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Navigating a Geek Marriage?

JoeLinux writes "I am soon to marry my true love (a girl! yes! they do exist!). She is a literary geek, whereas I am a gaming/Linux geek. Being the RTFM-style geeks that we are, we have been reading up on marriage, making things work, etc. Unfortunately, all of the references seem to be based around an alpha-male jock and a submissive cheerleader-style wife. A lot of the references to incompatibility in the books don't apply to us (neglect due to interest in sports, etc.). What are some of the pitfalls and successes learned in the course of a more geek-oriented marriage?"

39 of 1,146 comments (clear)

  1. Perhaps you can ask your girl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A lot of the references to incompatibility in the books don't apply to us (neglect due to interest in sports, etc.).

    Sports is an example, not the only cause of neglect. If your girl is a literary geek, she can probably explain this concept to you. Ask her about it when you've finished a gaming or Linux debugging session which prevented you from installing the bookshelf that you promised her 2 weeks ago.

    1. Re:Perhaps you can ask your girl by SerpentMage · · Score: 5, Informative

      No I think what he is getting at not bookshelf, but self-absorbed.

      Here is an example. My wife loves books above everything. Me I work on my computer all the time. On the weekends she is ready ALL THE TIME. Normally this would bother somebody. It did bother her family quite a bit. Me, I did not actually care at all.

      So what was the compromise? I have a little desk in the living room with two notebooks that are joined and connected to my trading desk downstairs. Thus when she reads we are both in the same room. Granted not talking much to each other, but still together. That is I think what he is getting at.

      Whenever we buy a house we always make sure that my office is big enough so that the couch, TV, and my computer array fits in. Thus she spends most of her time in my office. This time our house has the office in the bunker (seriously its a bunker) and its too damp and hence we put a little table in the living room.

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    2. Re:Perhaps you can ask your girl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Paging Dr. Freud. Dr.Freud to the reading room.

      What does it say about me that I actually read "reading" instead of "ready"? Can't be too good.

    3. Re:Perhaps you can ask your girl by krou · · Score: 5, Funny

      On the weekends she is ready ALL THE TIME.

      Is your wife a goer, eh? Know whatahmean, know whatahmean, nudge nudge, know whatahmean, say no more? ;)

      --
      'If Christ had tweeted the sermon on the mount, it might have lasted until nightfall.' - John Perry Barlow
    4. Re:Perhaps you can ask your girl by FCAdcock · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I was going to make this same comment. When you read those books pretend that the word "sports" says "favourite hobby." Even if you have the same hobby as your wife, if you're doing it alone all the time it will only harm your marriage.

      My ex-wife used to come home and play the nintendo ds all night. It wasn't sports, but it was her hobby. The time we could have spent together talking and working on our relationship was spent with her face and attention glued firmly to something else.

      The judge signs our divorce papers today at noon. Out of spite, I kept the DS even though she got to keep all my money and can just go buy her own.

      My advice:

      *The 5 love languages is a great book for new marriages. You'll learn a lot about your spouse. It will take an honest effort to put what you learn to good use, but it can work wonders.

      *If either of you even think about the Fireproof movie and doing the "love dare," just don't. "sports jocks" and "cheerleaders" go for that, but all the nerds I know who's spouses tried it saw right through it and resented them using a manual...

      *Whatever you both like doing together, do it often. Make it an important time for the two of you to spend together.

      *Make friends with other married couples. Go out together. Enjoy being with your spouse and your friends.

      --
      --Forest C. Adcock--
  2. Intriguing by Noam.of.Doom · · Score: 5, Funny

    Being in a similar situation, I'd also be interested in hearing suggestions from married geeks with more XP

    --
    It is the universe that makes fun of us all.
  3. Forget the books by fazz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Intelligent people do not need the kind of rubberstamp advice you find in self-help books. As long you remain honest, open and calm, you are very well off. Not doing stupid thing like playing WoW (ATTN! compare to watching football with you buddies and sipping beer) through your anniversary helps, too.

    1. Re:Forget the books by dotancohen · · Score: 5, Funny

      Set up a home bugzilla server. Every complain she has she can log into bugzilla, from household repairs to you forgetting the anniversary.

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    2. Re:Forget the books by Critical+Facilities · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I have to agree with this. The real irony is, the GP speaks (rather arrogantly) that he doesn't think intelligent people need to read books in order to get good advice on how to have a good marriage.....and then proceeds to post on how one ought to have a happy marriage. Is it OK to read marriage/relationship advice if it's in the comment section of Slashdot, but not OK in a printed book?

      I agree with the parent here. Just like anything else in life, you can never improve too much. To that end, why should it be bad to seek wisdom/advice from books, or spiritual advice, or therapists/counselors, or family, or other married friends, etc etc.

      That's not to say that one should obsess on trying to be "perfect" (that will never happen), but there is nothing wrong with working toward a goal of being the best you can be. Just like your own life, a marriage is like a shared life. You both exist on your own, as your own people, with your own interests and personalities. At the same time, you have this shared life that must be maintained in the same manner as your own, individual life. In short, don't ever stop growing!

      If you're not growing, you're dying.

  4. wrong kind of books by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Don't read books to make your marriage work. Don't ask strangers on slashdot like geeks were some sort of alien race. Get advice from people you know who are already married, parents, relatives -- people you know and trust. And then, relax, ignore it all, as the biggest thing is "different strokes for different folks"/"everyone has to learn for themselves".

  5. Nows not the time to be logical by ma11achy · · Score: 5, Informative

    Small piece of advice.

    We geeks find it hard to "get in touch with our emotional side" sometimes...

    Concentrate on enjoying each other's company. Enjoy being with each other. Stop trying to analyse the hell out of it and just ENJOY it :)

    --
    Eagles may soar, but weasels don't get sucked into jet engines
    1. Re:Nows not the time to be logical by grrrgrrr · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The question is not about getting girls it is about making living together work. Also your story is bullshit. My father always had lots of women he was not socially intelligent or successful at all he was scary (aggressive drinking manipulative). Staying married to them was a completely different story.

    2. Re:Nows not the time to be logical by photozz · · Score: 5, Funny

      And please, don't be someone your wife looks up to-- be someone she's proud of :)

      My wife is 5'3... she has to look up at me.

      --


      Dirty Pirate Hooker
  6. Geekiness is irrelevant. by Max+Romantschuk · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Making a marriage work requires three things:

    Communication, communication and communication.

    Learn how to talk, how to fight, and how to consider the other person, and you'll be fine. Don't try to own your partner and let him/her do things with other people that you can't reasonably do together. Don't be afraid to show your feelings, and talk about little issues before they become big issues. Compromises are inevitable, so don't think of these are a failure on either part.

    The single biggest thing that is needed to make a marriage work is simply work. You can't expect a relationship to last without maintenance. Make sure to have time for each other when times are rough, and you'll be fine.

    And ultimately, if things eventually stop working, divorce is not really a failure. It's simply an option to be considered if the relationship is hurting either or both parties.

    --
    .: Max Romantschuk :: http://max.romantschuk.fi/
    1. Re:Geekiness is irrelevant. by Kokuyo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Define argue.

      My wife and I have lived together for over six years now and as far as I know, we never truly argued.

      This is something I hear very often. Couples who don't argue don't last. Well, crap, we're doomed. Why is it good advice to have an outlet for suppressed resent? Why not advise to talk it out (as in discussing it) BEFORE it cann even become suppressed? Why do you have to resent your partner in the first place?

      Us, we don't do resentment. We just don't see the need.

  7. Geek Marriage Here by SerpentMage · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I am an engineer (ME), my wife is an engineer (EE).

    We have been married for 15 years now and things are good.

    1) I dated non engineers and let me tell you those relationships were more "active" in every sense of the word. But you actually tire of it quite quickly because you are constantly trying to figure things out.

    2) The relationship becomes pretty constant since both you are pretty constant people. That is a good thing, but as my wife says NEVER take it for granted. Appreciate each and every day.

    3) Be there for each other. I seriously mean this one. Be there for the other person through it all. EVEN if your logic says that the other person is wrong.

    4) Support the other person. My wife is a director level manager and I have worked for her. Here in Europe some look at that as being a "wuss". After meeting me people quickly realize I am not a wuss, but there is a stigma associated with it. Though times are changing...

    --

    "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
    "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
  8. Rules of seeking relationship advice by tsvk · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The first rule of seeking relationship advice on Slashdot:

    1. Do not seek relationship advice on Slashdot.

  9. Re:Just some generic advice from me. by MartinSchou · · Score: 5, Funny

    always count to 10.

    What good will that do?

    0, 1, 10 ...

  10. Marriage kernel 0.01, suitable for hackers only by FourthAge · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There is no stock "off the shelf" marriage; every marriage is self-built, like Linux kernel 0.01.

    You must learn to modify the source to fix problems that come up. There is no manual, and although there is a large user community, all of them have different systems, and consequently may give you bad advice. At least you have a co-author to help you.

    Here is one piece of advice. Neither of you should play timesink online games, such as MMOs, unless you do it together or set clear boundaries about the times when you will play. Otherwise you or your wife will use those games to escape the marriage when it becomes difficult, and avoiding problems will make them worse.

    --
    The tao of democracy: the government you can vote for is not the real government.
  11. Honestly: be honest, and stick together as a team by FreeUser · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Intelligent people do not need the kind of rubberstamp advice you find in self-help books. As long you remain honest, open and calm, you are very well off. Not doing stupid thing like playing WoW (ATTN! compare to watching football with you buddies and sipping beer) through your anniversary helps, too.

    I can't second this enough. In the 4.5 years I've been married, the ONLY time we ever ran into any real trouble was when I tried to "manage" information. The excuse you'll typically tell yourself if tempted to do this is that it's to "spare her feelings", "you couldn't cope with it then", or "spare us an unnecessary fight". Those are excuses...the real reason is you don't want to deal with her reaction and the fallout. Don't give in to that temptation. Be honest, and demand honesty from your partner. That, and a good dose of compatabiltiy and love, will take you through just about anything).

    The other underlying principle I'd add is: take the attitude that you're a team, and its you against the world--not necessarily in a combative sense, but in a "we stick together" and an economic (perhaps competative) sense. If you do these two things, you'll do well, and weather just about any storm.

    There are other obvious guidelines, like not tearing each other down to your friends (even joking about the ball-and-chain will propogate memes that undermine what you have, so don't do it), not engaging in activity that can result in relationship-destroying behavior that you'll regret--like drunken "boy's nights out" in nightclubs or pick-up joints, or my personal favorite: these idiotic bachelor parties/stag dos that people go on right before they tie the knot (talk about laying the groundwork for a divorce before you're even married) ... but these are all common sense things that are directly derived from the two basic principles above: be absolutely honest with each other even when (or more precisely, especially when) it is difficult, and stick together as a team against the inevitable external pressures that the rest of the world will exert (in whatever form it takes, be it economic, cultural, external tempation, vicious inlaws, jealous exes, or whatever).

    --
    The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
  12. Too much analyzing, too little feeling real. by Bongo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As a geek couple, I can say after 12 + years there are certain real pitfalls.

    This may vary for you, but here's a few key items:

    Your intellect can be very clever at making up lies, hiding what you really feel, and it basically just gets in the way. This hiding and dissociation from your feelings can take different forms. If you're the kind of guy who tries to be nice and tries to be a good partner, then you may find that you hide your natural anger and hide your resentments. Eventually these will bite you hard. If on the other hand you or your partner are basically quite selfish, lack empathy, and lack a basic goodness, then she or you can do the most outrageously selfish things but rationalize them away using your clever intellect. (I know one woman who would cry "sexist" if you said she was behaving badly, on the basis that had she been a man, you'd have complemented him for being "strong" (some people are educated beyond their intelligence)).

    So feeling is very important. But what's also important, and this is beyond therapy now... what is also becoming more important for modern couples is that, once you both accept each other as equals (you're not stereotypical gender roles from the 50s), once you accept each other as equals, doesn't mean you are the same. You still have to be a man and she still has to be a woman, otherwise there is no difference between you, and there is no polarity of attraction, and sex and romance will disappear completely. See David Deida's books for a challenging and difficult slap in the face on this subject. Your woman may often act crazy--she is testing you and she wants to feel your masculine ability to be a solidly dependable rock who can stand there and still love her. Once she knows she can trust you to be a rock, she can relax into her feminine side and blossom and be sexy. And this little drama will repeat itself over and over. If you don't want that, get a best friend and forget about romantic partners.

    1. Re:Too much analyzing, too little feeling real. by Fluffy+Bunnies · · Score: 5, Interesting

      As a half of a geek couple just entering into our fourth year, I found myself really nodding along while reading your third paragraph. By all means be nice and be a good partner, but don't forget to tell your SO what he/she needs to do in order to be nice and a good partner to you. Otherwise you may end up harboring resentments because you think your partner isn't putting as much effort into being nice as you are.

      The last paragraph, I didn't care so much for: one of the things that brought us together was our inability to play social games (like "testing your husband"). Takes all kinds I guess, but treating the relationship as a game is not something you necessarily have to put up with. YMMV.

  13. It's not that different by DeathToBill · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Geek marriage is not that different to any other marriage. Three pointers:

    • Talk to each other. When something bugs you, talk about it early, not when you're at the walking out stage. It will make things easier. And make time to just talk to each other about whatever.
    • Cherish each other. Count how lucky you are to have your wife. Regularly. Focus on what's good.
    • Sex. Lots of it. I know this sounds incredibly daft, but don't forget sex in your relationship. I know at least one geek couple (not me, BTW) who ran into serious trouble because she was always playing online games, he was always designing new gadgets and somehow they just never ended up in bed together. Both of them wanted it, but it never actually happened. Make it happen, or you will start looking elsewhere for it, and that is very nearly the end of your marriage.
    --
    Slashdot - News for Nerds, Stuff that Matters, in ISO-8859-1 Has just realised that beta makes this signature redundant
  14. Re:August by jackharrer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You know, some of us are actually married (with a woman, shock, horror!) and we passed though lots of those pitfalls.

    But back on subject. I suggest some NLP training - it's a good stuff if you want to understand other people. I know, lots of you will not agree, but I still believe that the basic parts of it are very useful, relationship wise. Best is that those not only apply to marriage but all kind of relationships.

    Then I'd get into some books/audiobooks about negotiations. Only Win-Win stuff. Surprisingly helpful ;)

    You can also try to get stuff like "Laugh your way to better marriage". It floats somewhere on intertubes.

    Go to elbitz.net and search there. They have lots of cool material. Just stop your urge when you get there and build the ratio as it's quite hard later ;)

    Have fun - marriage is to make your life better. If it is not going to make it better - why bother?

    --

    "an experienced, industrious, ambitious, and often, quite often, picturesque liar" - Mark Twain
  15. Re:Honestly: be honest, and stick together as a te by Kokuyo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'd disagree with you on those bachelor parties, but then again, only very few people have such a relentless grip on their jealousy as me and my wife do.

    I will agree with the honesty, though. You made a good point: Demand it of your partner. In fact, you might have to TEACH it to her in the first place. I married a geek girl, not the cheerleader-type and she still had to be taught that yes, it is okay to tell me the truth, no it will not result in a fight and yes, I do want to hear her opinion.

    My wife has had to deal with a mother who thought she had to be like her in order to be an acceptable child. You can imagine how puberty impacted on that relationship, though, so this situation might not necessarily apply to other women. Do not forget, though, that the stereotypes of a beer drinking, football addicted husband and the constantly frustrated and nagging wife come from somewhere. They are so prevalent in our media that, it seems, a lot of girls think that's the way it's supposed to work. Some of them have to literally be retaught.

  16. After a 16 year relationship (1 child), my advice by Qbertino · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've had (... still have ... in a way such relationships never die) a 16 year relationship with a woman. We have one daughter, 11 years old. My advice on marrige is quite simple: Don't marry. Or marry with a 2-inch thick marriage contract. The simple fact that either of the SOs can walk away, with (nearly) no legal commitments holding them back contributes greatly to respecting each other and acknowledging each others sacrafices that where done for a relationship. And on this aspect of issues i'd like to quote this:

    "People who are intensly in Love often forget that for it to last you need to actively maintain it. Emotionally and in your attitude towards your significant other."

    Every single day. Don't get me wrong: You can marry, if it is for outside reasons. Maybe you have to marry for tax reasons or because you live in a society where only married couples are accepted. Maybe you or your SO is a federal employee and will have to move to a different state whenever superiors say so and there only are exemptions for married couples. However, what you should do - both of you, at the same time and in the same intensity - is treat each other as if you weren't married. Every day. That's easiest to ensure if you simply don't marry or do so with a thick contract that seals details.

    Me and her, we've each had our share of affairs on the side lately and we actually console each other when things get rough or someone of us is lovesick about it. However, we have never lost our respect for one another. I went through a solid stretch of of near flat-out neglegt by her for years, and simply the fact that I knew I could walk out of the door at any time had me stick with her and my responsibilies towards our daughter. If you marry, it should be under circumstances under which you both feel comfortable with your self and are sure that you can give what the other expects of you and what is required to make the others life better than if they were alone.

    And if you, after all this advice, *do* marry, *don't* spend huge amounts of money on the wedding. Marry, maybe invite your best friends and families to a dinner or party or something, but don't go into huge dept just for a wedding. The positive effect (bragging rights, etc.) wears of quickly and if that's all your doing it for it's pointless to do anyway. And you get the best marriage effect ('My wife' / 'my husband') anyways.

    Congratulations on finding the love of your life and my best wishes to both of you!

    My 2 Euros.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
  17. Re:Honestly: be honest, and stick together as a te by Swizec · · Score: 5, Funny

    Intelligent people do not need the kind of rubberstamp advice you find in self-help books. As long you remain honest, open and calm, you are very well off. Not doing stupid thing like playing WoW (ATTN! compare to watching football with you buddies and sipping beer) through your anniversary helps, too.

    I can't second this enough. In the 4.5 years I've been married, the ONLY time we ever ran into any real trouble was when I tried to "manage" information. The excuse you'll typically tell yourself if tempted to do this is that it's to "spare her feelings", "you couldn't cope with it then", or "spare us an unnecessary fight". Those are excuses...the real reason is you don't want to deal with her reaction and the fallout. Don't give in to that temptation. Be honest, and demand honesty from your partner. That, and a good dose of compatabiltiy and love, will take you through just about anything).

    What's so bad about not wanting to deal with someone's reaction? I'm sure they don't tell you the sex sucked right after you're done ... just as you probably don't tell them it's the arse that makes them look fat not the jeans.

    Small lies, it's what holds relationships together.

  18. Re:August by krou · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yeah, some good advice. I'm married, and while my wife isn't geeky, the same "rules" apply in all marriages, IMO:

    • Always communicate.
    • Never go to bed angry.
    • Learn to say, "Yes, dear."
    • Learn to accept the things you don't have in common, rather than just focusing on the things you do have in common.
    • Remember to always listen, as this is mostly all that is often needed.

    Best of luck for your future together! I don't regret getting married for a second.

    PS. Also, let her win at things, no matter how good you are. Trust me on this one. Oh, and when you ask her if she's okay and she says, "Nothing's wrong.", give her a hug, because something is definitely wrong!

    --
    'If Christ had tweeted the sermon on the mount, it might have lasted until nightfall.' - John Perry Barlow
  19. Re:August by sopssa · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The traditional way to do this is to get bored out of your skull while the girl stays in the booth. No fun. Ask, nay, tell her to show you what she tries on so you can interact, and you'll enjoy it too.

    Yeah, I do this and go with her to the booth aswell (which admittedly felt a bit weird at the first times specially if someone looked what they're doing, but ohwell). High heels and shoes and such is hard to comment, other clothing easier tho. But seeing some boobies in the booth helps make the time more enjoyable :)

  20. Re:August by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    NLP?? I certainly disagree.

    I had this stuff inflicted on me during a management course recently. Being the nerdy little science geek I am I went out to investigate it and discovered the same thing that you will discover if you go out and spend some serious time looking through its underlying claims - that is, that it's mostly pulled directly out of someone's plump rectum. I didn't just take my own word for it - I went to the psychology dept at my local university and checked my findings with senior research staff.

    That's not to say that learning to listen isn't incredibly important to keeping a marriage going, and it probably is true that approaching that via NLP, bullshit as the specifics are, is still better than not bothering to get the skillset at all. However, it would probably be more healthy to avoid the obfuscatory layer of mumbo-jumbo. NLP selling organisations can be virtually cult-like, and the 'science' has been recognised as more or less valueless since about the 80s.

    Posting anonymously because I have a day-job.

  21. Re:August by Ezubaric · · Score: 5, Funny

    I suggest some NLP training

    I have to disagree with this. Non-linear programming is not appropriate for a marriage. If you can't express your needs as a set of linear constraints, then you're not trying hard enough. If you can't use the simplex algorithm to resolve resource allocation conflicts, then you're not ready to get married.

    --

    ----------
    I am an expert in electricity. My father held the chair of applied electricity at the state prision.
  22. Re:August by characterZer0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Never go to bed angry.

    Bollocks. If it is bed time and you are angry, your tiredness is making you even more angry and irrational. If you just go to bed, half the time you will not even remember that you were angry once morning comes. Just go to bed.

    --
    Go green: turn off your refrigerator.
  23. Re:August by e.coli · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yeah, some good advice. I'm married, and while my wife isn't geeky, the same "rules" apply in all marriages, IMO:

    • Always communicate.
    • Never go to bed angry.
    • Learn to say, "Yes, dear."
    • Learn to accept the things you don't have in common, rather than just focusing on the things you do have in common.
    • Remember to always listen, as this is mostly all that is often needed.

    Best of luck for your future together! I don't regret getting married for a second.

    PS. Also, let her win at things, no matter how good you are. Trust me on this one. Oh, and when you ask her if she's okay and she says, "Nothing's wrong.", give her a hug, because something is definitely wrong!

    Add to this:

    • try to see the other persons side from their point of view even if you don't agree with it - it will lead to better understanding of your partners thought process.
    • Listen to what they are saying without judgment, without trying to second guess or control them or their thoughts.
    • Remain calm no matter what - lose your temper and you lose control of your self and your side of the discussion/argument.
    • Again, remember to listen without interruption - actually hear what your partner is saying without judgement.
    • Sometimes you have to lose the battle to win the war. Even if you know you are right. Later the truth of the matter will often reveal itself.

    It's worked for me and my wife for almost 30 years now.
    Good luck!

  24. Re:August by ondigo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't forget to say those three special words: "I am sorry." I'm amazed at how many people in this world have trouble saying they are sorry even when they know they are clearly wrong. (This applies in all relationships, not just marriage.)

  25. Re:August by nahdude812 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A lot of traditional wisdom is honestly some of the best wisdom. When reading books and whatnot, sure it may often be presented in ways that are dated, but there's still a core of truth to much of it. For example:

    1) Never go to bed angry. You might go to bed before you solve the problem, but no matter what it is, no matter how bad it is, you can always find a way to hug your wife, kiss her, and tell her that the two of you will be able to work it out. Going to bed angry breeds resentment.

    2) Find a few minutes to connect with your wife every day. Tell her that you love her in a way that's not just a repeat utterance of the phrase (like some people say "Have a good day," at the end of every transaction at the store). Change the word order, change the inflection, make eye contact, and hold her hand - something to indicate that you mean it and that you're not just saying it because it's supposed to be said.

    3) Never say the word divorce. Not even once. It doesn't matter how mad you are, that is a word that once spoken you cannot take it back. It represents a fracture that will never heal.

    4) Agree with each other that when you're having an argument which gets particularly heated, it is ok for either person to walk out of the room, and the argument can just wait until tempers have cooled down a bit. Personally I've always had a really bad temper, and it's only through substantial effort that I have learned to not allow it to control me. But I have a breaking point, and because I'm working so hard at controlling my temper by this point already, I go from seemingly relatively calm to white hot don't-later-remember-what-happened rage within a few seconds. When I fear I'm approaching that point, I walk away, and my wife lets me go. This is much harder than it seems, because both people are probably very angry, hurt, and frustrated at this point, and it's hard to set that aside for the moment. When you resume the discussion later (usually not very long, just long enough to cool off some), cooler heads almost always make it much smoother. DO NOT use this as a way to avoid an argument - this is meant to protect your marriage; abusing it is a form of dishonesty, and will cripple its ability to act as a safety valve. When you get to that point, the things you say can be so hurtful that they remain long after the original trifle that the argument was about is forgotten. When you walk out on the argument, you must always return to it, and it really should be the person who walked out who initiates the return.

    5) Always put your wife first. Her interests always trump yours, just as they would when you're dating. That might sound like an unbalanced relationship, but when it's reciprocal the decision process is each person advocating for the other. It tends to cause much more level-headed discussions, and it reinforces the strength of your bond because you feel as if your spouse genuinely cares about what's best for you (and you're right about that). Women are much more likely than men to do this naturally, so you may have to work at it. Sometimes you don't get to do what you wanted to do, but if it's actually important to you, then she'll see and understand that and will advocate it for you. Often you'll later discover that it wasn't nearly as important to you as you thought it was at the time.

  26. Re:August by notgm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    agreed.

    but you can boil it all down to "you can be right, or you can be happy."

    i heard a comedian say it, on tv.

    my wife hits me when i say it.

    i'm nearly 100% certain that it's accurate.

  27. Re:August by sycodon · · Score: 5, Informative

    My Advice...don't get married. It's a trap.

    What happens when you get married:
    1. Sex stops
    2. She get's fat (probably you too)
    3. All your money starts disappearing for no apparent reason.
    4. You will be surrounded by strange and insufferable relatives from some place you have never heard of.
    5. You will get to drive the old car.
    6. Gaming did you say? That won't last long. "I can't believe you are going to play on the computer AGAIN. You just played last week!"
    7. She will start asking you if she looks fat, despite the fact she is perfectly aware of #2
    8. She won't cook (See #1) and she won't be able to make a decent dinner.
    9. You will have to leave the house when her literary friends come over to discuss the life analogies in some gay French author's book.
    10. LAN parties? No Fucking Way in her house!

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  28. Re:August by KC7JHO · · Score: 5, Insightful

    90% of the time when she has a problem she wants to talk about, SHE DOES NOT WANT YOU TO SOLVE IT, she wants to TALK about it! They have to vent and discuss and analyze and most of all gossip about the problems they have. Men just want to get things done and if it dose not work fix it. Spending time talking about a problem without the intent to resolve it goes against everything we are made up of, however that is just the way they work.

    Still trying to get this right after 17 years marriage (to the same girl) so good luck! Ooh and if you ask them which they want, they will tell you they want it solved, just don't try and offer them advice on how to accomplish that!

  29. Re:August by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 5, Funny

    the one I cant stand.... WTF is it with all the fricking pillows on the bed? we need 2... TWO!!!! not 60 of them!!!!!

    See #1. You're not using them right ;)

    --
    Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.