Let’s Talk About Marriage

Let’s Talk About Marriage

I started thinking about writing this commentary on marriage after yet another phone conversation with a male friend who is suffering through a devastating divorce and the destruction of his family. The pattern is all too familiar. Good guy, hard worker, successful businessman, devoted husband, and father. His first wife died tragically, leaving him with two young sons. He was in his early forties, lonely, struggling to manage his home and businesses. He admitted to remarrying too soon.

He shared that their marriage always seemed to struggle, but he felt it would improve if he worked hard enough at the union. Men, by nature, are fixers. They bought a big home, an expensive RV, and a nice boat. He admits that he indulged her with lifestyle and gifts in that process, seeking her happiness. They had two more sons, and she became more difficult and demanding after that. She ran up the credit cards, started hanging out with feminist, divorced friends. She saw his success in business and, despite having no experience, soon became determined to own a business of her own. He tried to help and advise her, but she informed him that this was HER business and she would make all of the decisions. He gave her hundreds of thousands of dollars that she lost through foolishness. By that time, her friends convinced her that she needed to be divorced so she could join them on their girl trips to resorts that cater to women in that lifestyle. They recommended an infamous divorce attorney; you can imagine the details from there.

Another family destroyed, another angry, unhappy woman, a devastated husband who lost his identity as a family man. I wish I could tell you that this was an unusual story, but sadly, it is all too common.

If a man came to me for advice on the matter, I would counsel him not to get married, at least not in the term's common use. I will describe what I believe to be a solution later, because society only survives based on the success of its family units. Unfortunately, we’re operating from a very poor model.

To most people, a marriage is an institution that involves a member of the clergy or a magistrate, a man and a woman, and a marriage license issued by the government. I believe that is a prescription for disaster because, along with that, comes mutual independence and the ability to divorce. Most people would be surprised to find that women initiate 70% of divorces against their husbands. That statistic rises to 90% if the woman has a college education.

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1 Comment on “Let’s Talk About Marriage

  1. Wow, this article really hits home. I’ve seen so many good men—hardworking, loyal guys—get absolutely wrecked by divorce. Like your friend, they tried to do everything “right,” but it didn’t matter in the end. The system’s stacked against them, and the stats don’t lie: most divorces are filed by women, especially educated ones. That’s not misogyny—it’s just the uncomfortable truth.

    I never really thought about how much marriage has changed until reading this. Back then, it wasn’t about lovey-dovey feelings but survival, legacy, and stability. Now? It’s a legal gamble where men lose half their stuff and often their kids. And you’re right—monogamy wasn’t even the norm for most of history. The whole “soulmate” idea? Pretty modern… and pretty flawed.

    Your solution—contract-based unions, clear expectations, and yeah, even polygyny—might sound extreme, but let’s be honest: what we’re doing now *isn’t working*. Families are crumbling, kids grow up without fathers, and everyone’s miserable. Maybe we don’t have to go full biblical patriarchy, but we’ve gotta admit modern marriage is broken.

    Anyway, brutal but necessary read. Makes me think twice before ever signing a marriage license.