Indylady
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Apr 28, 2008
- Messages
- 5,780
Hi @Indylady this is what worked for us when we moved in together.
Being patient with each other.
Communicating as soon as something was bothering us and just being open and honest and kind.
Be considerate of each other. Treat each other with respect and love and compassion and understanding. Just as one wants to be treated they should treat their partner.
When difficulties and conflict arise (and it is not a matter of if but when) it is not so much about the specific conflict/disagreement but more so about how you resolve your conflicts. How you work together to come to a good solution. One point I feel strongly about is sometimes you cannot compromise and one of you has to have their way. It should be the one who feels more strongly about the issue. Yes many times you can compromise but sometimes a compromise won't do.
And when something was not going right approaching the issue in a loving way remembering we are on the same team and working together towards the same goal.
Might sound corny but that is what worked for us and believe me moving in together was a huge change for both of us. It was a challenging few months when we first moved in together. More for me than my dh since I am more stuck in my ways.
Make time for each other but also make time for your friends apart from each other.
And that brings me to my last suggestion. Remain flexible and roll with the punches and you can work out anything together.
Good luck and wishing the happy couple all the best in health, happiness and love.
2 bathrooms. That's all.
Amen!!!2 bathrooms. That's all.
Are separate bathrooms the secret to a happy marriage?
At least one therapist says it's not an idea to be flushed away so easily.
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Oct. 23, 2018 / 3:28 PM EDT / Source: TODAY
By Randee Dawn
Michelle Obama. Michael Caine. Sarah Michelle Gellar. Joan Collins. What do all of these celebrities have in common?
They all agree that having two separate bathrooms equals one long-lived, happy marriage.
"Listen, I know that everybody can't have that, but it does help, quite frankly," Collins told James Corden on "The Late, Late Show" in September. Early in October, the former first lady echoed the sentiment on TODAY.
"We're all seeking sound bites of sage wisdom about what works in a relationship," licensed marriage and family therapist Laura Petifordtold TODAY. "The reality is it's always more contextual, much deeper and highly reliant on what's important to those particular people."
In other words, "maybe."
Two bathrooms — and the admission of a preference for them — is in part a declaration of a "highly egalitarian marriage," she said. "It can be a reflection that at least in this aspect of life, there's equality."
Plus, it can be a romance saver.
"The bathroom is a space where we attend to highly intimate aspects of ourselves, and a high-risk environment to reveal habits of cleanliness, which can be contentious for couples," she said. "On a superficial level, having two bathrooms might allow for maintaining a higher level of romance, keeping a degree of mystery."
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From Joan Collins to Michelle Obama and Sarah Michelle Gellar, some celebrities credit separate bathrooms as the secret to a long marriage.Getty Images
Studies on whether long-term couples share or separate their bathrooms are pretty scant, but in 2017 Honest Tea released results of a study indicating that 60 percent of those surveyed believed that being honest with your partner about your bathroom habits led to a healthier relationship.
But, as Petiford noted, any problems couple have are probably not solely about bathrooms, or any shared rooms for that matter.
"Whenever anybody comes in with a 'preventing' issue, it's really more about the dynamic that exists between the couple, rather than critical issues," she said. "As is often the case in therapy or when people have a complaint, it's almost never about the particular issue at hand, but the dynamic about the thing that's being talked about."
No surprise: It turns out the bathroom discussion can be a metaphor for an entire relationship.
"There are no shortcuts (to maintaining a long, happy relationship)," said Petiford. "We're always looking for them: Tell me what the secret is! But the bottom line is that relationships are hard work. Hard work, and a lot of communication — no matter how many bathrooms you have."
Missy, sorry to cut your quote short, its just a little more manageable this way. Wow, great advice, thank you!! You are so right--being loving in the way one approaches issues goes a very long way. My boyfriend once commented that I respond more by his tone than the content of his words. And I think its true. The delivery, especially if kind and loving, really changes how you might take criticism or anything else that you otherwise might react badly toward. And you are right, remembering that you're in it together is so important! I sometimes find it easy to forgetHi @Indylady this is what worked for us when we moved in together.
Being patient with each other.
Communicating as soon as something was bothering us and just being open and honest and kind.
How old are the couple? Are they introverts? Extroverts? One of each? Can you tell us more about them? Are they moving into a small space together like a one bedroom apartment? Or a big space? How many sinks in the master bathroom. Are they only children? Have siblings?
Advice is not one size fits all. We got a lot of useless scary advice when we moved in together.
Missy, sorry to cut your quote short, its just a little more manageable this way. Wow, great advice, thank you!! You are so right--being loving in the way one approaches issues goes a very long way. My boyfriend once commented that I respond more by his tone than the content of his words. And I think its true. The delivery, especially if kind and loving, really changes how you might take criticism or anything else that you otherwise might react badly toward. And you are right, remembering that you're in it together is so important! I sometimes find it easy to forget, so that's definitely one for me to work on!
The couple is...me!Late 20's/early 30's, a 1 bedroom apartment but a spacious one, one sink in the bathroom, and I am an only child.
First time for both!
And who's gonna sport the bigger diamond?And agree beforehand, who's gonna do which household chores, how often and when.
So you in summary: learn about yourself and him. Pay attention to your differences. Problem solve solutions to household issues together, taking into account your strengths and weaknesses individually. You can either be stronger together or weaker together. Keep your eye on how to compliment each other's strengths instead of getting stuck on each other's weaknesses. Learn to pick your battles. You may just have to learn to accept that for 20 years, the milk will not be on the right shelf when you aren't the one putting it back. You can't make each issue into Waterloo, work together to fix the things you can't live with, and learn to compromise or just accept the things that you can.
Heheheh. I'm working on a project with Steven Kirsch right now, I'm so excited, so I'm thinking it'll be me for just a little while.And who's gonna sport the bigger diamond?![]()
Not sure if anyone has mentioned this. If not, if you haven't already done so, I'd open a joint bank account for shared household expenses like mortgage/ rent, utilities, internet, groceries etc..But keep your own accounts in your individual names.
And agree beforehand, who's gonna do which household chores, how often and when.