We’ve all spent plenty of time
asking friends, family, even the little voice in our head, “How will we know
when we’ve found the one?” But Ellen McCarthy, a reporter at The Washington
Post, is really the one you should ask.
She spent years covering weddings and
relationships for the paper’s On Love column—and all of the conversations about
true love that come with that kind of job.
When she accepted the wedding
reporter gig in 2009, McCarthy was 30 and, like the plotline to a good romantic
comedy, recently single. She never suspected that strangers would show her the
ropes when it came to love, commitment, and happily-ish ever after. Yet after
chatting with hundreds of couples and more than a few sexperts, she’s written
the book on romance—literally. The Real Thing is loaded with stories and
lessons on finding love, all from her sweet beat. So, we naturally asked her to
hand over the keys to bliss, whether it’s wedded, bedded, or just-for-now TLC.
1. Stop looking for someone
who’s perfect on paper.
We have this idea of, "I
have two Ph.D.s and a law degree so obviously I’m going to marry somebody whose
pedigree stands up to that." Or, "I’m of Indian descent, and I have
to marry someone else who’s Indian." Or, "I can’t date somebody who’s
not into NASCAR." We end up not looking at people as people but as
packages. None of that stuff matters in the end. Ending up with somebody who is
X inches taller than you isn’t going to make a marriage work.
2. Ignore other people’s
expectations.
People love to say, "My
son-in-law the doctor." We fall into these traps of what will make our
parents happy or what our sorority sisters or our childhood buddies expected
for us, and we get boxed in. It’s all just irrelevant. It’s damaging. If you’re
so busy fulfilling other people’s expectations of who you should be with, then
you might miss out.
3. Don’t hit the panic button.
I think that there is a lot of pressure
on people to get married—to find the one, settle down, have babies, and get on
with it already. It can become a real preoccupation—it certainly was for me.
That was what led me to freeze my eggs. I was worried about finding the right
person, but more than that, I was worried about making a bad decision because
of that pressure. I wanted to push a release valve. I think anything you can do
to make your own life as rewarding as it can be in this moment is only going to
make you happier now, and it’s only going to make you more attractive.
4. Go for genuine interest,
not game play.
People kept saying to me, when
they were talking about the early stages of dating the person they ended up
with, "I just didn’t have that anxiety I had before. I was never second-guessing
if he liked me. Or should I call or did I do the right thing?" It just
kept coming up in interview after interview. When I started seeing my husband,
I felt like there was a sincerity from which we were both approaching things. I
always knew there was going to be a next date. It was something I took
seriously because I had heard it over and over again from couples I’d talked
to. It was a sign.
5. Aim for comfortable.
When I would sit down with
couples and ask them why they ended up with this person, I can’t tell you how
often they would sort of hem and haw and dance around the subject. Eventually
they’d say, "I felt comfortable. I felt like myself. It felt
natural." And then they’d backtrack and say, "I know that sounds horrible
and like settling. I don’t mean it to sound so bad, but that’s the truth."
Then they would talk about previous relationships where they felt lightning and
they were challenged, but it came with a lot of drama.
6. Don’t force your partner to
be your everything.
We don’t live in a society where
our whole support system lives on one block anymore. I think that’s part of the
reason we’ve come to expect our spouse to fulfill all of these roles—best
friend, activity partner, co-parent, financial equal. But it’s not fair to them.
We need to learn to use our village more, and let our spouse be our spouse.
They can fulfill some of those roles, maybe even all of those roles some of the
time, but not all the time.
7. Lay out your
expectations—all of them.
Sometimes we expect that our
partner will sit across from us at breakfast every morning and hold a cheerful
conversation, when in fact your partner is not a morning person and doesn’t
want to be verbal before that first cup of coffee. Your feelings are going to
be hurt, right? Have these conversations in advance instead of assuming that
things will just go the way you want them to go. It’s like giving somebody a
how-to guide. They may not agree with it, and they may not meet all your needs
or expectations, but at least they’ll know what they are. Then, when they sit
mute across from you, poking their eggs, you don’t blow a gasket.
8. Stop thinking about sex.
Start thinking about everything else.
There have been studies that show
that you fall in love, and that initial first feeling of love lasts for a few
months. For most of us, what takes over is what scientists call companionate
love . Your marriage isn’t always going to take place on sandy beaches and
across candlelit dinners. It’s largely going to take place hanging out on the
couch, waking up in the middle of the night to take care of sick kids, and on
long car trips. Who do you want to hang out with doing those things?
9. Forget about finding The
One.
I tell this story of Betty and
Edgar, this old couple who’ve been together for 65 years. They were so in sync.
They both walked with their matching little canes and had this unbelievable
rat-a-tat rapport where they completed each other’s jokes. It was exactly what
you want for yourself after a 65-year marriage. I said to them, "People of
my generation spend a lot of time talking about The One. What do you think
about that idea?" And Betty looked like she just wanted to slap me,
frankly. She was disgusted. "What are you talking about? That’s
ridiculous. Listen, if I hadn’t married Edgar, I would’ve been married to
somebody else for 65 years. I would have made that work."
People are waiting for some
perfect person to come down like a Greek god, and it’s crazy. You find the
person with whom you can make a life and be happy. I don’t know if there is
more than one of those—I think probably there is. But the idea that there is going
to be this human embodiment of perfection, designed specifically for you, with
whom things will always be perfect is ludicrous.