4 Reasons to Marry Your Best Friend

I have been married for more than 40 years, to the only man I ever dated. So, why in the world would I be writing about relationships? After all, I’ve had only one real one. For forever. So I readily admit that I have no idea how to date, how to pick the “right” one, or how to break up. What I do know is marriage. And I know that you should marry your best friend.

I am quite aware that I am one of the fortunates. But I also know that I am one of the strugglers. One of those who decided to fight for every inch of that forty years. And I am married to someone who feels the same. It is worth that much. So since most of you have not been married this long, if at all, I decided to tell you what we did before we married that has helped to bind us together. For forever.

I thought that once I started writing there would be 10 or 20 amazingly wise things to share, some pithy dos and don’ts. I was wrong. Nope. Nothing like that came to me. What did come to me were deeper issues than I expected. Much deeper. And there are only four. Just four. But, for us, they were gigoondo (that’s bigger than huge).

We take none – not one – of them for granted. They are what make E and I inseparable (written with tears of thankfulness!).

 4 Reasons To Marry Your Best Friend

1. Friendship Fuels The Spark

I know that most relationships start with a physical attraction, a spark. That’s fine and good. We all def need that. Our spark came after we had been friends for awhile, when we started noticing that we reeeealllly liked each other. But before that we were laughing, talking, walking friends. We truly liked each other. A greeting card that I sent him (and that he kept) said ‘Isn’t it ironic, we were once platonic!’ Witty.

If you start with the spark, at some point, you have to figure out if you really like each other, too.  You need to find out if you would rather spend a rainy afternoon with him watching a movie than with anyone else on earth. Anyone.

Friendship matters.

A lot. Because friendship is what fuels the spark. When stress and age and life starts to sap that flame, it’s your friendship that keeps it all cooking. There will a be a few rainy afternoons ahead, but if you marry your best friend, there will also be sunshine in that gloom.

2. Friendships Start From Shared Values

Values are the things you really want your life to be. It isn’t politics or sports team or the way the toilet paper hangs off the roll. All those can be very important, and you should know about them, but most can change over time. (Hey, I voted for George McCarthy in 1972, and today Ronald Reagan is my hero).

Best friends know about these deep-in-the-soul things. If you marry your best friend, you are building your future on this bedrock.

You’ll also have idea of what your friend wants in life too. And that’s vital. You want your hopes to align. Because, in marriage, you can’t be shy about your non-negotiables, the things that you want in your life when you’re 90. For me it was shared faith in God, kids, and complete trust. For you it might be something different. You get to decide what these are, and the two of you get to decide if you are aligned.

I know two women who did not do this. They both wanted kids. It was a non-negotiable. But they married without that shared value. One assumed he would change his mind, the other assumed he wanted what she did without asking him. The former is divorced, remarried and has 4 kids. The latter is still married to the same man, and has three dogs that she treats like they were her kids. A compromise, of sorts.

Shared values are vital.

Without them you will have to compromise on things you may not want to compromise on. And that will always leave a bad taste.

3. Friendship Helps Shape Your Understanding

So often in marriage we expect a level of perfection that we don’t demand from our friends. The thing is, expecting perfection, or a look-alike, will only get you mired down in comparisons. Expect that you will need to work at it, work that may look completely different than your best friend’s, or your parents.

Marriage is not easy. It is not dating on steroids. It is hard. And it requires two adults being sold out to figuring out what will work. For them. Not for your parents, not for the couple on TV, or the next door neighbors. What you both expect and want YOUR marriage to be.

Accept that before you get married. It will save you major grief. The good news? When you marry your best friend, you’ve already got a leg up – because you’re coming into the marriage knowing your future spouse as a person, rather than an idealized figure.

4. Friendship Teaches You To Cherish A Person

Without the commitment to cherish there is nothing

I know this seems like a given. To love each other.  But love is more than just a list of things to do – be kind, selfless, not proud, not angry. All so beautifully listed in 1 Corinthians 13. Read at many a wedding. For good reason. But before you get married, read and absorb and decide to live the first 4 verses of that chapter:

If you do not love, you have nothing. You are nothing. You gain nothing.

Hear that loud and clear. When the feelings leave, when the bells and whistles of first love cease to chime, there is only love. Grinding, daily, tiring as marriage – and life – may be, there always needs to be that conscious effort, every day, to preserve it, to cherish each other. Remember that you married your best friend. Every day. No matter how frustrated, how annoyed. Love.

We can trace the valleys in our marriage, the times we failed each other, directly back to one of these four things. To this day, we re-commit, we discuss expectations, we revisit what we like about each other.

Building A Marriage That Lasts

Forty years is a long time. People change. Needs change as all the seasons of a life together tick by. These four remain the framework for being together, and staying together, through all of it.

Marry your best friend, and your spouse will continue to be that. Every day.

You might also be interested in: Be Friends First: Friendship Is Vital In New Relationships