Relationship

Not a Walk in the Park

For every marriage on the rocks, there are channels to swim
through and end up happy on the other side.

By zara maqbool | November 2020

walk in park

It is said somewhere that a marriage is like a walk in the park, the Jurassic Park, that is. Almost every other day various memes are exchanged, implicitly expressing how tough a marriage is.

Many therapists find that when they meet a couple in an initial session, the dynamics between the man and woman are quite obvious. Both give their own version of what went wrong, mostly indulging in demonic dialogue, sitting with pain and anger in their respective corners, blaming each other for being in a therapist’s office. They both seem to have already withdrawn from the relationship. But they seem to be making an effort to come together to repair the cracks as children are involved, or sometimes due to their own desire to rekindle what was extinguished.

The divorce rate in Pakistan is higher now compared to the 70s, 80s and 90s. Many say this is because women were more compromising back then. Many blame the feminist movement on the deterioration of the sacred institution of marriage. Today the percentage of educated women is far more than what it was before. Women are financially more independent with more supportive families who are willing to listen and support them, unlike in the earlier decades when the statement to the girl that ‘ab tumhari mayyat hi wapas aaye gi’ was actually a staunch belief. Today, women to some extent, may be less compromising than before but the question is what were they expected to compromise on?

Another factor was the joint family system that intervened and prevented the couple from taking any drastic action and this saved the marriage. What is important here to highlight is that though marriages then did not dissolve as much as they do now but marital problems were the same.

People are also more aware today and are more involved in their personal growth; they listen to Ted Talks, read psychology articles or seek therapy. Perhaps a few on the journey of self-growth forget to take their partner along or personal growth endeavours clashe with the growth of the marriage.

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zara maqbool

The writer is psychotherapist and a free-lance contributor.
She can be reached at zaramaqbool@yahoo.com

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