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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

25 years later you can choose change

Washington Post

Dear Carolyn: I married a man who didn’t make me a priority, expecting he would change. Every time we would argue about his insensitivity, he would come back with “I’m changing.”

Then once again I would stuff my feelings down like they didn’t matter. He would go places by himself often. His thing was fishing and hunting, and I would not say anything, not wanting to be a “nag.”

Well, I have been waiting 25 years for that change, and some years ago came to realize that sometimes people don’t want to change, and sometimes they can’t.

I’m a firm believer that wedding vows are a very serious thing, so after 25 years I decided I had to resign myself to “This is just the way it is.”

– Lonely at 59

A conviction that marriage is for life can be a beautiful, grounding, guiding belief. It can also be a cop-out, a retreat into “principle” to avoid the – and I get it – sheer terror of walking away from the only life you know.

I’m guessing you’d rather be unhappy than scared, than to invite the financial and emotional risk of leaving. Maybe it’s the right calculation: The expense of going to two households from one as you near retirement age can’t be ignored, for one, and presumably you do have some good moments with your husband between abandonments, or else you’d be thrilled to see him go.

Why not ask yourself: “If I felt as free as my husband to do my own thing, what would I do?” Why not take the answer and plug it in where you now have resignation?

Because you are exactly as free.

And you always have been. “Had to” resign yourself? No – chose to. Just as you chose to hold out for change. Maybe it was right for you and you owe yourself more credit – or maybe it was wrong for you and you owe yourself some new choices, be they temperate or drastic.