I have been married three times. If you met me, you would know immediately I am not the Elizabeth Taylor type. My three men did not seduce me with rock-sized engagement rings. I did not tire of any of them: they were or are all good men! It is only life’s unpredictable circumstances that have made me a serial bride.
I have come to realize that the tenure of each of my marriages corresponds to three unique stages of life: young adulthood, family-focused years, and now retirement. All three marriages can offer some wisdom into how being in a relationship at various times in one’s life is so different, even if one’s partner remains the same! I am also quite stunned on a daily basis that marriage can bring such great satisfaction later in life.
Dr. Sara Yogev, in her book A Couple’s Guide to Happy Retirement, has discovered through counseling her patients for over 30 years, and in the literature, that newly retired individuals report the lowest marital satisfaction and highest marital conflict compared to older retirees, the unretired, and those still working. It seems to take about two years for husbands and wives in retirement to settle down and begin to make accommodations to the other’s needs (if they can).
Each member of the couple has uniquely different desires in retirement, and both have not spent such a great amount of time together… ever! Luckily, Dr. Yogev has some great suggestions for the common problems. Perhaps such a consultation can lower the “grey divorce” rate which has tripled among those over 65 since the 1990s. Also, a look at marriage in prior life stages might illuminate the challenges and pleasures which marriage can bring in one’s later years.
Also read, Why Do Couples Divorce Later in Life?
Like many in my generation, I married at a very young age: engaged at 19 and married at 20. I fell in love with my first husband at a summer religious youth camp. We came from the same community, and there was a great alignment of values, friends, and aspirations for the future.
We supported each other in every important way through college, both living at home, and working in our spare time to save enough to get married in our senior year. Our future looked bright, and we were supported by loving parents, siblings and the local community.
Although our stars aligned, I was too young for so much responsibility while still in college. I had no experience with all the required domestic duties, and I found them to be quite burdensome. Right after our honeymoon, I was thrown into my student teaching semester, with its own very adult responsibilities.
I secretly wanted to have the marriage annulled, but I felt badly about the cost of the wedding album which had not yet been delivered by the photographer!
Unfortunately, this 8-year marriage ended when my young husband was killed in a tragic accident at the age of 30, leaving me with a toddler. Although my marriage had quite an unusual ending, women who marry too young often are not prepared emotionally for the adult requirements of running a household, intimacy on a daily basis, and lose the years required for deep self-exploration.
After surviving the first two years as a widow and single parent, fate smiled upon me.
I took my daughter to register for nursery school, and the secretary just happened to be a childhood friend of my mother. She introduced me to the education director of that institution, and we fell in love immediately.
Once again, there was a large, loving community enveloping us, an alignment of values, this time of a very spiritual nature, and our son was a happy surprise who needed a babysitter as we celebrated our first anniversary.
My second husband gladly adopted my daughter, and all four of us reveled in our hard-won family status: I was a young widow, and my husband was a 40-year-old bachelor, now with two children. My daughter now had a brother!
Unfortunately, a tragic death leaves its imprint on everyone in an extended family. I now had the old in-laws, the new in-laws and their tribe, and a daughter affected by her father’s death.
Even our son was influenced by the family saga which never seemed to recede. Unfortunately, this 18-year marriage ended in divorce. This was a hectic time, with both of us working so many hours, coping with domestic chores and full children’s schedules. We all did the hard work in therapy, but we were pulled under the strong current of past events and the daily grind common to many couples in middle age.
Not being one to give in to adversity, after several years passed, I signed up for Match.com. Along comes husband #3 and a reawakening of love and passion… at the age of 51! At this juncture, extended family obligations had receded. Robert and I were able to focus on our relationship, especially when my son went off to college. One of my friends now calls us a happy “nation of two.”
Although we’ve been married for 20 years and have passed through the abrupt end of my career and his tricky divorce, we find ourselves in a daily state of comfort, living the intersection of similar values and interests, and palpable feelings of love and support.
These later years have great poignancy with their inherent illnesses, losses, and diminishing future. I’ve been by Robert’s side as he navigated two serious illnesses, and he’s been by my side as I lost both parents and continue to unravel my family history.
I find marriage so much more satisfying at this age for a number of reasons. In previous life stages, I always felt the competition of my agenda (which always included my children’s needs) vs. my husband’s. Now that I’m retired, I have no compelling agenda. I am able to pivot easily depending on the demands of the moment, yet I honor the carefully curated life I’ve chosen.
“Time,” which was always ferociously biting at my heels, is now a vague concept. I often lose track of the current date. This casual approach to life has extended to Robert. Although I was previously described by him as “strident,” I just let this man be. There is no longer the noticing or the judgments about behavior, appearance, domestic faux pas, etc.
Marriage in later life can be the result of all the relationship wisdom gathered over a lifetime through life’s stages. In the words of Desmond Tutu, “Our maturity will be judged by how well we are able to disagree and continue to love one another, to care for one another, and cherish one another, and seek the greater good of the other.”
What is your experience of marriage? Is your relationship a long and happy one or have you been through separation and divorce? How have relationships worked out for you thus far?
Tags Marriage After 60
PS I love the quote on your website so I added to my signature line on my emails. Hope that is ok.
It is when we are in transition, that we are most completely alive.
William Bridges
Renee, your article is so well written and hits home to many women, including myself. I agree with every sentiment you wrote. Life’s journey is so amazing and though thankful for the men in my past marriages (and glad I have moved on), I am also in a “daily state of comfort, living the intersection of similar values and interests, and palpable feelings of love and support” with a man that I have been blessed to cross my path. Keep up the great writing.
I too have been married 3 times. At 75 I will not be married again. I was married 47 years to the love of my life and took care of him for nearly 10 years in a very difficult cancer. After he passed, I married a Christian man at my church. Thank goodness we had a prenup because he was a different person once married. We divorced after 2 years. I now have a “friend/partner” …..he is 79 and lives 3 houses away and we have so much in common….play lots of tennis and go biking. We do love each other but no marriage. It’s too complex in our older years and we truly enjoy our days living apart and then getting together for dinner (he’s a great cook) and after dinner, then go back to our houses at night. This is perfect…no mixing assets or responsibilities and our days are free to do whatever you’d like….our evenings as well but normally we switch off every few nights with cooking responsibility and then treat ourselves going out to eat a few times a week of which we share the expenses. We travel together (3 trips coming up this summer). At our age, life is great without the financial responsibilities and no need to sell a house…just enjoy what we have. We are both blessed financially and life is really great!
I’ve been married twice. My first husband and I met when we were in law school together. I was dating someone else, who had been My True Love off and on from age 17-26. When My True Love proposed just before I started law school, while he was a struggling musician with a Master’s from Peabody Conservatory, my immaturity prevented me from seeing him as having a stable future. He was kind, loving and very sweet to me.
Enter the law student/Pharmacist with the ambition to become a Patent Attorney. It took him a year to convince me to leave My True Love.
Our marriage lasted nine years, and we were together for a total of 13. We moved across the country to California and had two sons. After five years, we moved back to the East Coast. Unfortunately, I suffered from very bad postpartum depression with a continuing major depression after that. My husband and I grew apart while he focused on work and I took care of the kids and tried to get over my depression.
The marriage ended when I found out he was deeply involved with someone he worked with. We went through counseling, but he refused to give up his “friend“.
I was divorced for 15 years. During that time I was engaged three times, but the wedding would never happen. I bounced from boyfriend to boyfriend during that whole time.
I met my second husband on craigslist! I was so tired of the dating scene on match.com that I wrote a frustrated post on craigslist, saying “why can’t we just meet and have dinner“? He responded and we have been together ever since.
I think the difference between my first marriage and my second marriage was at least partly communication problems. My first husband and I did not know how to resolve difficulties. But by the time I met my second husband, I had been working on my mental health for years. Straight communication was much more important to me by that time. At this point in my life, I can safely say I have studied DBT and cognitive therapy enough to be able to communicate through whatever difficulties we face. So far we’ve been through cancer, depression, children’s divorces, and one of my children suffering from very deep depression.
We will celebrate our 13th wedding anniversary this year. I’m so happy to be in this phase of my life, with less time commitments and more time to pursue my creative and athletic interests.