I found this interesting article by Alain de Botton in the New York Times and though it might be of interest to you.
IT’S one of the things we are most afraid might happen to us. We go to great lengths to avoid it. And yet we do it all the same: We marry the wrong person.
Partly, it’s because we have a bewildering array of
problems that emerge when we try to get close to others. We seem normal only to
those who don’t know us very well. In a wiser, more self-aware society than our
own, a standard question on any early dinner date would be: “And how are you
crazy?”
Perhaps we have a latent tendency to get furious
when someone disagrees with us or can relax only when we are working; perhaps
we’re tricky about intimacy after sex or clam up in response to humiliation.
Nobody’s perfect. The problem is that before marriage, we rarely delve into our
complexities. Whenever casual relationships threaten to reveal our flaws, we blame
our partners and call it a day. As for our friends, they don’t care enough to
do the hard work of enlightening us. One of the privileges of being on our own
is therefore the sincere impression that we are really quite easy to live with.
Our partners are no more self-aware. Naturally, we
make a stab at trying to understand them. We visit their families. We look at
their photos, we meet their college friends. All this contributes to a sense
that we’ve done our homework. We haven’t. Marriage ends up as a hopeful,
generous, infinitely kind gamble taken by two people who don’t know yet who
they are or who the other might be, binding themselves to a future they cannot
conceive of and have carefully avoided investigating.
For most of recorded history, people married for
logical sorts of reasons: because her parcel of land adjoined yours, his family
had a flourishing business, her father was the magistrate in town, there was a
castle to keep up, or both sets of parents subscribed to the same
interpretation of a holy text. And from such reasonable marriages, there flowed
loneliness, infidelity, abuse, hardness of heart and screams heard through the
nursery doors. The marriage of reason was not, in hindsight, reasonable at all;
it was often expedient, narrow-minded, snobbish and exploitative. That is why
what has replaced it — the marriage of feeling — has largely been spared the
need to account for itself.
What matters in the marriage of feeling is that two
people are drawn to each other by an overwhelming instinct and know in their
hearts that it is right. Indeed, the more imprudent a marriage appears (perhaps
it’s been only six months since they met; one of them has no job or both are
barely out of their teens), the safer it can feel. Recklessness is taken as a counterweight
to all the errors of reason, that catalyst of misery, that accountant’s demand.
The prestige of instinct is the traumatized reaction against too many centuries
of unreasonable reason.
But though we believe ourselves to be seeking
happiness in marriage, it isn’t that simple. What we really seek is familiarity
— which may well complicate any plans we might have had for happiness. We are
looking to recreate, within our adult relationships, the feelings we knew so
well in childhood. The love most of us will have tasted early on was often
confused with other, more destructive dynamics: feelings of wanting to help an
adult who was out of control, of being deprived of a parent’s warmth or scared
of his anger, of not feeling secure enough to communicate our wishes. How
logical, then, that we should as grown-ups find ourselves rejecting certain
candidates for marriage not because they are wrong but because they are too
right — too balanced, mature, understanding and reliable — given that in our
hearts, such rightness feels foreign. We marry the wrong people because we
don’t associate being loved with feeling happy.
We make mistakes, too, because we are so lonely. No
one can be in an optimal frame of mind to choose a partner when remaining
single feels unbearable. We have to be wholly at peace with the prospect of
many years of solitude in order to be appropriately picky; otherwise, we risk
loving no longer being single rather more than we love the partner who spared
us that fate.
Finally, we marry to make a nice feeling permanent.
We imagine that marriage will help us to bottle the joy we felt when the
thought of proposing first came to us: Perhaps we were in Venice, on the
lagoon, in a motorboat, with the evening sun throwing glitter across the sea,
chatting about aspects of our souls no one ever seemed to have grasped before,
with the prospect of dinner in a risotto place a little later. We married to
make such sensations permanent but failed to see that there was no solid
connection between these feelings and the institution of marriage.
Indeed, marriage tends decisively to move us onto
another, very different and more administrative plane, which perhaps unfolds in
a suburban house, with a long commute and maddening children who kill the
passion from which they emerged. The only ingredient in common is the partner.
And that might have been the wrong ingredient to bottle.
The good news is that it doesn’t matter if we find
we have married the wrong person.
We mustn’t abandon him or her, only the founding
Romantic idea upon which the Western understanding of marriage has been based
the last 250 years: that a perfect being exists who can meet all our needs and
satisfy our every yearning.
We need to swap the Romantic view for a tragic (and
at points comedic) awareness that every human will frustrate, anger, annoy,
madden and disappoint us — and we will (without any malice) do the same to
them. There can be no end to our sense of emptiness and incompleteness. But
none of this is unusual or grounds for divorce. Choosing whom to commit
ourselves to is merely a case of identifying which particular variety of
suffering we would most like to sacrifice ourselves for.
This philosophy of pessimism offers a solution to a
lot of distress and agitation around marriage. It might sound odd, but
pessimism relieves the excessive imaginative pressure that our romantic culture
places upon marriage. The failure of one particular partner to save us from our
grief and melancholy is not an argument against that person and no sign that a
union deserves to fail or be upgraded.
The person who is best suited to us is not the
person who shares our every taste (he or she doesn’t exist), but the person who
can negotiate differences in taste intelligently — the person who is good at
disagreement. Rather than some notional idea of perfect complementarity, it is
the capacity to tolerate differences with generosity that is the true marker of
the “not overly wrong” person. Compatibility is an achievement of love; it must
not be its precondition.
Romanticism has been unhelpful to us; it is a harsh
philosophy. It has made a lot of what we go through in marriage seem
exceptional and appalling. We end up lonely and convinced that our union, with
its imperfections, is not “normal.” We should learn to accommodate ourselves to
“wrongness,” striving always to adopt a more forgiving, humorous and kindly
perspective on its multiple examples in ourselves and in our partners.
Alain de
Botton, FRSL is a Swiss-born, British-based author and television presenter.
His books and television programmes discuss various contemporary subjects and
themes, emphasizing philosophy's relevance to everyday life
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