“...there is so much beauty in the trying, and in the failing, and in the trying again.”
Ada Calhoun“Dating is poetry. Marriage is a novel. There are times, maybe years, that are all exposition.”
Ada Calhoun, Wedding Toasts I'll Never Give“As married people, we dwell on a spectrum between happy and unhappy, in love and out of love, and we move back and forth on that line decade by decade, year by year, week by week, even hour by hour.”
Ada Calhoun, Wedding Toasts I'll Never Give“People who don't marry miss both the pelting hardships of marriage and its warm rewards.”
Ada Calhoun, Wedding Toasts I'll Never Give“I want to say that at various points in your marriage, may it last forever, you will look at this person and feel only rage.”
Ada Calhoun, Wedding Toasts I'll Never Give“Wherever you go, there you are. You would just have different problems. Are the problems you have now so bad that any other problems would be better?”
Ada Calhoun, Wedding Toasts I'll Never Give“(Personally, I have avoided many fights by going to bed angry and waking up to realize that I'd just been tired.)”
Ada Calhoun, Wedding Toasts I'll Never Give“To love somebody is not just a strong feeling -- it is a decision, it is a judgment, it is a promise," writes psychologist Erich Fromm. "If love were only a feeling, there would be no basis for the promise to love each other forever. A feeling comes and it may go. How can I judge that it will stay forever, when my act does not involve judgment and decision?”
Ada Calhoun, Wedding Toasts I'll Never Give“The boring parts don't last forever. In retrospect, they aren't even boring.”
Ada Calhoun, Wedding Toasts I'll Never Give“Forsaking all others means going deep with one person -- exhaustingly deep.”
Ada Calhoun, Wedding Toasts I'll Never Give“...that's part of what marriage means: sometimes hating this other person but staying together because you promised you would.”
Ada Calhoun, Wedding Toasts I'll Never Give