I think the humans race is evolving to understand more about what behaviors work and what don’t. We have gone from the silent generation that didn’t talk at all or have much stock in emotion, and each generation gets a little more emotionally intelligent and demands more from life.
I don’t know that I can agree with the evolving comment here, at least certainly not as evidenced by last few generations. There is just too much gorgeous poetry and literature going back thousands of years. Humans have been pretty emotionally on point for a long time. Certainly the pendulum swings, but I don’t think I can easily agree that we as a species are clearly growing here.
Evolution doesn’t mean better. But for every poet or art piece we aren’t producing, there have been many advancements that make our life’s easier, and the overall environment we are responding to is different. There isn’t even a way to debate that.
What I was specifically referring to is we expect more out of everything than other generations. And we talk about our feelings more in a scale that what is understood about our emotions, patterns, etc has evolved. You probably wouldn’t find a helpful book on relationships much earlier than 1960. Most before that told us women to dote on our husbands and make sure he has his slippers and have you and the children be quiet so he can rest from his day. We didn’t study this stuff for there even to be patterns and not many of us want to pattern our relationship after our parents relationship, so we go about it differently.
My point for talking about the evolution is I think the information we have about cheating is fairly recent in the last 50 years or so and no one goes and seeks it until it happens to them. Society as a whole sees adultery through the eyes of fictional depiction that does not really cover what lies beneath it.
The function of marriage is completely different. It lasts a lot longer because our life spans are different. We go through phases in life that would have been previously unstudied.
Also not sure about these statements. I’ve considered the thought that what we expect from marriage is totally different than the "survive and reproduce" model of "the past". But again, there is just too much romanticism in ancient literature for me to give that much credence. The Song of Solomon in the Bible is no less than 3000 years old and it’s an ode to erotic love. And our life spans are somewhat longer, but there are a shit ton of us that hit this wall at about 20 years of marriage, nothing there that would have timed out our ancestors.
I think it’s impossible not to say marriage has changed, even since the sexual revolution. It’s difficult to say that it didn’t start out about love at the time that Solomon covers but to think there hasn’t been and ebb and slow based on environment would be throwing darts and too broad for discussion. I would argue the Bible says things about marriage that I think holds up today and other things that we ignore. But I am not looking to debate any of that.
What I am talking about is how it’s changed since our direct descendants. My grandparents were the silent generation. They believed you got married, stayed together, didn’t matter that it looked like or if you were happy. The women were financially dependent on men. I talked to my grandfather on his death bed and he told stories of how he met my grandmother that were sweet but it was obvious that the rest of it was living with her made him miserable for the 50 plus years they were together. Most of us won’t endure that, divorce has become far more of an option. And if you think any of them went to marriage counseling, then perhaps your grandparents were wealthy or they did it with their pastor if they could bear having someone knowing their business.
Life was not about happiness, that is a newer expectation, to be happy as much as possible.
I am not really talking about cheating I am talking here about emotional intelligence. Because I am responding to the question of why didn’t we know? We weren’t really taught, and it’s information like I said that most people don’t seek out until they need it. No one gets married reading books about infidelity. I was reading things like "Women are from Venus, men are from Mars" which to most now is outdated, and this was only a quarter century ago.
Mid- life crisis is a big one because most people didn’t live past then. Women have careers, but it creates these unrealistic pictures of what our lives should be. What we should be able to accomplish. I think there is. High rate of burnout and we are seeing it in the fact women initiate 75 percent of divorces today.
Not so sure about the lifespan comment, and I’ll just say that my wife did not have this burn out problem.
Well I wasn’t really talking about anyone’s specific spouse, and I definitely wasn’t making any comments about yours. Though my affair did occur during an existential crisis, and because of that have read a lot surrounding it. I have also spoken to many here over the years that shared that experience.
My point is that we didn’t live long enough to have these phases in life to even study them. We now understand different phases of marriage. My whole explanation is geared towards why didn’t we know?
I know that nobody was going to ride in on their white horse and save me from my situation. But it just seems like no one even knows what to look for, even therapists. It’s why Gotmann’s claims are so bold and exciting, the man actually claims to have something worth listening to here. But my friends and family, to them all my cries just sounded normal enough. Therapists just called it he said/she said stuff. In fact the first MC we ever saw was a few years into our marriage. I remember this woman’s advice to me was that, because my wife was upset that I should obviously just apologize for whatever it was she was upset about, regardless of how I saw it. I guess I have held a resentment against her for a long time now. rolleyes
Tell me about it. After my affair I went to therapy and one of the reasons was to prepare to confess. My therpist really tried to talk me out of that. I had to get a new one who could align with the idea that I my integrity could never be restored if I just didn’t tell him.
And I have thought about that later- I mean, I could have not told him and just worked on myself and he would have been spared.I still think it was one hundred present the right thing to do with all that I know now, but the theory community is a whole lot of generalists. They kind of give the same processes like a one size fits all sort of thing. Those here that saw specialists claim it’s worth the money. We didn’t have them in our area. And at some point therapy is not got to solve it all. I haven’t been in years but the awareness it brought still allows me to uncover little pieces of the puzzle with myself today.
[This message edited by hikingout at 4:06 PM, Sunday, February 25th]