Making Love Last

The “Secrets” to 20 Years of Marriage

Last week my wife and I celebrated our 20th Wedding Anniversary! How in the world can that be? In some ways it feels like it was yesterday that we said “I Do” and in other ways I feel the miles we have traveled together.

My wife is a Disney nut (I kind of like it too!) and she has always wanted to go on a Disney Cruise. It seemed like the perfect splurge to celebrate our special milestone.

Disney is great at asking if you are celebrating anything special and as word got out on the cruise several “cast members” asked us, “What’s the secret to staying together so long?” I found the question a little off putting because I still consider myself somewhat young-ish. One particular waitress waited until we would give an answer. I blurted out… “forgiveness and never giving up.” But I wasn’t happy with that answer.

When we arrived back in New York I was asked again, “What’s the secret to love that lasts?”

The question caught me off guard because I didn’t expect to be answering it until we had added a few more decades to our grand total. Sadly, in our culture, when it comes to marriage 20 years is a long time.

I certainly don’t think we have any “secrets” but we have several beliefs that we have learned from others which we believe have gotten us this far. Beliefs that don’t seem to be so common anymore. So I’m going to take another run at the question…

“THE SECRETS”

1. It Takes 2 People

Both people have to be equally committed to the marriage for it to last. Some of you know the painful truth of this. You were committed to honoring your vows, but the other person wasn’t. And in the end… “All the king’s horses and all the king’s men couldn’t put humpty dumpty back together again.”

(For those of you who have been through a divorce I recognize this could be a painful read and in no way is my intent to cause you pain. In fact, my heart is to save people from the pain you know all too well.)

2. Remove the “D”- Word from Your Vocabulary

Divorce can’t be an option or you’ll eventually take it. Don’t even use the word in an argument. It should be completely off limits. Once you start using this word…the more comfortable you’ll become with getting one.

If divorce isn’t an option then you are forced to push through the conflict and find a way forward. Of course, you don’t have to push through and you could choose to become bitter and resentful, but what a miserable way to live.

There may come a time when you will want to hit the eject button, but it’s hard to press it, if it’s not there.

Stop using the D-word! Make it completely off limits.

3. Remember You Married a Human Being

I read somewhere that more marriages die because they refuse to admit they married a human being.

You didn’t marry a savior, you didn’t marry someone to rescue you, you didn’t marry a counselor. You married a human being. You married someone who isn’t perfect, who gets moody, who has stuff they are still trying to overcome from their family of origin. You married a work-in-progress.

When two people come to each other with their hands out saying, “Fix me,” it’s a recipe for heartbreak. Only God can complete you and make you whole.

It’s why you need to do some hard work on yourself before you get married.

Two healthy people coming together to form a family are a powerful force. I wish I knew this earlier on. I wish I had worked harder on myself before marriage. Marriage doesn’t fix anything that’s broken inside of you.

4. Go to Counseling Now

My wife and I have engaged the help of a counselor a couple of times over our 20 years of marriage. Sometimes you reach an impasse and you don’t need a divorce you just need an objective voice to help you see the way forward.

It took us 6 months to get into the counselor we wanted and quite a bit of money, but afterwards we wondered why we waited so long to make the initial call.

It was a game changer.

Too many people think counseling is only for people who have “serious problems.” The real serious problem is how blind we can be to our own short-comings. It’s always easier to see other’s faults than our own.

You don’t have to be miserable and neither does your spouse.

5. Large Doses of Forgiveness

Living in such close proximity to each other you will hurt each other…unintentionally and intentionally. You have a choice…make them hurt like you do or give up your right to get even. One choice leads to 20 years of marriage and one doesn’t.

Because you live in such close proximity you know where the buttons are that cause the most pain. A healthy, loving person refuses to push them. If they do get pushed a healthy, loving person forgives…just as Christ has forgiven them.

6. Celebrate Your Differences

Chances are extremely high you married someone who was the exact opposite of you. You’re a saver and they’re a spender. You’re an extrovert and they’re an introvert. When you were dating you valued those differences…they helped you feel more secure about your future because they planned and saved. You liked how they helped you loosen up and brought you out of your shell. But now you resent those differences.

It’s one of God’s blessings to give you someone different than you. You now have a fuller picture of life and the gift of a different perspective.

God has put you together to complement each other, not to destroy each other. It takes a fork and a knife to eat the steak of life. When we insist our spouse is just like us we lose out.

Don’t just tolerate your spouse’s differences, celebrate them! Never speak ill of your spouse and their differences, especially to other people.

Be their #1 cheerleader!

7. Love Every Version of Your Spouse

When you said your vows you not only promised to love the person in front of you, but every person they would become in the future. (I’m grateful to Tim Keller for this idea.)

Your spouse will change over the years…as will you. Which isn’t a bad thing…it would probably be a sign of immaturity if they don’t change. Can you imagine a 50-year-old man acting like a 25-year-old?

Even if you don’t love the current version…love your mess. (Hey they are loving your mess.)

To replace your spouse with a new one is to just replace your problems with new and different ones. Every person has issues. Every person has things that will drive you crazy. See number 3.

8. You’ve Got to Keep Putting Gas in the Tank

Your marriage isn’t going to keep running on the love you had when you first met and were dating. You’ve got to keep doing the things you did that caused you to fall in love in the first place. The adventures, the new experiences, the notes, the flowers, the gifts, the words of admiration, the thoughtful acts of service, the physical affection…all of those things put gas in your tank. It helped you fall in love and it will help you stay in love.

A car wasn’t meant to be pushed. A marriage wasn’t meant to run on willpower.

Over time it’s easy to get in a rut and do the same things over and over again. Adventure and trying new things together will keep your relationship fresh.

9. Have a Mission Together

It’s got to be a mission that’s bigger than your kids because one day your kids will leave. Raising healthy kids who love Jesus will be a big focus and one of your great accomplishments together. But the reality is you’ll spend more years without kids in your home than with them.

What if you could have a mission that you could invite your kids to be part of too?

For my wife and I the great mission thus far has been starting and leading a church that shares and shows the love of Jesus to everyone in the Capital District. It’s a mission that many other families have made part of their family’s mission too! They would all say it’s made their marriage and family stronger. (I’m not talking about just attending church together…I’m talking about being a vital part of church.)

What’s your mission together?

10. Keep Your Vows

Marriage isn’t just a box you check on forms, it is the pinnacle of a commitment you make to another person. You can’t find a higher form of commitment.

Its why guys are totally fine with just “living together” and not getting married. Marriage is a serious commitment. Why commit if I can get all of the benefits of marriage (sex) without any of the responsibilities of marriage? Ladies, if your man really loves you, he will commit.

Because marriage is the highest level of commitment it is always accompanied by vows. Vows designed to protect the definition of love. Vows that ensure the couple know love isn’t a feeling, but actions. Vows that transcend circumstances (sickness or in health/for richer or poorer) or feelings (for better or worse).

And when you said your vows you didn’t say…“I’ll try.”

Be a trustworthy person. Be a person who keeps their vows as in…I DO.

For those of us who are Christians this is an even bigger deal because we not only made the vow to our spouse but we also made the vow to God.

If God will give you the strength to love your enemies, He will certainly give you the strength to love your spouse.

THE FUTURE

I wish I had a firm grasp on these things 20 years ago. My wife would have had the husband she deserved.

If we can make it this far, I know you can too! My wife and I are about as different as they come, but at the end of the day we love Jesus, each other, and we are committed to our marriage. It’s made all of the difference! And we’ve never been happier!

The secret is there is no secret. It’s showing up day after day and doing what you committed to do on day 1. You bring great honor to yourself, your family, and Jesus when you do.

The good news is it does get easier! There is so much joy on the other side! It’s not hopeless. It won’t always be this hard. Don’t give up now! Keep doing the hard work on yourself. Be more concerned about your flaws then theirs. God is growing you both!

I can’t wait to celebrate your big milestone with you!

RESOURCES

Ready to grow your marriage? Check out these books

Sacred Marriage by Gary Thomas

The Meaning of Marriage by Tim Keller

His Needs, Her Needs by Willard Harley

If you’re single read this one first:

The New Rules for Love, Sex, and Dating by Andy Stanley