For Better or For Worse: Marriage & Finances // Beyond the Big Day

Today is a continuation of the blog series "Beyond the Big Day." These blogs are intended to help engaged couples, newlyweds, and anyone who is open to wisdom from others who have been married and learned a few things from it! Today you'll hear from my sweet husband, who finally agreed to write a blog for me :)

Going from a completely independent young woman straight out of grad school with one set of bills into a co-dependent marriage with two people and two hefty sets of bills and debt is not exactly the easiest transition.

Let's add your husband switching careers and going back to school full-time and your becoming the main income with your small business... and you've got the perfect storm for some marital stress, tension, and a lot of irrational pressure points.

I didn't exactly grow up with abundance; the basics were always provided for, but things were always tight. I started working at age 13 as a babysitter and as soon as I could get hired at the local art store at age 16, I was there with the red apron and name tag. I saw money and divorce tear apart my families twice, so it's always been a trigger point of anxiety and stress for me. 

My husband Rusty's upbringing was a bit different as he grew up as an only child and came from a different economic philosophy. He has always been a hard worker since he was legally able to work, but if he ever asked for anything, he most always was given.

Getting married was the easy part. It was the actual day-to-day marriage of literally two becoming one financially that will test all limits. Because we both came from broken families, we had our eyes wide open and knew from the beginning we needed to understand and work together to blend our financial philosophies, but it was some rocky ground as we had to create a system that worked for us.

Understand each other's financial philosophies. I'm a saver, and my husband is a spender. This has been the hardest part of our marriage, but being a spender isn't a bad thing. It just means boundaries and systems have to be set.

Knowing your trigger points. Before getting married, I was that girl who would literally panic over pennies missing in the checkbook. I would meticulously balance and tally expenses and deposits every day. There came a point when it became an unhealthy routine as it would trigger anxiety. And a routine that could not be allowed to come into my marriage. I went cold turkey and stopped balancing the actual checkbook and relied more on an unconventional system of paying bills. I don't recommend that for everyone, but it was something I had to do to honor my new marriage. Money has been and will always be my trigger point for anxiety, and Rusty and I know this and navigate this accordingly.

Develop a system with delegation (and allow for system evolution). Ever since we got married, I've been the bill keeper and household manager. We are in our sixth year of marriage, and we finally just changed that system. My husband now is in charge of bill management because we realized I was letting this become a huge burden and unhealthy routine again. Being constantly reminded about numbers, what's coming and going, and deadlines even after all these years just wasn't strengthening our marriage. We re-delegated and working together a lot better now.

Have separate bank accounts. In addition to our joint checking account that is strictly for bills and our multiple joint savings accounts for various investments, we each have our own checking and savings accounts. This allows for the practical way of allocating funds but also the more fun ways of being able to save and purchase each other gifts without spoiling the surprise. Double bonus: knowing it'll never affect your joint bill paying.

Add each other onto your respective bills and bank accounts. There should always be financial transparency. Always. You are still two very individual people (particularly according to the IRS) who have decided to join lives. Not just needing access when you least expect it, it's the trust factor of being open and honest about finances.

Look to the future; get life insurance. No one wants to think about it, but the first year of our marriage, we got life insurance for each of us. I unfortunately brought a lot of student loan debt into our marriage. If something were to happen to me, my husband needs to be able to take care of things while he's grieving. It's just the practical elephant in the room that has to be talked about, especially if you decide to have children.

Consider hiring a financial advisor. Neither of us come from financial savvy backgrounds. I would over-save if I could, and Rusty would over-spend if he could. Having an unbiased professional tell you exactly what you need to do to get to x-y-z goals is pinnacle. Whether that goal is to buy a house, to get down your debt, or to invest in your future, knowing the exact formula of what has to happen with professional accountability can relieve a lot of marital stress. It turns your joint finances from a personal point of contention into a fair, practical action plan.

Sadly, decades upon decades, money is always in the top 3 of why couples divorce (or the root of a broken relationship). But realistically, I totally get it. It's the worst thing to argue about, it always causes friction, and it can destroy your bond as a family unit. Marriage isn't for the weak.

But you can survive and you can thrive. Even if you're eating rice and beans for weeks on end (been there, done that), financial disturbance should never be allowed to seep into your marriage. Give your joint finances their boundaries for better and for worse, and your partnership in love and money is sure to be a rock solid one.

Click here to read more from the Beyond the Big Day series.

Chelsea Lavere from Bit of Ivory Photography and Tidewater and Tulle

Considered an enthusiastic entrepreneur in the wedding industry, Chelsea LaVere is the lead wedding photographer for Bit of Ivory Photography, the Creative Director behind Orchestrated Stylized Shoots, and wedding blog founder and editor of Tidewater and Tulle, a southeastern Virginia online publication showcasing local wedding inspiration. Since 2009, she has proudly built her successful wedding-anchored businesses from the ground up, thanks to her respective teams of equally amazing people and some good old-fashioned elbow grease over the years.

With experience in knowing the “start to finish” of a wedding and stylized shoot, Chelsea is passionate about all sides of the industry and loves to share her expertise in helping her fellow wedding pros succeed and be stronger and happier small business owners.

When she has a spare moment away from the office, she loves to travel, search out the best gluten-free food at new restaurants, and relax at home with her husband Rusty and their three cats: Pickles Barrington, Marmalade O’Hoolihan, and Anchovy Evans.

Our Desire for Fulfillment // Beyond the Big Day

Our Desire for Fulfillment // Beyond the Big Day

Today is a continuation of the blog series "Beyond the Big Day." These blogs are intended to help engaged couples, newlyweds, and anyone who is open to wisdom from others who have been married and learned a few things from it! Today you'll hear from my sweet husband, who finally agreed to write a blog for me :)

Marriage.  Ahh, what a wonderful thing.  We savor each other's presence on the wedding day, looking into each other's eyes as we make our vows 'before God and man' and dreaming of our futures together.

Romanticized and found wanting, the marriage we dreamed of crashes and leaves us utterly flabbergasted.  Not for all, but for many married couples divorce will be the final kiss goodbye.  What about the commitment?  What about the vows we took?  'To have and to hold from this day forward 'til death do us part' is quickly forgotten in the midst of career visions, children, moving, and family ties...

Staying Together Requires Humility // Beyond the Big Day

Today is a continuation of the blog series "Beyond the Big Day." These blogs are intended to help engaged couples, newlyweds, and anyone who is open to wisdom from others who have been married and learned a few things from it! Today you'll hear from my mom and her 30+ years of marriage experience. I'm so grateful she was willing to share!

Thirty-two years ago, Gary asked me to marry him, and I said, “Yes!”  Seven months later we walked down the aisle and committed our lives to one another before God and friends and family.  I remember our pre-marriage counselling with a couple we deeply respected.  As they outlined typical problem areas in marriage, I thought to myself, “Oh, those will never be issues for us.  We agree on everything!”

I can tell you that it was not total agreement that brought us through many years of marriage.  In fact, it was surprising to me how we could agree on so much, yet interpret the same set of circumstances so differently.  While our families shared the same bedrock values, we learned to approach joys and problems in nearly opposite ways.  Depending on the situation, this could be either extremely stressful or totally hilarious!

I discovered that to stay together “for better, for worse; for richer, for poorer; in sickness and health; ‘til death do us part” calls for real humility.  It calls for the daily practice of putting another above self, of forgiving small offenses, of realizing the need to remove the log from my own eye before demanding the speck be removed from the other’s.  I fall so far short in this daily discipline of putting my husband first.  We both know we won’t accomplish this “putting the other first” perfectly, no matter how excellent our intentions!  But as we learn and grow and ask God’s help, we find grace to fill that gap. We are always a couple, having accepted the calling to go through life together, growing in our faith in God and love and respect for each other. 

Those attitudes of unselfishness, respect, trust, and humility also serve to multiply and magnify the joys and victories we navigate together.  It’s natural to focus in on our present interaction, whether good or bad, and let it fill our viewfinder.  But choosing the wide-angle lens allows us to see that there is far more to the picture.  Now as we look back on our happiest memories, as well as the less happy ones, we can see the ways that God was at work in our lives.  We recognize the way God took us by the hand and walked us through our own abundant inadequacies and missteps so that we would learn to depend on Him more.  We can see some of the ways He brought undeserved blessing after blessing into our lives. We can look ahead, too, with excitement that God is building a future far better than we could ever work out on our own.  Life is truly an endless adventure!

So many weddings include the words from the Bible: Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.  Love never fails. (I Corinthians 13:7-8a)
My best advice to couples starting out is to seek God as the source of unconditional love that lasts an eternity.  

Click here to read more from the Beyond the Big Day series.

Staying Together Requires Humility // Beyond the Big Day

Linda Pasquarell is a wife of 32+ years and a mom to four kids, one daughter-in-law, two sons-in-law, one granddaughter, and 3 more grandchildren on the way. She currently resides in Roanoke, Virginia, and teaches music to students of all ages. 

Since she is my mom, I can brag on her a little: she has been not only my mom, but my teacher, encourager, example, and close friend my entire life. I don't look up to anyone else quite the same way I look up to her. When I thought of this series, she was one of the first people I wanted to share advice from, because she has amazingly made our family work through the last thirty years. I love you, mom!