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Pillemer - 30 lessons for loving: advice from the wisest Americans on love, relationships, and marriage

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Pillemer 30 lessons for loving: advice from the wisest Americans on love, relationships, and marriage
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Based on the most detailed survey of longmarried people ever conducted, 30 Lessons for Loving shows the way to lifelong, fulfilling relationships. The author, an internationally renowned gerontologist at Cornell University, offers sage advice from the oldest and wisest Americans on everything from finding a partner, to deciding to commit, to growing old together. Along the way, the book answers questions like these: How do you know if the person you love is the right one? What are the secrets for improving communication and reducing conflict? What gets you through the major stresses of marriage, such as child-rearing, work, money issues, and inlaws? From interviews with 700 elders, 30 Lessons for Loving offers unique wisdom that will enrich anyones relationship life, from people searching for the right partner to those working to keep the spark alive after decades together.

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Also by Karl Pillemer 30 Lessons for Living HUDSON STREET PRESS Published - photo 1

Also by Karl Pillemer

30 Lessons for Living

30 lessons for loving advice from the wisest Americans on love relationships and marriage - image 2

HUDSON STREET PRESS

Published by the Penguin Group

Penguin Group (USA) LLC

375 Hudson Street

New York, New York 10014

30 lessons for loving advice from the wisest Americans on love relationships and marriage - image 3

USA | Canada | UK | Ireland | Australia | New Zealand | India | South Africa | China

penguin.com

A Penguin Random House Company

First published by Hudson Street Press, a member of Penguin Group (USA) LLC, 2015

Copyright 2015 by Karl Pillemer

Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.

REGISTERED TRADEMARKMARCA REGISTRADA LIBRARY OF CONGRESS - photo 4 REGISTERED TRADEMARKMARCA REGISTRADA

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA

Pillemer, Karl A.

30 lessons for loving : advice from the wisest Americans on love, relationships, and marriage / Karl Pillemer.

pages cm

ISBN 978-0-698-16130-6

1. MarriageUnited States. 2. LoveUnited States. 3. Interpersonal relationsUnited States. I. Title. II. Title: Thirty lessons for loving.

HQ536.P55 2015

306.810973dc23

2014021221

Version_1

To Clare

May there always be a new path to explore

C ONTENTS
A N OTE ON N AMES

A ll names in this book are pseudonyms, created by a random name generator. Any resemblance to those of actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental. Indeed, finding your name in this book is the one way to be certain that you are not in it.

I NTRODUCTION

L ove and marriage in contemporary society create a world of questions. How do I know if the person I love is the right one for me? How can my partner and I communicate more effectively? How should we deal with conflicts that inevitably arise? What will get us through the predictable stresses of marriage, such as child-rearing, work problems, money issues, and in-laws? How do we keep our marriage vibrant and interesting? And the most fundamental question of all: How can two very different individuals come together and create a relationship that lasts a lifetime?

I wrote this book to provide answers to questions like these. But first I had to answer a question myself.

Another marriage advice book? When I set out on this projectwhich lasted years and involved interviews with hundreds of peoplethats the question some of my friends and academic colleagues asked me. Do we really need another how-to volume for creating a happy marriage? Every bookstore has a whole section devoted to this topic. So, they asked, what can you hope to add to the overflowing shelves of marriage advice?

Theres a compelling answer to that questionand it came from readers like you. Several years ago, I published a book called 30 Lessons for Living: Tried and True Advice from the Wisest Americans. For that book, I surveyed over twelve hundred older people, asking them some of lifes biggest questions: What are the most important lessons you have learned over the course of your life? What are the values and principles you would like to pass on to future generations? How can young people get to the end of life without regrets? I also asked them for their practical advice on specific topics: work, child-rearing, agingand marriage.

It was the last topic that really captured readers attention. Many people told me that after reading the marriage advice, they bought the book for friends and family membersjust for that one chapter. I heard that the elders lessons about love and marriage helped single people who were looking for love, as well as those in committed relationships who were trying to make them last a lifetime. The book became a wedding gift. Some couples were even inspired to create a Leave Your Lessons station at the wedding reception, where guests could record their advice for the newlyweds.

Over and over, readers of 30 Lessons for Living told me, That chapter wasnt enoughwhy dont you write a whole book about the elders advice for love, relationships, and marriage? I will be forever grateful for their persistence because it led me on a fascinating new journey. You hold in your hand the product of my quest: a guidebook from the wisest Americans on finding the right partner, establishing the groundwork for a lasting relationship, and keeping the spark alive for a lifetime.

In contemporary society, the search for love and lasting relationships has become complex and difficult. Shifting norms about marriage and the rise of social media have made finding a mate and deciding to commit more confusing. In our desire for relationship guidance, we turn to bookstores and go online. Ive done so myself and come away disappointed. The available advice often comes in the form of pop psychology or books by celebrities on what, in their opinion, made their own glamorous marriages work so well.

The more I pored over these volumes, the more I felt that something was missing: the voice of lived experience. I wondered: Could we learn from people who have navigated the turbulent waters of marriage and reached the end of the voyage? Why not go to the sourcethe oldest Americans who have vast experience of love and committed relationships? I believed it was possible to collect that wisdom systematically and translate it into practical advice for people trying to get and stay happily married in an uncertain and difficult world.

When asked about what qualifies me to write a marriage advice book, my half-joking response has become: I may not know that much about marriage myselfbut I know a whole lot of very wise people who do. For this book, I conducted the largest in-depth interview study ever done of people in very long marriageshundreds of individuals who have been in one relationship for thirty, forty, fifty yearsand more. I wasnt interested in just a handful of stories; instead, I wanted to take advantage of the wisdom of crowds, collecting the love and relationship advice of a large and varied cross section of long-married elders.

But I didnt stop there. Because one problem Ive noticed about marriage advice books is that they tend to focus either on the very good or the very badbut not both. Some authors have selected successful long-married couples and hypothesized what makes them so happy. Other writers (typically marital counselors) base their books on the problems brought to them by troubled couples. But to offer the best possible guidance, whats needed is the full range of marriage experience, from the blissful partners who have been happy for a half century to someone who has wound up alone and unsatisfied after serial marriages and divorces.

To capture this range of experience, I created the Marriage Advice Project. Using social science research methods, I amassed a group of over seven hundred older Americans who were interviewed in-depth. (The methods are detailed in the appendix to this book.) One sample consisted of individuals who were currently in long marriages. Because many very old people are widowed, I also included a sample of elders who were once in long marriages but whose spouse had died. The average length of the marriages was forty-three years; the longest marriage was a one-hundred-year-old woman married to her ninety-eight-year-old husband for seventy-six years. I tapped these two groups of people to get answers to the questions, How did you do it? What helped you make the promise until death do us part a reality?

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