Keeping your marriage strong-even after kids !

Mrs P

New member
Ah, the joys of raising children: The pitter-patter of little feet, the tiny plump hands slipped into yours, the first day of school...and the bitter arguments with your spouse over who gets to go to the gym after work tonight.

While children are wonderful, there's no question that their arrival can put strains on a marriage. Between the lack of sleep, fragmented attention, and, in some cases, strained finances, parents often find themselves losing the connection that brought them together in the first place -- if not fighting like cats and dogs over who does more housework, who pays more bills, and who knows best how to raise a child.

A recent study of 218 couples over the first eight years of marriage found a sudden negative aspect to measures such as relationship satisfaction once couples became parents, compared to those who didn't. And while the researchers found that childless marriages also lose some luster over time, having babies takes the shine off faster than when couples remain child-free.

The Importance of the Marital Bond:"The writer Nora Ephron once said, 'Having a baby is like throwing a hand grenade into a marriage,'" says Charles Schmitz, PhD. "I've always thought that was pretty apt." Schmitz, who is dean emeritus of counseling and family therapy at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, and his wife, Elizabeth Schmitz, EdD, president of Successful Marriage Reflections, LLC, have studied thousands of couples in 45 countries in their search for the secrets to a happy marriage. And one of the key ones, they say, is figuring out what your priorities are and should be.

"The relationship between husband and wife should trump everything else,"Charles says. "You have to keep it strong, keep the romantic energy. Everything else comes from that. Children are beautiful, but they're not the sole purpose of marriage."

That's why, they say, when married-with-children couples start to bicker or grow apart, it's time to change the patterns they have fallen into. "We believe that sometimes you have to jolt your marriage from negative to positive," Elizabeth says.

"If your husband comes home and you immediately start arguing about housework, you have to change the conversation. Don't start with complaints. Start with an expression of appreciation."


Tips for Keeping Your Marriage Strong
Charles and Elizabeth Schmitz traveled the world to study thousands of successful couples. Their book, Building a Love That Lasts: The Seven Surprising Secrets of Successful Marriage, details what they learned, including these findings:

Time in -- Whether it's a date night, a walk in the park, or going for a bike ride, "you have to spend time together to keep the flame alive," Elizabeth says. "You have to allow time for each other."

Time out -- Conversely, alone time is also crucial. "In the best marriages, spouses allow each other time for solitude, so they can think private thoughts or just get things done," Elizabeth says.

Touchy, touchy -- Successful couples use the "Morse code of marriage," Charles says. "It's called touching. It's a substitute for talking about feelings. You are saying, 'I love you so much I have to touch you.'


I read this onother forum a few days ago & wanted to post it.. I think is really important to remain a couple after you have kids, there's nothing I love more than being a mom, and of course your relashionship will change after kids, your not gonna be available 100 % of the time, you have to deal with the "can I have more juice ?, I'm hungry again !, Can we see this movie again ?, Can we play this again ?.. and my fav "Mom I spilled juice !"lol There's nothing I appreciate more than my husband's help with the kids and anything that needs to be done in the house...
I think you have to always find time to re-connect & enjoy each other...
"Happier Parents = Happier kids"
 
It ain't easy. The wife and I have two little ones ages 3 and 2 and we're coming up on the "7 year itch" phase of the marriage. It doesn't help that she's obese and stuck in a couch potato rut. I love her to death but we've had some real challenges the past few years.

Making time to be together as adults is crucial. If you don't plan for it it's simply not going to happen in your spare time because there never is any spare time. Likewise for nookie. The spontaneity of youth has long passed us by and if we don't make a "date" to get naked it just doesn't happen.

Our problems aside we fortunately have some strengths in the communications area. We both wear our hearts on our sleeve and that is a liability at times, but more often than not it keeps us from remaining silent about shit that bothering us and prevents us from building up relationship destroying resentments. We get plenty angry at each other but we own it, express it, and get it out of the way.

Hats off to all you parents out there making it work. The challenge is worth the reward, IMO.
 
It ain't easy. The wife and I have two little ones ages 3 and 2 and we're coming up on the "7 year itch" phase of the marriage. It doesn't help that she's obese and stuck in a couch potato rut. I love her to death but we've had some real challenges the past few years.

Making time to be together as adults is crucial. If you don't plan for it it's simply not going to happen in your spare time because there never is any spare time. Likewise for nookie. The spontaneity of youth has long passed us by and if we don't make a "date" to get naked it just doesn't happen.

Our problems aside we fortunately have some strengths in the communications area. We both wear our hearts on our sleeve and that is a liability at times, but more often than not it keeps us from remaining silent about shit that bothering us and prevents us from building up relationship destroying resentments. We get plenty angry at each other but we own it, express it, and get it out of the way.

Hats off to all you parents out there making it work. The challenge is worth the reward, IMO.

I hear you Epic, ages 3 & 2, I remember the terrible two's.. my 2 oldest are 21 months apart, so when they were 2 and 3 it was soooo hard !

She's probably very sensitive to anything you have to say abou her weight right ? I think having the husband/boyfriend talk to girls about their weight is more touchy than talking about anything else.
Why don't u have her join ? She's gonna start to feel better about herself once she starts seeing changes in her, and both of u will be happier. Or maybe u can join a gym together that has childcare, working out together can be great for u guys.

very true that u have to make the time, there's not much spare time when u have little ones, not easy, but can be done.

Is good that you guys have good communication.

take care :)
 
damn Mrs. P you are an ambassador to the sport. I wish the lame ass excuses for women I have dealt with lately were half as smart as you.
 
After 5 years of marriage and a now 13 month old daughter my wife and I don't seem to have the same relationship we had. Money is tight, I work 12 hours a day, and we rarely have time together before we get in bed. I tend to look at it as a phase in our life that we will get through. Hopefully.
 
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