Despite
all the fashionable theories of marriage, the narratives and the
feminists, the reasons to engage in marriage largely remain the
same. True, there have been role reversals and new stereotypes have
cropped up. But the biological, physiological and biochemical facts
were less amenable to modern criticisms of culture. Men are still
men and women are still women in more than one respect.
Men
and women marry for the same reasons :
The
Sexual Dyad – formed due to sexual attraction and in order to secure
a stable, consistent and permanently available source of sexual
gratification.
The
Economic Dyad – To form a functioning economic unit within which
the economic activities of the members of the dyad and of additional
entrants will be concentrated. The economic unit generates more
wealth than it consumes and the synergy between its members is likely
to lead to gains in production and in productivity relative to individual
efforts and investment.
The
Social Dyad – The members of the couple bond as a result of implicit
or explicit, direct, or indirect social pressure. This pressure
can manifest itself in numerous forms. In Judaism, a person cannot
belong to some religious vocations, unless he is married. This is
economic pressure. In most human societies, avowed bachelors are
considered to be socially deviant and abnormal. They are condemned
by society, ridiculed, shunned and isolated, effectively ex-communicated.
Partly to avoid these sanctions and partly to enjoy the warmth provided
by conformity and acceptance, couples marry. Today, a myriad of
lifestyles is on offer. The old fashioned, nuclear marriage is one
of many variants. Children are reared by single parents. Homosexual
couples abound. But in all this turbulence, a pattern is discernible
: almost 95% of the adult population gets married ultimately. They
settle into a two-member arrangement, whether formalized and sanctioned
religiously or legally – or not.
The
Companionship Dyad – Formed by adults in search of sources of long-term
and stable support, emotional warmth, empathy, care, good advice
and intimacy. The members of these couples tend to define themselves
as each other's best friends.
It
is folk wisdom to state that the first three types of dyad arrangements
suffer from instability. Sexual attraction wanes and is replaced
by sexual attrition in most cases. This could lead to the adoption
of non-conventional sexual behaviour patterns (sexual abstinence,
group sex, couple swapping, etc.) – or to recurrent marital infidelity.
Economics are not sufficient grounds for a lasting relationship,
either. In today's world, both partners are potentially financially
independent. This new found autonomy corrodes the old patriarchal-domineering-disciplinarian
pattern of relationship. It is replaced by a more balanced, business
like, version with children and the couple’s welfare and life standard
as the products. Marriages based solely on these considerations
and motivations are as easy to dismantle and as likely to unravel
as is any other business collaboration. Social pressures are a potent
maintainer of family cohesiveness and apparent stability. But –
being enforced from the outside – it resembles detention rather
than a voluntary arrangement, with the same level of happiness to
go with it. Moreover, social norms, peer pressure, social conformity
– cannot be relied upon to fulfil the roles of stabilizer and shock
absorber reliably. Norms change, peer pressure can adversely influence
the survival of the marriage (“If all my friends are divorced and
apparently content, why shouldn't I try it, too ?”).
It
is only the companionship dyad, which appears to be enduring. Friendships
deepen with time. While sex deteriorates, economic motives are reversible
or voidable, and social norms are fickle – companionship, like wine,
gets better with time. Even when planted on the most desolate land,
under the most difficult and insidious circumstances – this obdurate
seed sprouts and blossoms. “Matchmaking is done in heaven” goes
the old Jewish saying but Jewish matchmakers were not averse to
lending the divine process a hand. After closely scrutinizing the
background of both candidates – male and female – a marriage was
pronounced. In other cultures, marriages were arranged by prospective
or actual fathers without asking for the embryos or the toddlers’
consent.
The
surprising fact is that arranged marriages last much longer than
those, which are, ostensibly, the result of romantic love. Moreover:
the longer a couple cohabitates prior to the marriage, the higher
the likelihood of divorce. So, romantic love and cohabitation (“getting
to know each other better”) are negative precursors and predictors
of marital longevity, contrary to commonsense.
Companionship
grows out of friction within a formal arrangement, which is devoid
of “escape clauses”. In marriages where divorce is not an option
(due to prohibitive economic or social costs or because of legal
impossibility) – companionship will grudgingly develop and with
it contentment, if not happiness. Companionship is the offspring
of pity and empathy and shared events and fears and common suffering
and the wish to protect and to shield and habit forming. Sex is
fire – companionship is old slippers: comfortable, static, useful,
warm, secure. We get attached very quickly and very thoroughly to
that with which we are in constant touch. This is a reflex that
has to do with survival. We attach to other mothers and have our
mothers attach to us. In the absence of social interactions, we
die younger. We need to bond and to create dependency in others.
The
marital cycle is composed of euphorias and dysphorias (which are
more of the nature of panic). They are the source of our dynamism
in seeking out mates, copulating, coupling (marrying) and reproducing.
The source of these changing moods is to be found in the meaning
that we attach to our marriages. They constitute the real, irrevocable,
irreversible and serious entry into adult society. Previous rites
of passage (like the Jewish Bar Mitzvah, the Christian Communion
and more exotic rites elsewhere) prepare us only partially to the
shock of realizing that we are about to emulate our parents.
During
the first years of our lives, we tend to view our parents as omnipotent,
omniscient, and omnipresent demigods (or complete gods). Our perception
of them, of ourselves and of the world is magical. All are entangled,
constantly interacting, identity interchanging entities. Our parents
are idealized and, then, as we get disillusioned, they are internalized
to become the first and most important among the myriad of inner
voices that guide our lives. As we grow up (adolescence) we rebel
against our parents (in the final phases of identity formation)
and then learn to accept them and to resort to them in times of
need. But the primordial gods of our infancy never die, nor do they
lie dormant. They lurk in our superego, conducting an incessant
dialogue with the other structures of our personality. They constantly
criticize and analyse, make suggestions and reproach. The hiss of
these voices is the background radiation of our personal big bang.
Thus,
to get married, is to become gods, to commit sacrilege, to violate
the very existence of our mother and father, to defile the inner
sanctum of our formative years. This is a rebellion so momentous,
so all encompassing, touching upon the very foundation of our personality
– that we shudder in anticipation of the imminent and, no doubt,
horrible punishment that awaits us for being so presumptuous and
iconoclastic. This, indeed, is the first dysphoria, which accompanies
our mental preparations. Preparedness is achieved at a cost of great
consternation and the activation of a host of primitive defence
mechanisms, which lay dormant hitherto. We deny, we regress, we
repress, we project – to no avail. The battle is waged and it is
horrific to behold. Luckily, only its echoes reach our consciousness
and only in our dreams does it find a fuller (though more symbol
laden) expression.
This
self-induced panic is the result of a conflict. On the one hand,
the person knows that it is absolutely life threatening to remain
alone (both biologically and psychologically). A feeling of urgency
emerges which propels the person with a great thrust to find a mate.
On the other hand, there is this feeling of impending disaster,
that he is doing something wrong, that an act of blasphemy and sacrilege
is in the making. Getting married is the most terrifying rite of
passage. The reaction is to confine oneself to known territories.
The terra cognita of one’s neighbourhood, country, language, race,
culture, language, background, profession, social stratum, education.
The individual defines himself by belonging to these groups. They
imbue him with feelings of security and firmness. It is to them
that he applies in his quest to find a mate. There, in the confidence
of yore, he seeks to find the security of morrow. Solace can be
found in familiar grounds. The panicked person can be calmed and
restored among his peers and (mental, economic, social) brethren.
No wonder that more than 80% of the marriages take place among members
of the same social class, profession, race, creed and breed. True:
the chances to come across a mate are bigger within these groups
and associations – but the more predominant reason is the comfort
that it provides. The dysphoria is replaced by an euphoria.
This
is the euphoria, which naturally accompanies any triumph in life.
Overcoming the panic is such a triumph and not a mean one at that.
Subduing the internal tyrants (or guides, depending on the character
of the primary objects) of yesteryear qualifies the young adult
to become one himself. He cannot become a parent unless and until
he eradicates his parents. This is patricide and matricide committed
with great trepidation and pain. But the victory is rewarding all
the same and it leads to feelings of renewed vigour, new-found optimism,
sensations of omnipotence and other traces of magical thinking.
The adult is ready to court his mate, woo her, hypnotize her into
being his. He is full of the powers of life, of hormones, of energy.
He gushes forth, he resounds with the tintinnabulation's of a better
future, his eyes glint, his speech revives. In short, he is immersed
in romantic love. Being a suitor is a full time emotional job. The
chances of success are enhanced the more mentally and emotionally
available is the youth, the less burdened he is with past unresolved
conflicts. The more successfully resolved the previous, dysphoric
phase – the more vigorous the ensuing euphoric one and the bigger
the chances of mating, generation and reproduction.
But
our conflicts are never really put to eternal rest. They lie dormant
in the waiting. The next anti-climatic dysphoric phase transpires
when the attempts to secure (the consent of) a mate are met with
success. It is easier and more satisfying to dream. Fighting for
a cause is always preferable to the dreariness of materializing
it. Mundane routine is the enemy of love and of optimism. This is
where all dreams end and harsh reality intrudes with its uncompromising
demands. The assent of the future spouse forces the youth to move
forward in a path which grows irreversible and ominous as he progresses.
The emotional investment is about to acquire economic and social
dimensions. The weight is growing heavier, the commitment deeper,
the escape remoter, the end inevitable. The person feels trapped,
shackled, threatened. His newfound stability flounders. He staggers
along a way of no return leading to what looks like a dead end.
The strength of these negative emotions depends, to a very large
extent, on the parental models of the individual and on the kind
of family life that he experienced. The worse the earlier (and only)
available example – the mightier the sense of entrapment and resulting
paranoia and backlash.
But
most people overcome this stage fright and proceed to formalize
a relationship. They get married in a religious institution, or
in a civil court, or sign a contract, or make their own arrangements.
The formality resides in the institutionalization of the relationship
– not necessarily in the choice of the legal host. This decision,
this leap of faith is the corridor, which leads to the palatial
hall of post-nuptial euphoria.
This
time the euphoria is mostly a social reaction. The new status (just
married) bears a cornucopia of social rewards and incentives, some
of them enshrined in legislation. Economic benefits, social approval,
familial support, the envious reactions of the younger, the expectations
and joys of marriage (freely available sex, children, lack of parental
or societal control, newly experienced unrestrained and almost unconstrained
freedoms). All these infuse the person with another magical bout
of feelings of omnipotence. The control that he exercises over his
“lebensraum”, over his spouse, over his life is translated into
a fountain of mental forces emanating from the person’s very being.
He feels confidence, his self esteem skyrockets, he sets high goals
and seriously intends to achieve them. To him, everything is possible,
now that he is left to his own devices and is supported by his mate.
With luck and the right partner, this frame of mind can last and
be prolonged. However, as life’s disappointments accumulate, obstacles
mount, the possible sorted out from the improbable and time inexorably
passes – the feeling of well being and of willingness to take on
the world and its challenges abates. The reserves of energy and
determination dwindle. Gradually, the person slides into a dysphoric
(even anhedonic or depressed) mood which colours his entire life.
The
coloration stops at nothing. The routines of his life, their mundane
attributes, the contrast between the glamour of our dreams (however
realistically construed) and the reality of our day to day existence
– these erode his previous horizon. It tends to shrink and imprison
him in what looks like a life sentence. He feels suffocated and
in his bitterness and agony, in his fear of entrapment, he lashes
at his spouse. She represents to him this dead end situation. Had
it not been for this new responsibility – he would not have let
his life atrophy thus. Thoughts of breaking loose, of going back
to the parental nest, of revoking the arrangements agreed upon begin
to frequent the troubled mind and to intrude upon al planning. Dismantling
the existing is a frightening prospect. Again, panic sets it. Conflict
rears its ugly head. Cognitive dissonance abounds. Inner turmoil
leads to irresponsible, self-defeating and self-destructive
behaviour.
A lot of marriages end here. Those that survive do so because of
children.
In
his quest for an outlet, a solution, a release of the bottled tensions,
an exit from numbing boredom, from professional inertia and “death”
– both members of the couple (providing they still possess the minimal
wish to “save” the marriage) hit upon the same idea but from different
directions. The woman finds it an attractive and efficient way of
securing the bonding, fastening the relationship and transforming
it into a long-term commitment. Bringing a child to the world is
perceived by her to be a “double whammy” (partly because of social
and cultural conditioning during the socialization process). On
the one hand, it is in all likelihood the glue to cement the hitherto
marriage of fun or of convenience. On the other, it is the ultimate
manifestation of her femininity. Children are, therefore, brought
to the world as an insurance policy against the disintegration of
their parents’ relationships. Love and attachment follow later.
The
male reaction is more compounded. At first, the child is (at least
unconsciously) perceived to be an extension of the state of entrapment
and stagnation. The man realizes that a child will only “drag him
deeper” into the quagmire. The quicksand characteristics of his
life seem to be only amplified by this new entrant. The dysphoria
deepens and matures into full-fledged panic. It then subsides and
gives way to a sense of awe and wonder. As it increases, it becomes
all-pervasive. A psychedelic feeling of being part parent (to the
child) and part child (to his own parents) ensues. The birth of
the child and his first stages of development only serve to deepen
this odd sensation.
Child
rearing is a difficult task. It is time and energy consuming. It
is emotionally taxing. It denies the parent long obtained achievements
and long granted rights (such as privacy or intimacy or self-indulgence
or even sleep). It is a full-blown crisis and trauma with potentially
the severest consequences. The strain on the relationship of the
parents in enormous. They either completely break down – or are
revived by the common challenge and hardships. A period of collaboration
and reciprocity, of mutual support and increasing love follows.
An euphoric phase sets in. Everything else pales besides the little
miracle. The child becomes the centre of Narcissistic feelings,
of hopes and fears, the heart of an emotional tornado. So much is
vested and invested in him and, initially, the child gives so much
in return that it blots away the daily problems, tedious procedures,
failures, disappointments and aggravations. But this role of his
is temporary. The more autonomous a child becomes, the more knowledgeable,
the less innocent – the less rewarding, the more frustrating, the
sadder the scene, the more dysphoric. The children’s adolescence,
the dysfunction of a couple, the members of which grew apart, developed
separately and are estranged – set the scenery and pave the way
to the next major dysphoria: the midlife crisis.
This,
essentially, is a crisis of reckoning, of inventory taking, a disillusionment,
a realization and assimilation of one’s mortality. The person looks
back and sees how little he has achieved, how short the time left,
how unrealistic his expectations were and are, how alienated he
is from his society, his country, his culture, his closest, how
ill-equipped he is to cope with all this and how irrelevant and
unhelpful is marriage is. To him, it is all a fake, a Potemkin village,
a facade behind which rot and corruption have consumed his life
and corroded his vitality. This seems to be a last chance to recuperate,
to recover lost ground, to strike one more time. Aided by others’
youth (a young lover, students, his own children, a young partner
or consultant, a start up company) the person tries to recreate
his beginnings in a vain effort to make amends, not to commit the
same mistakes twice. This crisis is exacerbated by the ”empty nest”
syndrome (as children grow up and live the parental home). A major
topic of consensus, a catalyst of interaction between the members
of the couple thus disappears. The vacuity of the relationship,
the gaping hole formed by the termites of a thousand marital discords
is revealed. It is the couple’s chance to fill it in with empathy
and mutual support. Most fail, however. They discover that they
lost faith in their powers to rejuvenate each other. They are suffocated
by fumes of grudges, regrets and sorrows. They want out into a fresher
(younger) atmosphere. And out they go. Those who do remain, revert
to accommodation rather than to love, to co-existence rather to
experimentation, to arrangements of convenience rather to revival.
It is a sad sight to behold. As biological decay sets in, the couple
heads into the ultimate dysphoria: ageing and death.
********************************
Dr.
Sam Vaknin is the author of "Malignant
Self Love - Narcissism Revisited" and "After
the Rain - How the West Lost the East".
He is a columnist in "Central Europe Review", United Press
International (UPI) and InternetContent.net and the editor of mental
health and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory,
Suite101, Go.com and searcheurope.com.
He is the Economic Advisor to the Government of Macedonia.
His web site: http://samvak.tripod.com