Does your marriage have an expiration date? If not, it should! I believe marriages should expire periodically so partners can freshly evaluate if they want to continue living a life together or not. I have many clients that call me about how they can breathe some life and vigor into a dead, expired, long past due-to-end, marriage. I think if we can recognize a marriage as a cyclical event, like a driver’s license, we can then honestly assess if it is complete or not at various points in time. If it is time to end it, it becomes a release, not a divorce. It expires.
The word “divorce” itself is a horrid word in our language that implies (even sounds like!) anger, struggle, animosity and conflict. I think we should release a spouse or complete a relationship, or better yet, work to an expiration date in a marriage.
If we were to do so, we could honestly, even objectively decide if we wanted to renew it or let it expire and move on, simply because it lived itself out. It makes “time to move on” a recognized option easily done after consideration, just like a magazine subscription that we no longer are interested in.
What if you could reassess your marriage at regular intervals? Would you do it at 3, 5, 8 or 10 years? What questions would you ask? Here is my version of the 10 things to ask yourself about your marriage when considering continuing it or completing it. How would you answer these questions if faced with a marriage renewal date:
- Am I still in love with my spouse?
- Are my basic emotional needs being met?
- Are my basic physical needs being met?
- Is this a true 50-50 partnership?
- What would I add to the marriage in the next years?
- What would I eliminate in the marriage in the next years?
- Am I still committed to making this marriage work?
- Is my spouse still committed to making this marriage work?
- On a scale of 1 to 10 I rate this marriage a _____ (with 1 being lowest, 10 being the highest.)
- Do I want to sign up for this for another 5 years?
Most of the time we are so dedicated to the search of a marriage certificate as a security blanket we lose sight of the fact that it is nothing of the sort. Each year, the rate of divorce increases. More than 50% of all marriages end in divorce. There is no security or guarantee of happiness or longevity with a marriage certificate. Many of us, as we marry, have no concept of “until death do us part.” It becomes shocking when we end something that really had a limited lifespan anyway, and put ourselves through more pain and grief.
I think it is time to change all of this. If there was an expiration date on marriage, we would cherish it more. I believe there would be less divorce. I also think there would be many more happy people working on true lifelong partnerships not based upon a legal paper that can easily be ripped in two within a process called “divorce.”