Is it possible to go from an abusive household with no role modeling for healthy relationship skills and have a successful marriage?
I can’t answer for anyone else. I can only say, for us, it was not a given, no matter how much we loved each other.
Is it even relevant?
What do you say about the issues in your early years of marriage, when you are writing about them from 40+ years out? From having navigated struggles and joys, successes, near-death episodes, and all that life can throw at you? When I think of who we were back then compared to now, we were almost more like strangers.
So does it even feel relevant to look back?
Yes…
Yes…because writing this memoir is partly about putting all the broken pieces of my life’s picture back together and seeing what it can teach me in the present moment. And at least for me, those lessons come through clearest when I view them through the lens of that shared past.
Yes…because there is never a place you reach where you can say “we got it knocked now and we’re all set. We know it all.” Being humans, we are always changing, and hopefully, learning. Even now, this many years out, each day is always a journey of mindful teamwork – sometimes easy because of the work from 40+ years of previous “negotiations. But sometimes just as strenuous as the beginning, because we keep changing as we enter different phases of life. And those changes mean we still need to stop, take stock, and sometimes shift or renegotiate things. You don’t raise a plant and then say, “Enough, I don’t need to tend it anymore.” If something is “alive,” you always need to do some tending, or it will die. And if anything is a living, breathing thing, it is a relationship. I may kill plants, but I don’t want to kill my marriage.
Yes…because all of that means you never stop paying attention to the person you love and walk through life with, and noticing growth and change. It is that very past knowledge that lets you see anything new emerging. And it is always possible for something new, wonderful, and interesting to be found in your beloved, through attention and curiosity.
Yes…because sometimes there are issues, struggles, or discords that have been there for a lifetime, and something in the current moment finally explains it all. That discovery brings depth and peace to that lifelong struggle, and an appreciation for the willingness of both parties to sustain through it all.
Yes…because those early struggles set the foundation for how and why we are still together. The tools used to build that foundation are just as useful for continued “maintenance.”
Yes…because there was a lot that was GOOD, and those things, properly fed and nurtured, saw us through a lot of ills. It is equally important to go back and see all the good and celebrate it.
And yes…because it is the “accumulated history” that urges you to continue, and gives the perspective of that whole past as you consider what to do with the future.
For each of these, you go back to go forward.
So what was going on?
Given the number of years, memories, and events we have walked through, it almost seemed overwhelming to figure out where to start or how to capture the essence. So I did what I always do – Mindmap it. Just empty out every idea that comes to mind and then look for patterns and truths.
My first pass yielded this map, with positives on one end, negatives on the other, and “differences between us” in the middle. And I will note that differences aren’t necessarily bad or good. They can be both, depending on the situation.

Then I had an idea for another way to look at it all. What was in our marriage, good and bad, and what was battering us from outside?

THIS made it so much clearer for me. I will come back to the center part, the “bonded core,” in another entry. But first, this let me see at a glance just how many challenges and issues were arrayed against us. And those were over and above the usual ones of jobs, money, parenthood, no help or support, and just plain survival.
We had internal issues that were causing friction, but with no role modeling from our families of origin, with no tools for how to handle problems, no idea what was wrong, and no idea that there even WERE tools to help, the stress intensified.
Then there were our respective families and what they left us with: Scars of abuse; PTSD, even though I had no idea what that was or that it was operating in me; wounds like emotional abandonment, lack of mothering for both of us, triggers from being manipulated, and low self-esteem. And of course, the biggies: no communication skills. His household was silent and manipulative. Mine was violent, loud, and manipulative. And instilled in both of us, operating in stealth, were the automatic “house rules,” those internalized, unspoken, unshared, automatic “rules of engagement.” Those were the inner beliefs and methods we were each taught in our homes that affected how we reacted to things, even though we didn’t realize it.
With all of that aligned AGAINST us, I am still absolutely amazed we made it.
In fact, re-reading my journal entry from September 5, 1995, we almost didn’t.
And while it was an “internal” issue – sex – that nearly broke us, its roots were thickly embedded in deep scar material from that “external” abusive past…