SINGLE LIFE Asking The Right Questions Early inquiries about practical issues could head off a marriage that might soon turn into a diasaster. ERICA MEYER RAUZIN Special to The Jewish News I n these trying times, we attempt to enter every new experience with as much preparation as possible. We have become cautious about jumping off the ends of diving boards without checking the water levels. Kids take home ec to learn how to cook, drivers' ed to learn how to drive and sex ed to learn how not to... well, you get the idea. However, it strikes me that there is no apt prepara- tion for the biggest decision in most lifetimes: choosing a spouse. The questions we ask beforehand rarely turn out to have covered the real- ly relevant issues. Generally, couples decide to marry in the midst of ro- mance, a befogging experi- ence. The most levelheaded, most adult, couples proba- bly do pause somewhere af- ter love and before marriage to consider common con- cerns, habits, finances, reli- gious attitudes and thoughts on child raising, but it rarely goes beyond that, at least not with people under 30 marrying for the first time. Erica Meyer Rauzin is a col- umnist for The Miami Jewish Tribune. Grownups and repeaters may be more wary. And, as anyone married for any length of time can tell you, those things are just the jumping off points. Having never chosen a wife, I can't offer much guidance in that realm. But I suppose the following con- cerns have some gender neu- trality, or at least a flip side wife-choosers could consid- er. I should note, out of self- preservation, that I offer these points on husband- choosing with the comfor- ting sense that I lucked out. If I'd known to give my fi- ance this particular exam a dozen years ago, he'd have passed with flying colors. I might not have made the grade myself, but that's a different matter. Once major life traits are considered on the road to getting married, some minor traits should be tallied up as well. Just ask: • Who's going to do the chores? I don't mean, will he help with the house and the dishes and take out the trash and the recycle bins. That's serious. I mean will he take over some area of constant nuisance and keep it? For instance, will he begin by coping with the cars, and just do it forever: from in- spection stickers to license renewals to carburetors. My relationship with my car ex- tends to buying it, driving it and putting gas in it. He does the rest. (There is a quid pro quo here, in that I seem to be the permanent chairwoman of food pro- curement and preparation. But it's worth it.) • Do you share the same internal clock? Will you be forever early to his late, or late to his early? Will you rush for planes he believes will wait at the gate? Are you the first at the party? Is he the last? • Did his mom raise him with the same manners your mom raised you with? You'll be amazed how often eti- quette comes up. I phoned an acquaintance last week and her husband answered the phone like this: "Yo?" If I were her, I would have wanted to know that he was going to do that before I married him. I might have reconsidered. • Do you share the same spending habits? This is not a financial management question. Long-range in- vestments are much easier to agree upon than short- range splurges. This is a matter of setting a marital tipping policy that doesn't leave you forever sneaking back to the table to hide an- other dollar under the coffee cup. This is a question of being able to buy six boxes of cookies — just because the Girl Scout is so appealing and the chocolate mints sound so wonderful and, af- ter all, the cookies are ko- sher — without having to hold a summit meeting on the budget first. This is a question of occasionally buying one small jar of cavi- ar instead of three big jars of peanut butter. Prospective husband- choosers also need to con- sider that they are choosing a future father, not only of a cuddly infant, but of an ex- asperating four-year-old, a shy seven-year-old, and a pi- rate of a nine-year-old. What kind of father will he make? Just ask: • How does he feel about sustained heavy lifting? Can he heft a 40-pound second- grader while a 35-pound kindergartner is pulling on his elbow and a baby is gnawing on his knee? • Is he quick? Can he get two pails of dirty diapers down the stairs and out to the curb before the diaper service man starts his truck up again and disappears. • Is he squeamish? When the baby needs immediate changing and the preschooler is turning green and bilious, which kid will he take? And which one will he leave with you? And who will the third kid spill his buttermilk upon shortly thereafter? • Is he dedicated to the long run? It is one thing to clean up after a puppy, hush his midnight barking and run him to the vet for dipp- ing. It is another thing to be THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 203