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  • It can seem very confusing why certain  long-term relationships survive and some  

  • don’t. It can - from afar - look as if it’s the  most cruel and alarming sort of lottery. Trying to  

  • explain love to a child or a visitor from another  planet promises to be a perplexing matter indeed:  

  • all couples on their wedding day are united  in wanting to make things work. Then,  

  • for reasons beyond anyone’s comprehension, some  of them simply seem to dissolve and others don’t.

  • To remove some of the terrifying  element of apparent chance  

  • (and encourage us to work on the  right aspects of our own couples),  

  • it may be helpful to become deliberately reductive  about the real reasons why breakups occur.

  • We need - in this regardfirst to discount certain causes  

  • that gain far too much airtime  relative to their actual likelihoods.  

  • Of course, sometimes people break up because one  party wants a younger partner. Or because they  

  • want better sex. Or because they are seeking  a more exciting companion. Or because their  

  • hobbies or political views have drifted apartOr because things have - somehow - grownstale.’

  • But let’s quickly try to reduce the role  we give to such explanatory factors:  

  • given the costs of break-ups, given the massive  investments that people make in being together,  

  • given the chaos generated if there are childrenone can assert with a high degree of confidence  

  • that almost no one ever splits  up for such familiar reasons.

  • The real reason lies elsewhere; the real reason  for break up lies in one or both spouse’s sense  

  • that they have not been heard, that something  very important to them has been disregarded,  

  • that their point of view has not, at a fundamental  level, been acknowledged and honoured. It doesn’t  

  • matter what the subject of this non-hearing  happens to be: it could be that they haven’t  

  • been heard about their views on money, or on  the way the children are being brought up,  

  • or on how their weekends should be managedor on how intimacy occurs or doesn’t occur.

  • It’s feeling unheard for our  differences that is unbearable;  

  • it’s never the presence of differences per se.

  • We don’t break up because a partner doesn’t agree  with us. We could stand not getting what we want.  

  • We could stand a partner who votes another  way than we do. Or who is no longer as young  

  • as they once were. Or who has annoying friends. Or  different tastes in holidays. What we can’t stand  

  • is someone who blocks us when we try to articulate  how troublesome we find these areas of divergence;  

  • when our unique way of looking at existence  seems a matter of basic indifference,  

  • that is too lonely and enraging to bear. It’s  better to be single than unseen; after all,  

  • the unseen are alone anyway, whatever  their ostensible relationship status.

  • There is a big difference between a partner not  doing what we want and a partner not hearing  

  • what we want. It’s entirely possible that one  would remain with someone who doesn’t share  

  • most of our interests - so long as they happen  to accept, and signal an understanding of,  

  • how much these interests matter to us. It would be  possible for us to live with someone who doesn’t  

  • want the same sort of sex as we do (or wants  no sex at all), so long as they can at points  

  • see matters from our position - and can givemodicum of empathy to our hopes and longings.  

  • We could be with someone whose needs for  affection run in a different direction,  

  • so long as they have the courage  to listen to how ours operate.  

  • We don’t need partners to agree with us on  everything; we need them to give off signs  

  • that they can accept the scale and legitimacy  of our vision. ‘I understandis the phrase that  

  • could single-handedly rescue more long-term  relationships than any number of anniversary  

  • celebrations or therapy sessions; it deserves to  known as the most romantic phrase in existence.

  • There is a lot of hope in this  thesis. If we want to stay together,  

  • we don’t need to be exceptionally beautiful  or rich. We don’t need to rely on chance.  

  • We don’t have to have brilliant sex or  a friction free alignments of interests.

  • We just need to make sure  that we are people who listen;  

  • who when the partner has something very  important they need to get across to us,  

  • can bear to take things on board, can bear to  acknowledge an opposite position, can bear to say:  

  • ‘I can see this matters a lot to youand  I will try my hardest to think about it and  

  • see what I can do about it.’ From here, it really  doesn’t matter if things radically change or not;  

  • the vital work will have been done - and  the relationship will have been assured.

  • People described asdefensivemay havethousand charms. But we should know that the most  

  • flawed open person is preferable to the  most seemingly accomplished defensive one.  

  • The person we should settle down with  isn’t the most attractive or the cleverest,  

  • it’s the one who feels no pride or compunction in  readily saying: ‘I can hear what you are saying  

  • and how much this matters a lot to you…  I get it...’ Or, ‘because I love you,  

  • this makes me curious, tell me more…’ This person  will surely one day annoy or frustrate us mightily  

  • (everyone does). Well just be highly  unlikely ever to want to break up with them.

It can seem very confusing why certain  long-term relationships survive and some  

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