That seems like a lot of days, but it went by in a blur. Add in 60 days or so, and we were sitting in a bank office, signing paperwork for what seemed like all the money in the world at a brutal interest rate. I think it was 12 or 13%. The initial mortgage term was 15 years, and that was an eternity. Then again, we were callow youths at the time.
The first couple years were a little scary, but we both had steady jobs for the City, even if shift work was beginning to take a toll on me. We were fortunate our budgeting was good and we didn't have any emergencies. There wasn't much left over at the end of the month but we scraped by.
Things change. Interest rates went down. We made more money. There are lots of years I made more than that initial mortgage amount. We put some money into the house over the years on renovations and upkeep. We look at what we could sell it for now, and we're totally gobsmacked. We never dreamed house prices would go up this much. The problem with selling is that we would have to find somewhere to live.
Much as I'd like to live somewhere the air doesn't hurt my face for part of the year, those places are expensive. The house we'd like to live in might not be particularly big, but it's going to be nice, and that translates to expensive. Plus there's all the stuff in this house we'd have to deal with.
So we're likely to stay in this house till we can't take care of ourselves in it. Somewhere along the way we might not want to be cutting the lawn and shovelling snow, but there are people willing to do that. We already pay other people to do things like painting when needed. I can do it, I just don't want to.
The hard part is taking care of ourselves. It's a slippery slope. Like the lobster in the pot of water that is gradually heating up, slow changes creep up on you. It's easy to let things go, and then you're missing showers for multiple days in a row, or medications aren't being taken properly. Neither of us is on any medications now, but that will almost certainly change. Big Pharma and getting older will intersect sooner or later.
Children are often the ones that notice their parents are losing their grip, physically or mentally. Except we don't have any of those. We each have some cousins that live within a short drive, but one couple is our age, and the other is just a bit younger. We're going to die if we fall down and wait for one of them to show up. Sooner or later we are going to be shopping for a granny nanny.
It seems that we're rare creatures. Married 40 years. Both in good health. Our travel isn't hiking in the Himalayas or anything like it, but we're still able to travel, even if I hate airports now. We've got a long weekend in Pincher Creek for a photography conference, and a June trip to visit the grizzly bears. Musing about a trip to New Brunswick and PEI, or going to Haida Gwaii. The thought is to travel while we still can.
According to stats here, the average length of a marriage in Canada is 15.3 years. Just over two thirds of first marriages end within 40 years. I'm not sure why that is, but I suspect one of the big reasons is the constant barrage of messages that you deserve more. A better car. A bigger house. An important job. All the toys. A spouse who is everything, best friend, sex partner exactly as kinky as you are, hot date, rich, beautiful, or in other words, the unobtanium that powers science fiction space ships. Once you've been married a while it's easy to see the faults in the other person, and if divorce is easy, why not?
I've been trying to think of people about our age still married after 40 years. My cousin Vivian just celebrated 44 years. Linda's cousin Terry is a little past 40 years, though we aren't sure of the exact number. My friends Gord and Gail have been together about that long, but actually married much less time. There's some where I don't know the number but it could easily be in that range. Feel free to comment and tell me how long.
The stats say fewer people are getting married, and age at first marriage is increasing. I get that. It used to be that getting married was the reliable way of getting regular sex. Plus there was the whole expectation of 'getting married and settling down'. Becoming a contributing part of the community. That doesn't happen much anymore. People move to different communities to find work, or go to school. And then they grow roots there. Just like we did. Or maybe they don't, and are the X Y Z of no fixed address in the police reports. I can still remember news stories ending with "This is Jocko Thomas reporting from police headquarter."
Here's a few of the house, from way, way, WAY back, fall of 1984. With the then new best car ever.
Here's that same view from late last year.
And while you've seen these, here we are, those callow youths. You'd think I could have got a haircut for my own wedding.
And today.
Advice for staying married 40 years? You can't expect perfection. Learn to live with imperfection. Both of you. Respect your partner and support them. Take your time deciding who to marry and talk about money first. There shouldn't be any surprises when it comes to money.
The wedding isn't the important part, it's the easy part. Round up the appropriate authority and some family and friends, say I do, sign some paperwork and it's all over. Big whoop. People who spend big dollars on a wedding are stupid. Put the money towards a home. Celebrate the actual accomplishments; the anniversaries, if you have children celebrate their events.
And guys, the most important words you can say are "yes dear."