
When you enter your 30s, marriage looks different from the fairy tales you watched growing up. At this point, you’ve had relationships and a fair share of heartbreaks. You learned some valuable lessons along the way. You think you can handle it all now, but marriage surprises you. Staying in love is different from falling in love. And that’s exactly why you should learn these hard truths about your relationships. This prepares you for the reality ahead. Take a look.

Imagine love as the foundation, but daily habits are the pillars that keep marriage afloat. When you marry a person, you also invite their habits into your life. For instance, the person who leaves dishes in the sink, stays up late scrolling, or never makes the bed will affect you. While good habits improve your life, bad ones create stress and encourage you to succumb to it. So before you say ‘I do’, ask yourself: can I live with this person?

Most couples believe physical intimacy can bridge emotional gaps. That’s the biggest lie they are telling themselves. Regardless of how active your sexual life is, it won’t solve emotional distance. For that, you need honest conversations. Talk to your partner about your feelings, fears, and what’s really bothering you. Talk first, touch later.

Here’s the hard truth no one told you about marriage. In this relationship, you can win every argument and still lose! Winning an argument with your partner will only make you lose your relationship. Naturally, you may want to prove your point, to be right, to win, but these impulses may destroy the relationship rather than save it. Instead, move ahead with kindness. Know that your partner is not your opponent. You are in this together.

When you enter your 30s, the attraction starts to fade. And it is absolutely natural. Not having butterflies in your stomach after the infatuation period is normal. Something more important than attraction is respect. That is the foundation of a healthy relationship. Mutual respect is what binds you. Before you choose your partner, ask yourself: Do they respect you? And what about you? As you move ahead, life will throw you a curveball, things may get hard, bodies change, and real challenges will test your marriage. But what pushes you forward is respect.

Here’s something no one told you about marriages. Money fights can end your marriage more than affairs. Financial stress is a silent killer. When two people with different money management habits come together, problems will appear. The best bet is money talk. Have honest conversations and a shared plan. Create a budget together, and agree on major purchases. Similarly, financial transparency is crucial.

Most couples make a common mistake. They invest all their energy and resources into parenting. They almost forget about themselves and their partners. Sure, children are a part of you. But, your partner is more important. Kids will grow up and leave. Your partner is the one who will be by your side through thick and thin, forever (at least that’s the idea and hope). So, protect your marriage. Invest time in your partner. In fact, your children actually benefit from seeing parents who prioritize their relationship.

Problems in marriage do not vanish into thin air. So hoping that they resolve themselves is a pipedream. Unresolved conflicts will only worsen things. So, if your marriage is going through a tough phase, address it. Take action. Talk to your partner. If therapy helps, go for it. Start dating your partner. Ignoring issues will only worsen them. Facing them gives you a fighting chance.