10 Things Everyone Should Know About Marriage, According To Divorcees

Love is not enough.
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Want solid marriage advice? Ask a divorced person.

There are some things you can’t possibly know about marriage until you’ve been there.

Below, HuffPost Divorce bloggers and readers on Facebook reflect on what they wish they had known about marriage before saying “I do.”

1. You need more than love to keep your marriage alive.

“Love is not enough. You must like your partner and have a deep respect for them. You need someone who is your best friend. You need a rock and a place that is not just a house, but a home. You need a partner in life. The best marriages I’ve been blessed to know have had that at their foundation.” ― Jessica Kahan

2. The annoying habits that drive you nuts before you’re married won’t go away once you’re wed. 

“Your spouse’s annoying habits multiply exponentially after you’ve tied the knot. I’m talking about little things that gain annoying momentum as years go by. For me, it was abrasive quirks like these: tailgating at rush hour, interrupting me to correct me, calling every woman he met ‘sweetheart’ and twisting his napkin into a knot after every meal. Shallow and petty, I admit, but day after day took its toll. While dating, I wrote them off as changeable and cute. When the adrenaline wore off, those pesky habits became a problem.” ― Kat Forsythe

3. It’s not necessary to spend every waking minute together.

“Growing up, my dad was a ‘rolling stone’ so I always thought that in order to prevent that sort of thing, married couples had to like the same things, do the same things and always be in each other’s sight. This is what I carried into my first marriage. Notice I said first marriage. That approach to spending time together ended in divorce. I’m remarried now and I know that it’s healthy for couples to have their own identity and enjoy their own hobbies.”— Tiffany Benyacko

4. If you suspect your spouse is upset about something, find out what it is at any cost. 

“When you’re married to someone who doesn’t want to talk about challenges and concerns in the marriage, push. Push hard. If you can make it happen on your own, great; if you need to seek the services of a counselor, do it. Don’t settle for ‘Things are fine; you’re making something out of nothing.’ If you’re feeling it, it’s not nothing and when you’re not being heard and acknowledged, resentment can’t help but grow. By the time that resentment has taken hold, if you’re not already gone, you will be.” ― Lisa Lavia Ryan

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If your spouse is upset, press to find out why.

5. A marriage license doesn’t change much.

“A paper will not miraculously change anything about a person.” ― Carrie Rovere-Mundrick

6. You don’t have to stay in a bad marriage

No one should ever feel trapped in a marriage. Marriage shouldn’t be taken lightly and divorce should (almost) never be the first option, but if it isn’t the marriage you want, you desire, you deserve, you have choices. Staying is one of them but so is leaving. That doesn’t mean your marriage failed. It just means that it ended.” ― Aubrey Keefer

7. Your spouse will change. 

“You will change, too, so make damn sure that you can grow together and that you agree on the things that you consider dealbreakers.” ― Carol Schaffer

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Don't expect your spouse to stay the same person throughout your marriage.

8. Meddling in-laws will test your marriage. 

“It’s your marriage and your life but issues within the immediate family can cause a huge problem in your marriage. It can chip away at your trust and your respect for one another. I wish I would have known that certain family dynamics can intensely interfere with a marriage. If your spouse doesn’t act like your backbone or help you feel supported through communication and establishing healthy boundaries, your marriage will fall apart.” ― Shelley Cameron 

9. One person’s love cannot sustain a marriage. 

“One person loving extra doesn’t make up for the other person loving less.” ― Jen Cooper Atkinson

10. It’s OK to be done. 

“At some point in the last seven years of my 15-year marriage ― the seven where I read every book, went to every counselor and ran myself into the ground trying to fix it ― I wish someone had told me, ‘It’s OK to be done.’” ― Kami Sayre

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Before You Go

8 Women Whose Divorce Was A Catalyst For Change
Martha Stewart (01 of08)
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Today she's a lifestyle powerhouse but before she was a household name, she was a fashion model-turned-stockbroker married to a publishing executive named Andy Stewart.

In 1972, the couple and their daughter moved to Connecticut where Martha launched a successful gourmet catering company. But Martha's career truly took off after her 1990 divorce. With the launch of her lifestyle magazine Martha Stewart Living in 1991, her company became Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, Inc. A successful cable TV cooking show and radio show followed, proving that divorce truly can be a good thing.
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Nora Ephron(02 of08)
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Nora Ephron's 1980 divorce from fellow writer Carl Bernstein inspired Heartburn, an autobiographical novel that was adapted into a film starring Jack Nicholson and Meryl Streep six years later.

Post-divorce, the late writer went on to pen over a dozen books and screenplays, including much loved scripts for "When Harry Met Sally" and "Sleepless in Seattle." In her final book I Remember Nothing, Ephron reflected on moving on from the divorce.

“The divorce has lasted way longer than the marriage, but finally it’s over. Enough about that," she wrote. "The point is that for a long time, the fact that I was divorced was the most important thing about me. And now it’s not.”
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Cheryl Strayed (03 of08)
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In the wake of a divorce and her mother's death from lung cancer, a devastated, 26-year-old Cheryl Strayed set off on a solo, 1,000-mile hike along the Pacific Crest Trail -- a trek she'd later document in her bestselling 2012 memoir, Wild. In a revealing essay that ran in The Sun literary magazine, Strayed opened up about her divorce from first husband Marco Littig.

"We loved each other, but love was not enough. We had become the Insanely Young, Insanely Sad, Insanely Messed-Up Married Couple," she wrote.

Post-divorce, the writer also legally changed her last name from Nyland to Strayed, to symbolize the uncharted path her life had taken.
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Tina Turner(04 of08)
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Musical duo Tina and Ike Turner's notoriously messy marriage -- Ike was reportedly physically and emotionally abusive -- ended in divorce in 1978. Tina kept the surname after the split and went on to become even bigger as a solo artist. In a 1986 interview with Ebony, Turner said she hoped her story would inspire others to make big leaps in their lives.

"If you are unhappy with anything -- your mother, your father, your husband, your wife, your job, your boss, your car -- whatever is bringing you down, get rid of it," she said. "You'll find that when you're free, your true creativity, your true self comes out."
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Elizabeth Gilbert (05 of08)
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Following an emotionally shattering divorce, writer Elizabeth Gilbert embarked on a year-long journey to Italy, India and Indonesia. When she returned, she penned Eat Pray Love, a memoir chronicling the whole soul-searching trip.

“I'm choosing happiness over suffering, I know I am," Gilbert writes in the best-selling book. "I'm making space for the unknown future to fill up my life with yet-to-come surprises.”
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Wendy Davis (06 of08)
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Before she pursued politics, former Texas state senator Wendy Davis was a 21-year-old divorced mom struggling to put food on the table for her young daughter.

To make ends meet, Davis worked at a doctor’s office and as a waitress, all while attending community college. Ultimately, she was accepted to Harvard Law School. After graduation, the single mom returned to Texas where she served on the Fort Worth City Council and won a Fort Worth seat in the Texas Senate in 2008.

"I'm not an overnight sensation," Davis said during her 2014 Texas gubernatorial campaign. "I'm a Texan. And I'm a Texas success story. I am the epitome of hard work and optimism."
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Eva Longoria (07 of08)
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Eva Longoria separated from Tony Parker in November 2010 amid reports that the NBA star had been caught "sexting" with a former teammate's wife. Unshaken by the tabloids' attention, the actress continued to work on "Desperate Housewives" while devoting more time charity and social causes. (It's not for nothing that she was named philanthropist of the year by The Hollywood Reporter in 2009.)

In 2013, Longoria earned her master's degree in Chicano studies from California State University after three years of study.
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Sharon Olds(08 of08)
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In 2013, Sharon Olds won the Pulitzer Prize in Poetry for Stag's Leap, a collection the Pulitzer board described as a “book of unflinching poems on the author's divorce that examine love, sorrow, and the limits of self-knowledge."

In an interview with The Huffington Post shortly after she received the honor, Olds opened up about the raw experience of writing about being left by her husband after 32 years of marriage.

"I think not writing is a lot more painful than writing," Olds said. "Working -- though it's really a kind of playing -- to make something that can stand on its own, a small song, that's fun."
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