
Stepping into the role of a new husband is a momentous and exciting journey.
Building a happier home is not an overnight endeavor; it’s a continuous process that requires dedication, communication, and effort.
Avoiding missteps during the transition into marriage strengthens the future of the marriage. According to Dr. Perry Jenkins, the Department Chair of Psychological and Brain Sciences at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, the routines we fall into in the first six months of marriage usually become the habits of a marriage for a lifetime.
In this post, we’ll explore essential steps for new husbands to foster a warm and joyful environment where love thrives, and happiness becomes a way of life.
1. Share the chores fairly
According to a survey shared by Dr. Whillans of Harvard, 25 percent of people who were divorced named “disagreements about housework” as the top reason for getting a divorce.
Sharing the household labor must involve a fair distribution of the mental load of home management. There’s a difference between completing a task and shouldering the responsibilities of the task. Cooking dinner takes around half an hour. Thinking about what you need from the grocery store to prepare dinner, finding the time to go, and checking what ingredients you already have takes mental effort that takes far more time than just cooking.
The University of Cambridge found that men, not women, benefited from a less traditional gender role divide in household chores. And as we shared in a previous post, research has found that wives want more sex when men do more chores.
2. Managing money requires managing emotions
Money is frequently cited as the leading cause of conflict and stress in marriage. Managing money in a marriage often requires tough conversations. When couples can manage the emotions of such conversations, they are more likely to manage money well together.
We have written hundreds of thousands of words of wisdom to help couples manage their finances. Everyone is different and faces unique challenges throughout their marriage. It is impossible to encapsulate those words into a couple of paragraphs.
However, if we could summarize the money management advice we provide into one sentence, it would be:
We focus on sharing money management strategies in marriage at the intersection of personal finance concepts, emotions, and how best to work with our spouse.
Start with the following resources if money is a particularly contentious topic in your home:
Essential Money Management Strategies for Young Married Couples: A comprehensive post that includes essential free resources newly married couples can use right away.
Money Marriage U articles: Relationships and Family: Focusing on supporting couples tackling tough money conversations
Money Marriage U: Self-paced online courses for couples designed by national financial therapy and financial planning experts
Special Series: Transition to Marriage: Winning ideas to transition to manage money and the home as a team in marriage or partnership.
3. Be a good gift-giver
Our previous post, 5 research-based gift ideas that will be a hit, explained the science behind these ideas:
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Recipients LOVE sentimental gifts
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Buy experiences
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Write meaningful notes
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Give time
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Make a list and check it twice
4. Thoughtful caregiving
Parenting is a rollercoaster ride, and all too often, women are lead caregivers, representing nearly half of the American workforce. This can be over 20 hours of caregiving per week.
According to the Wilson Center, 20% of all lead caregivers suffer from depression, twice the national average. Estimates of lost lifetime earnings from leaving the workforce to be a caregiver range from $275,000 – $350,000, depending on the study and gender.
5. Plan and take vacations
Study after study tells us that we are happier when we spend more on experiences with our friends and spouses than on possessions. Vacations lead to happier marriages, facilitating quality time, communication, and shared experiences, enhancing the relationship’s happiness and satisfaction.
Yet employees are not fully utilizing their PTO, even though they are more productive over the year when they do.
So take your PTO and know that vacations are money well spent and worth saving for.
With that said, planning a vacation takes time and effort. Shoulder this responsibility for your spouse for a happier home. And if you have the means, consider the all-inclusive vacation hack.
As we wrote about in a previous post, research conducted by Duke professor Dan Ariely found that “when you pay upfront, you start the vacation, you’ve paid for the whole thing, and now you don’t think about money, and that’s a great way to experience it.” This also reduces the time and aggravation of planning the details of a vacation.
An all-inclusive vacation might be unaffordable for you right now. There are plenty of other options if money is tight. According to Dr. Whillans of Harvard, what is most important about quality time with your partner is feeling positive in the moment and supported by your partner.
6. Be active together
Participate in activities that make you and your spouse feel supported and in the moment. These activities can be free or can occur over short periods. What matters most is that you and your spouse feel a complete immersion and focus in an activity, where you experience a sense of timelessness, deep engagement, and joy.
Take date nights with friends
7. Schedule time for yourselves and friends
The report went on to share that while friendships are typically associated with moments of relief, families can also be the root of more serious, monotonous, or negative interactions.
What is the lesson? Encourage your spouse to spend time with friends, and you should do the same. And it could take a bit more than encouragement. Make it a point to tackle the tasks that could deter your spouse from going out. Your spouse should not be unsure about whether it is okay to take a bit of time away from you or your home.
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Previously Published on Modern Husbands and is republished on Medium.
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