1, 7" r " T ♦ e Last tar /7. 4 • • ..r" •-t.= t'' _ e - -0 e o Divorce Jr - •-r-t 2M'744 .. -p- . (fat t ,p/4!' er4Li--; I ..01) 11 44 fir - ,5‘ 1 C C-1 1 . 7 1 , V .tto ■ ' 4 4-t, _R.. „ r et • v.. eleori 9• - 4 4 44.,e 0 ,-e 4 4_4_ * F-'1" t•-4" c4--,:t Z d 4, f e - IC-C. By Julie Edgar' 4*— , _ • ' t r f Four couples share their stories of how difficult — and rewarding --- commitment can be. • t • t ."*' • 'It t" /1. - - e' 4 -t .1( e"../f-t cce' t - 4. 4- i t t-4 ttfffi 1: ..Q te• e.. /14-1 A . • ‘-t. 4`. ltr" o. t • t--,1 t' X 4. • ,4"- 4 .• 1_4 . C 114 to r t lf ` . et./ , 1:1P't e (c • "*A4 • - 7.1 - - T F r C >,•-•• t-1 he heart-shaped boxes of Whitman Samplers cluttering the aisles at drug- stores around town this month remind us that we are optimistic about percent for ever first marriages. Day 071Valentine's that exceeds 40 billion rate $14 mates that divorce spent an estimated love, despite a . The NRF e sti rise in rst year-to-year Last year, A771eriCaThS gifts, according to the National Retail Federbettheft gure will be exceeded this year, which would fi While, as Jews, we may not "celebrate" Valentine's Day, that won't stop many of spending in three years. us from buying our sweethearts flowers, chocolates and other love-related bric-a- }- 2.I I .4' # k - < Az_ r --- 4C 'Et•f-c• ,44 t-c - t •-• , ) "f _4 1'24 e We pro- there true love, the kind that endures through thick and thin, sickness to investigate. brae. Red Thread decided greed to shared with So, is and health, and for better or worse? different marriage, whoa of pressures that tear attuned stages to the of other in the face in filed four couples, each stay to us how they manage there is none. Yet, each couple shares something in so many couples apart. out common: most part, their spouse's fam- together. The big They secret: really Turns like their spouses and, for the staying 4_ •, ;yin, re, JAI. i t ,r r' tt 4 p pr.< _tt" • At' e s4 4 ,4 ily. Maybe more important, they are committed to 19. it r tt,2.1* tr Aze-gis711 4-4 (4. t e T Jr , COUPLE: HARRIET AND KEN RICH COUPLE: LINDSEY AND MARTY MADDIN Residence: Farmington Hills Residence: Huntington Woods Years married: 51 Years married: 3y2 Children: Michael, 50; Jill, 49; and Amy, 47; four grandchildren Children: Brody, 16 months Back story: Met at a Temple Beth El dance. He was given her phone number by a co-worker at the pharmacy where he worked, on Dexter Avenue in Detroit. The paper with her number was folded into a small square and tucked neatly in his pocket. He hadn't mustered up the nerve to call her before he set off for that evening As it turned out, he didn't need to; she gave him her phone number that night — and they got engaged five months later. The couple married in 1959. "She was the first girl I ever met that I felt so free in conversation; all I had to do was listen. I enjoyed her company from the very first time I met her," says Ken, 80. When she knew she loved him: While they were driving to the Fisher Theatre on one of their first dates, Ken pulled his car over to the side of the road to help two young women change a flat tire. Another time, he pulled over to help an older woman cross the street. Personalities: She talks; he listens. "I read a book once about happy marriages that said the best marriages are between the oldest and the youngest (children). He's the youngest, and I'm the oldest. When you're the oldest, you're used to bossing people around. If I had married somebody with my personality, it never would have lasted," says Harriet, 77. Favorite place: The Riches pack up sandwiches and their Rummikub game and head to the Franklin green. Bumps in the road: Ken was a pharmacist who worked long hours, which meant Harriet was alone with three young children. "But, I loved having kids. I loved being a mother," Harriet says. Ken can't recall any strife in the marriage, but he shudders when he thinks about her long hospital stay in 1998. She was seriously ill, and he couldn't do anything for her but visit every day. Strategies for making the marriage work: "Don't fight over trivial things; it's not worth it," Ken says. Says Harriet: "If anybody wants a marriage as happy as mine, they should marry Ken." Back story: Lindsey's mother, Jo Rosen, was visiting her daughter in Chicago in 2003. While there, Rosen went to have a pair of pants altered and overheard a woman in the shop talking about having three single sons. She asked if any of them lived in Chicago and gave the woman Lindsey's phone number. A month or so later, Lindsey was out with friends and, by hap- penstance, met a guy named "Marty," who had just moved to Chicago after graduating from law school. A few weeks later, Marty called "Lindsey," whose phone number his mother had given him; she asked if she could call him back — and dialed a friend to see if "Marty Maddin" was the guy they met at the Grotto a few weeks prior. Marty, in the meantime, thought Lindsey was blowing him off. She finally called him back, and the two pieced it together; another great "how we met" story was born. Marty later found a photograph from his summer as a teen service staffer at Camp Tamarack. Standing next to him in the picture — a 13-year-old Lindsey Rosen. "We call it freaky; our parents call it beshert," says Marty, 34. They wed in July 2007. Personalities: "We're both social and talkative," says Marty. "We're both very re- spectful on many levels. We recognize that we're a team. A lot of stuff needs to get done so we do whatever it takes." Lindsey, 30, calls Marty a very good listener, a person of great integrity, while he calls her incredibly supportive, caring and tuned in to other people's needs. Stressors: When Marty quit practicing law to become a business coach, Lindsey says, it was tough explaining the move to family and friends, but she knew he'd be successful. In his first job as a coach, Marty spent part of each month in Grand Rap- ids. Lindsey, a senior solutions consultant at ePrize, didn't like the frequent separa- tions and half-joked about getting another husband on the east side of the state. Strategies for making the marriage work: Going out for dinner as a couple is es- sential. "We believe you're either growing together or growing apart so we're invested in doing fun things together," says Marty. "As the saying goes, 'Happy parents, happy kids.' Favorite place: The Maddins like going to the Royal Oak Farmers Market, cooking together and hanging out with friends. Advice for other married couples: "It sounds generic, but communication is very important," Lindsey says. "You can't change someone so it's about learning to live with the things that bug you." Marty says couples need to keep investing in each other and to respect that the other is working just as hard as the other. O 24 February 2011 I 4. RED 11111LIID www.redthreadmagazine.com