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Another explanatory statistic, specifically addressing the fact that women divorce men at a dramatically higher rate than men divorce women, is that studies have found men are far more inclined to stay in a marriage which both partners find unfulfilling than women are. Statistically, most men will remained married in an unfulfilling marriage and operate on "auto-pilot" while women will not. 68% of divorced men polled state they never even saw the divorce coming. 90% of divorced women polled say they did... which makes sense as they usually initiated it.
Set clear, concise ground rules when the relationship starts getting serious. Write crap down. When you get married, write more crap down.
Spend time periodically reading this crap. The following are not optional and need to be agreed upon by both parties ahead of time:
-Financial distribution of total household income
-Joint or individual checking
-Retirement planning
-Maximum purchase price without consulting the spouse first
-A complete budget with the most accurate estimates possible (to be reviewed and modified every 6 months)
-How many children will be had
-Adopt or sire your own children
-What is or isn't acceptable behavior in the bedroom
-Frequency of said behavior in the bedroom (with a min and a max range)
-How often "date night" needs to happen
-What constitutes a "date night"
-How many hours a week must be spent together (as a bare minimum)
-Used versus new automobile
-How frequenty to replace automobiles
-How frequently to pray together
-How often to update your spouse about serious changes at work or in personal life
-How frequently updates are required
And most importantly, there needs to be a provision for monitoring all of this. The two parties must agree upon what the measure is for these various performance metrics, and then they need to change behavior based upon these metrics.
All of this crap is important, but it still doesn't negate the golden rule - do unto others as you would have them do unto you. In a marriage, each party belongs to the other. Some love and respect goes a long way, kindness, generosity, forgiveness, and charity go even farther.
I doubt there have been very many marriages that have failed when the most common stumbling blocks have been removed and mitigated (finances, children, adultery, bad sex life, boundary issues, lack of encouragement, ...). And frankly, where both parties went into the marriage with a servant mind set, the couple prayed together, and spent time in the word together, all of this other noise is just that - noise. But in case that somehow fails, then you've got a system in place to monitor for failures before they occur.