard, I was a little bummed out. I was also a little bit sad to hear about Katy Perry and Russell Brand. Not because I feel personally connected to these celebrities, but because each couple, after two years of marriage, decided to call it quits.

Just like that, it’s over.

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Marriage as a lifetime commitment or a business proposition?

Last week, Susan Pease Gadoua wrote a piece called, “What Marriage Really Needs Is for Us to Get ‘Whys,’” in which she references recent legislation in Mexico City that would give newly weds temporary marriage licenses to help them “avoid the hassle of divorce.”

The minimum marriage contract would be for two years and could be renewed if the couple stays happy. The contracts would include provisions on how children and property would be handled if the couple splits.

In Gadoua’s piece, she defends this legislation and says that both partners will know exactly what is expected of them and how long those expectations will last, or when they will be able to get out of the union if one or both partners are unhappy.

The elephant in the room (or, should I say at the altar) is the question that has, to my knowledge, never been asked and that is, “Why are people creating these special unions?” My guess is that no one asks “why” because it is assumed that love is the only answer anyone would give — or the only right answer — to that question. Yet, there are many additional unspoken reasons people have for tying the knot.

I referenced wanting to write about this on Tour Day 3, but felt my head wasn’t in the right place to craft my response. I was hesitant to tackle this subject, partly because I have only been married for little over a month and partly because I am only 24. Then I thought, well, that’s never stopped me before.

When Jay and I started dating we had several very serious discussions and discovered that we both held similar goals and values. We both enjoy our careers and work hard, we want to have children, we see eye to eye with the finances and the best way for us to meet our financial goals. We both want monogamy and are thoughtful of each-others needs. We both want a partner, a teammate for life, and agree that through thick and thin, good times and bad, we will stick together. Most importantly, we respect, love and are in love with each other.

It seems to me that we answered Gadoua when she asks why we created this special union. It also seems to me that if couples are unable to answer these questions and come to good, healthy conclusions, they probably shouldn’t get married.

I understand that divorce is a thing that happens, and in several instances (such as abusive relationships) should happen. I also understand that the divorce rate is down to 47 percent (a small decrease, but a decrease) and marriage takes hard work.

While reading The Secret Lives of Wives, which I am about a quarter of the way through, I’ve learned that the biggest problem with marriage is that it seems few people want to really put in the hard work. It gets tough, there is a period of unhappiness and therefore one or both spouses think it is time to separate.

Iris Krasnow wrote that for most couples, the unhappiness is alleviated five years after the initial incident. Sure, five years seems like a long time, but you pledged your entire life to this other person. If you meant, “until death do us part or until we hit a bump in the 50 plus years we could be together,” why did you make the pledge in the first place?

Go to couples counseling, get your own therapist, change your job, take a separate vacation, pick up a hobby — the grass is nary greener on the other side and once you get divorced, you’re more likely to do it again.

Additionally, being married creates a true sense of security and should allow for each partner to more freely and fully evolve into the kind of person they hope and want to be. What kind of security is there if you have to review and renew your marriage contract every two or 20 years?

Marriage is not a business agreement. Marriage is a union between two people (no matter your sexual preference) who are willing to pledge their lives to one another for the long haul.

If you don’t think you’re able to make that kind of commitment, perhaps you should re-think doing it in the first place. Marriage definitely isn’t for everyone.

Please don’t misunderstand me. I am a child of divorce. My parents divorced when I was very young and I can honestly say it was the best for everyone involved. The only memories I have of my parents together were not good ones. There is more to it, but it’s not my place to divulge those details.

I watch my dad and my amazing step-mom raise their two small girls and go through life as partners, happy together. It isn’t always easy, but all four siblings know they love each other deeply and that they will always push through life’s troubles together.

After all, that’s what marriage is all about.

Laura ♥

[photo by Zac Wolf]  [Follow @Laura__PM]