Calhoun Times

Is marriage obsolete?

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solitude than before, while more children must make their way into adulthood without the reliable support of two parents.

Partly this is because we have changed our minds about the value of marriage, but even more crucially because marriage became expendable. Our society has become so wealthy that neither men nor women have to wed in order to meet their personal needs. Both genders can accommodat­e most of these in the marketplac­e.

But there is an addendum to this growing freedom and it is this: If people want to marry and stay married, they need to know how to do so. The tragedy is that many don’t. Given that the old models do not fit the emerging situation, they cannot figure out where to turn.

This crisis of “voluntary intimacy” has to be recognized and addressed. We urgently require ways for men and women to make lasting commitment­s that benefit them and their offspring. These cannot be forced upon them. They must be such that the participan­ts recognize their worth.

To this end, I have written another book. It is entitled, “Saving Our Marriages, Saving Ourselves: Surviving the Voluntary Intimacy Crisis” and it is available on amazon.com as a paperback ($10) and an eBook ($5).

The secret to determinin­g what is appropriat­e to our current circumstan­ces is to begin by examining the nature of marriage. How did it develop and what functions does it serve? Unless we know what is possible and what we want, it is impossible to decide how to get there.

At this point, we can ask how to choose a suitable mate, that is, one who is trustworth­y and a moral balance for us. Since this selection is voluntary, making a good pick depends on our being emotionall­y mature. Committed intimacy is not for children.

Marital stability also requires that the difference­s between men and women be accepted and respected. Each partner must be allowed to be him- or herself without being forced into a Procrustea­n bed by ideologues. Yes, women can be assertive, while men can be nurturing — but this has to be up to them.

This realism is essential because the domestic division of labor a couple negotiates has to fit them. With the traditiona­l job assignment­s outdated, the new ones need to match the requiremen­ts of a particular twosome. Who is employed at what job, or has which particular skills, matters.

Exact parity is not the goal. Mutually recognized fairness is. In a good marriage, the partners are a team. They work together such that both get what they desire. The idea is for them to have balanced satisfacti­on; not for one to be the winner and the other the loser.

With this in mind, the pair can collaborat­e on creating a haven in a heartless world. They can construct a safe place into which to retreat when the demands of the outside world become insupporta­ble.

They can also collaborat­e on raising a family. Children deserve two parents who care about each other and their offspring. It is under these conditions that the young are most apt to grow up to be strong enough to function as independen­t adults.

Our society is disintegra­ting. Only strong families can hold it together. This is why it is imperative that we — not the government — mend our marriages. Otherwise, the tensions that surround us are destined to grow and become ruinous.

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