The 1 Stage Of Marriage Nobody Talks About, By A Psychologist

The 1 Stage Of Marriage Nobody Talks About, By A Psychologist


Most people think of marriage as a story with a clear beginning, middle and end. You fall in love, get married, build a life together and face a few challenges. Eventually, if you’re lucky, you might get to grow old together, side by side. But as any long-term couple will tell you, the path of a healthy marriage is very rarely this linear.

Increasingly, psychologists are describing marriage in terms of progressing through a series of different stages. “Honeymoon,” “power struggle,” “hanging in,” “stability,” “doing your own thing,” “commitment” and “legacy” are just some of the terms researchers have used to conceptualize the stages of marriage.

Yet, there’s another phase worth focusing on that’s often left out of the discussion: the stage of conscious partnership.

The Conscious Partnership

Love is often defined by emotion and intensity in the early stages of a relationship. You start off by discovering each other, your rhythms and your dreams together. Then later on, your focus shifts to gaining stability: marriage, kids, house, jobs, responsibilities. The proverbial “spark” may not be as bright as it looked during the honeymoon phase, but spouses have a much stronger sense of “us.”

The conscious partnership stage emerges in the latter part of a long-term relationship or marriage. Once partners have weathered enough of life’s challenges — career changes, parenting, losses, disappointments — they’re then able to recognize that the relationship itself is a living, evolving entity.

In turn, spouses stop trying to win arguments or prove points, and start seeing each other through a lens of empathy rather than ego. You realize that your partner is not your adversary, but your mirror.

As research from Communication Reports explains, this mindset is one of “relationship maintenance.” It involves acknowledging that healthy love isn’t something that happens to couples by chance, but rather by actively striving toward it every day through effort.

In turn, partners move beyond the surface-level questions of “Am I happy?” or “Are we compatible?” and into much more philosophical territory: How can we continue to grow together as whole, separate people?

And as conscious partners know, taking a more intentional approach to marriage is the only way to find the answer to this question. This demands mindfulness in terms of how much they give and take, as well as ensuring the relationship evolves at the same rate as they do individually.

Here’s two intentional changes that they have to make to get here.

1. Dependence To Interdependence

Earlier stages of marriage often involve a tug-of-war between independence and dependence. One partner may crave closeness while the other fights for space. The conscious partnership stage marks a point where partners find their true balance between these two needs. They’re not totally enmeshed, nor are they completely detached. Instead, they’re fully interdependent.

Interdependence theory, as defined in research from the Journal of Family Psychology, explains marriage as a dynamic exchange of rewards, costs and mutual dependence. More simply, this means satisfaction and commitment in a marriage relies on how partners evaluate their outcomes and alternatives:

  • Stable marriages often involve high satisfaction (positive outcomes), low alternatives (few appealing options outside the marriage) and high dependence (partners feel they need each other).
  • Unstable marriages may have low satisfaction (more costs than rewards), high alternatives (tempting exits) and low dependence (partners feel they could do fine alone).

Stable partners recognize that they can love someone deeply without losing themselves in the process. That they can be connected without being consumed. That they can find comfort with their partner without needing constant reassurance.

In turn, partners can start to trust that the relationship can withstand moments of distance, disagreement or discomfort. They both have a full understanding of why they stay together, why they may still struggle occasionally and what exactly strengthens their marriage over time.

2. Idealism To Radical Acceptance

A 2023 study published in Behaviour Research and Therapy suggests that, with radical acceptance, not only do individuals become more tolerant of distressing experiences, but they’re also better able to reframe those experiences in adaptive, constructive ways.

Radical acceptance involves surrendering the fantasy of perfection — and this is the exact shift needed to enter the conscious partnership stage of a marriage.

Contrary to popular belief, letting go of idealized expectations about constant passion, total emotional attunement or perpetual harmony doesn’t mean you’re settling for less or giving up on your marriage. Instead, it means you’re approaching it in a more honest, resilient way.

When couples stop comparing their relationship to imagined standards or to others’ perfectly curated versions of intimacy, they build a love that is chosen, rather than just taken for granted.

Acceptance, in this context, is active, deliberate and often hard-won. Partners must face their disappointments without becoming defensive. They must accept that unmet needs or moments of conflict aren’t indicative of failure, but rather invitations for them to grow together.

Just as acceptance in emotion regulation can enhance cognitive flexibility, acceptance in marriage can foster emotional agility. In turn, partners can respond to eventual challenges with compassion rather than critique.

Why Some Couples Never Get Here

The conscious partnership stage is never guaranteed in marriage. Many couples stall out in the earlier phases because they allow their emotional wounds to go unhealed, or because they simply stop communicating with one another. In doing so, they risk growing resentful and losing all sense of curiosity, as the relationship begins to run on outdated assumptions and habits.

In this sense, reaching the conscious partnership stage requires both partners to commit to honing their self-awareness. Couples can’t reach it through autopilot or out of sheer habit. They have to consciously work their way there, each day, by actively practicing relationship maintenance. This means constantly checking in with one another and addressing issues as soon as they crop up, all while staying emotionally present — even when it’s uncomfortable or tiring.

But above all, this stage requires a willingness to let your partner change, and to let yourself change, too. You have to be able to look at each other anew, again and again, even after decades together.

Want a grade on the current state of your marriage? Take the science-backed Marital Satisfaction Scale to see how you rank against other couples.



Forbes

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