Susan Pease Gadoua's Plan to Overhaul Marriage

Susan Pease Gadoua, author of Stronger Day by Day, suggests in a Huffington Post article that the institution of marriage needs an overhaul because to her knowledge no one is asking the intended why they're getting married. Susan makes a lot of assumptions and generalizations about marriage—to her knowledge. Her plan would be to replace marital unions with contracts such as the 20-year "parenting marriage.

I was going to say this is the dumbest thing ever said about marriage, but Susan isn't talking about marriage. She's talking about prenuptial agreements, which already exist—as does the freedom to get as crazy as you want to about them. Unless Susan's observations are based on cultural preferences from 1965, it's simply not true that our cultural standard is, as Susan puts it, "forever." Every state's divorce statistics and crowded family courts bear this out.

Saying marriage itself needs her kind of overhaul because of the number of marriages that don't last is like saying we need to widen the roads because texting drivers are plowing into oncoming lanes and adjacent properties. No matter one's reason for marrying, everyone gets out of a marriage what they put into it—whether that's honest communication and growth, a pack of lies (overt or covert, conscious or subconscious), or a hope chest of delusions (i.e.: S/he drinks so heavily because s/he's really thirsty). That's not just true of the day two people decide to marry or the day they do marry. That's true of every day they wake up married to each other.

Each person's answer to the question of "why" isn't made magically apparent by whipping up a contract. At best a contract would keep "why not" to a minimum. Even in those cases where premarital counseling isn't received (where often the first question asked is "why") and/or in cases where the family and friends doesn't ask, a contract could easily become a legal noose around the neck of the spouse who didn't or couldn't have foreseen whatever craziness the other snuck in under the bottom line.

Contracts aren't fences that keep honest people honest. If that were the case, there wouldn't be predatory lenders and their ilk. I assume a "parenting marriage" would include details about who will tell the kids about the parents' upcoming termination of contract and when. That has to be the gift every child wants most for their tenth birthday: a ten-year head start on dealing with their parents' divorce. Sorry kiddo, I meant "contract termination"—that hurts less, right? Further, how is it any less an emotional bombshell to the spouse who thought everything was going fine only to hear on the eve of the contract terminating that the other spouse wants out?

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Article Author: Diana Hartman

Diana Hartman is a (ret.) USMC spouse, mother of three in college and a Wichita, Kansas native. She is a contributing writer to Holiday Writes and can be found on Twitter.

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