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- From: his@the-temple.East.Sun.COM (Howard Solomon - SunExpress Support Engineer)
- Newsgroups: soc.motss
- Subject: Re: long-term relationships...success sto
- Date: 29 Dec 1992 21:16:24 GMT
- Organization: Sun Microsystems, Inc.
- Lines: 74
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1hqf78INN8pa@seven-up.East.Sun.COM>
- References: <105749@bu.edu>
- Reply-To: his@the-temple.East.Sun.COM
- NNTP-Posting-Host: the-temple.east.sun.com
-
- In article 105749@bu.edu, kane@buast7.bu.edu (Hot Young Star) writes:
- > At first I hesitated to respond to this, since my partner and I have been
- > together only for a third of a decade. But then I heard that of all couples
- > who legally married during 1989 (the year Mark and I met), 49% of them were
- > now divorced. I guess that gives me a bit of privilege, having outlasted
- > the near majority of our heterosexual peers.
-
- Length of relationship is a state of mind, I find. When people used to ask, I
- would say:
-
- x years, but it feels like 2x or 3x!
-
- Now, the time together is more pleasant, more confortable, and does not feel
- like an eternity. For the record, Mark and I (a different Mark, I supect :-))
- celebrated 8 years in October. AND, for the first time, we got an anniversary
- (belated) present from Mark's parents! Even though everything has been fine
- for years with the folks, this has always bugged me. Now that my parents are
- back together (after a 14 or so year separation, HALF my life!) I will bug them
- next year.
-
- > Well, to make a long, VERY long, story short, we just celebrated 3 1/3
- > years together earlier this month with another total lunar eclipse. The
- > inter-eclipse period, as we now like to refer to our growing relationship,
- > has had basically three phases. The first year was the romance, the
- > gleeful abandoning of independence for the sake of love. The second also
- > lasted a year and began with our moving in together; it was a year of
- > adjustment and compromise. Little habits we hadn't noticed suddenly became
- > either extremely endearing or horribly annoying. We had some rough spots,
- > but we treated ourselves to a three-week Hawaiian vacation at the end of
- > two years together. The most recent year, the most recent phase, began with
- > the realization that (perhaps prompted by our vacation) that the passion had
- > indeed faded. This has had positive effects and negative effects on our
- > relationship. At first, we felt a little lost. What now? We would have liked
- > to have another couple for a role model, but our schedules had been so busy
- > as to leave little time for socializing; most of our friends were either
- > single or, if coupled, had not reached the stage where we found each other.
- > On the other hand, we took our parents and relatives as an example and
- > made the assumption that since they were presumably not sexually passionate
- > about each other anymore, they might perhaps accept Mark and me as a couple,
- > too. So this past year has been principally about coming out as a couple to
- > our families, and about keeping the relationship fresh.
-
- Our romance period was very brief for reasons I will not get into on such a
- public forum (many of you who know me already know, not a big thing, actually, but...)
- The irritating little habits don't go away, you just get used to some of them.
- We had only one 'role model' longterm couple, but they just weren't "right" as such.
- Like everyone, we learned as we went. For the record, both sides of the family
- accept us and have for some time now.
-
- >
- > On the latter note, we've had some success through reasserting our independence
- > in making our own, new platonic friendships. Setting a routine night of
- > the week where we "do our own thing" has been helpful. Personally, I need
- > this space, since Mark is a gregarious person with a desire for constant
- > audiovisual stimulation, and I'm more a bookworm and gym-freak. Sometimes it
- > hasn't been easy letting go of each other so as we can assert some mutual
- > independence, but we both recognize the need.
-
- I agree with the importance of some "space". We don't get out as much as we
- used too and get out alone even less. It is nice to have times to socialize alone,
- though. (Business trips are a nice example)
-
- > Brian
-
- Howard (back again after an absence. How do some of you keep up with the volume?!?)
-
-
- ---
- ========================================================================
- Howard I. Solomon |
- Software Support Engineer, SunExpress |
- his@east.sun.com |
- =========================================================================
-
-