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Project: Happily Ever After: Saving Your Marriage When the Fairytale Falters
by Alisa Bowman

Published: 2010-12-28
Hardcover : 272 pages
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What do you do when your marriage is so unhappy that you begin to fantasize about your husband's funeral? That's how bad it got for Alisa Bowman. . . So she launched a last-ditch effort to save her marriage. Project: Happily Ever After is her fearlessly honest and humorous account of how ...
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Introduction

What do you do when your marriage is so unhappy that you begin to fantasize about your husband's funeral? That's how bad it got for Alisa Bowman. . . So she launched a last-ditch effort to save her marriage. Project: Happily Ever After is her fearlessly honest and humorous account of how she went from being a “divorce daydreamer? to renewing her wedding vows—and all of the steps in between.

From bikini waxes to erotica, romance instruction manuals to second honeymoons, the silent treatment to power struggles, she goes where many marriage-improvement gurus have feared to tread. Equal parts funny, poignant, and most importantly, useful, Bowman's story will give other miserably-married folks courage and hope. And in addition to telling her own story, she packs straightforward prescriptive guidance, including a “10-Step Marital Improvement Guide.? Readers will laugh. They?ll cry. And they can start on the road toward their own happy ending!

Editorial Review

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Excerpt

Introduction

You are okay. Really, you are.

You are even if you have not one ounce of desire to ever bed down with your spouse in this lifetime or the next.

You are even if several times a week, day, or hour you fantasize about your spouse conveniently dropping dead.

You are even if you have a long mental list of the people you will definitely date (or possibly marry) once your current spouse becomes your late spouse.

You are even if you dread the moment your spouse arrives home from work.

You are even if you can’t think of a single thing to say to your spouse over dinner.

You are even if you can’t for the life of you remember what possessed you to marry that dolt in the first place.

You are even if you’ve ranted about your spouse so often that your friends, siblings, and coworkers are taking bets regarding how long your marriage will last.

You are okay.You’re exceptionally normal. In fact, you and your marriage are downright typical.

You, of course, worry that you are not okay. Indeed, you are probably worried that such thoughts, feelings, and experiences are a sign that you deserve the Worst Spouse of the Year Award.

And you worry about this because you think that you are alone. You assume that none of your friends, family members, coworkers, or acquaintances has ever planned their very healthy spouse’s funeral.You assume that they are all just as attracted to their spouses now—after many years of marriage— as they were when they met.

You assume that they still believe that they married their soulmates.

You assume all of these things because no one talks about being stuck in a bad marriage. People don’t talk about that dread of having one’s spouse move into the spoon position, and of thinking, “Oh for the love of my sanity, please don’t let him want to have sex tonight, or tomorrow night, or ever, really! Why can’t I be the woman whose husband is in dire need of Viagra?”

And because people don’t talk about it, it makes you feel so very alone, as if you are the only screwup on the planet who accidentally married the wrong person.

But you’re not.

No, you’re definitely not. For one, there’s me. I’ve thought and felt and done all of those above-mentioned things, and so have pa-lenty of others.

For instance, there are the thousands of unhappily married folks who read my blog. I can’t tell you how many of them have emailed me and thanked me for outing the death fantasy. I also can’t tell you how many friends and acquaintances fessed up to similar thoughts, feelings, and experiences once I finally started talking about mine.

What I can tell you is this. It doesn’t matter how bad your marriage is. You can probably make it better. It doesn’t matter just how strongly you believe that you married the wrong person.You probably didn’t. It doesn’t matter if your mother-in-law has already declared your marriage hopeless and has asked for you to return that heirloom silver service. You can probably

prove her wrong.

That’s why I wrote this book—because I’ve been where you are right now. In 2007 I planned every detail of my divorce. I planned every detail of my very healthy husband’s funeral, too. But then a friend told me that I needed to try harder—that I needed to try everything before giving up.

So I did. I read 12 marital improvement books, I interviewed happily married friends (all three of them), and I studied the research.

Within just four months my marriage went from a 2 on the Happily Married Scale to an 8 and I was renewing my wedding vows.

Now, I feel closer to my husband than I ever have, and not a day goes by that I don’t mentally thank the friend who told me to try everything.

That’s how I know there’s hope for you. Heck, if my abysmally bad marriage could be saved, there is hope for nearly everyone’s marriage.

But you want more than hope, don’t you? You want a 100 percent guarantee. When I embarked on my marriage project, I wanted one of those, too. I wish I could give you one, but I can’t. No one—not me, not your parents, not your marriage therapist, and not your spouse—can know for sure whether your personal project will lead you to Happily Ever After.

No, you have to take a leap of faith. But I can guarantee this. If you take that leap, your life will improve.You will become stronger, happier, more assertive, and more confident.You will not regret your project. Even if, in the end, it does not save your marriage, your project will save you.

Take the leap.

Try everything.

Start your Project: Happily Ever After.

1

Once Upon a Time

MAY 2007

"I dreamt my lady came and found me dead"

—William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet

I knew something was terribly wrong with my marriage when I planned my husband’s funeral. I did it in late 2006 and early 2007, between Mark’s fortieth and forty-first birthdays. At least 210 times that year, I fantasized about the day Röbi, one of Mark’s closest friends, arrived at my door. His voice trembled as he said,“You’d better sit down. I’ve got bad news. There’s no good way to tell you. Mark dropped dead of a heart attack 5 minutes ago. They tried everything. He’s gone. I’m sorry.” Röbi drove me to the hospital morgue.After viewing the body, I phoned Mark’s parents.

I made the arrangements.

Mark would be cremated. His ashes would go into an urn until our daughter, Kaarina, was old enough to choose a location to scatter them.

The funeral? No, it would not be held at a church or a funeral home, but rather at The Farmhouse, his favorite restaurant and the place where we’d first met. The mourners would enjoy Magic Hat #9, Stone, and Flemish sour, a few of Mark’s favorite brands and varieties of beer. Chef Michael would make my husband’s favorite foods, including the butternut squash soup, crusty rolls, and braised lamb. For dessert, there would be handstretched strudel. He loved that.

A cinematographer would record the event, filming friends and family as they told stories about Mark. Röbi, for instance, might talk about Mark’s love of his bicycle. Taylor would say something interesting about Mark and his bike shop. Maybe Wood would come up with a drinking story. Ken might talk about their many road trips to Formula One races in Montreal. Jeff might mention something about rock climbing or kayaking. Chris could tell a story about Mark and his motorcycle.This film I would store away, somewhere secure, perhaps in the very safe where I kept our life insurance documents and passports.There it would stay until Kaarina was old enough to want to know more about Daddy. Then I would pull it out and let her watch it.

I always got stuck on the eulogy.What could I say? What should I say? It was appropriate to say something positive, of course, but I could only think of the negative. Perhaps I wouldn’t say anything. Some widows are too distraught to talk, right? Wouldn’t the other mourners notice my dry eyes, though? Wouldn’t they think something was odd about my facial expression? Wouldn’t the most perceptive among them think,“She’s relieved”?

Mark, in reality, was much more likely to die of old age than of a heart attack. Heart disease did not run in his family. His grandmother had lived well into her nineties.Yet staying married until old age felt unbearable, and the alternative, divorce, was terrifying.

The D word—I didn’t like to say that out loud. Would I be the first to break my family’s tradition of staying married regardless of marital disharmony?

My paternal grandparents had been married for more than sixty years. My maternal grandparents, despite how much they’d tormented one another, would probably have reached such a milestone, too, had my grandfather not died in his fifties. My parents had been together more than forty years, and so had Mark’s.

Unlike the death fantasy, my divorce scenario was not artificial. It was a plan of escape. Mark and I would amicably share custody of our daughter. He would agree to take his 401(k), and I’d take mine. We’d split the other investments down the middle. He’d keep the waterbed. I’d take the queen we used in the guest room. He’d want the La Z-Boy. I’d take the rocker. He’d get the leather sofas. I’d take the dining room set and the artwork. He could have the grill.

I’d take the dog, but, if needed, we could work out a custody arrangement. We both loved that dog.

I told myself that I would stay in the marriage until I found myself thinking about divorce every single day. I’d stay until the thought of losing half of our retirement savings to him felt less depressing than the thought of staying married to a man who didn’t seem to love me. I’d stay until the idea of our two-and-a-half-year-old growing up in a broken home seemed healthier than the idea of her being raised by two parents who never smiled when they talked to one another, if they talked to one another at all. I’d stay until the notion of telling my parents that we were splitting seemed less uncomfortable than the notion of navigating family gatherings with him by my side.

It was Mother’s Day of 2007 that changed everything.

That evening I traveled to NewYork City to have dinner with Deb, a close friend who was in town for a conference. I’d met Deb, a tall curlyhaired brunette, years ago at a book club. We earned our livings as freelance medical writers. We were both workaholics, and over the years, we’d created an informal freelance writing support group. She and I were the only members. We took turns telling work stories that, after a couple glasses of wine, took on dramatic plot twists, lots of animated arm movements, and an incredible amount of laughter. No matter how bedraggled I felt walking into a restaurant for a dinner with Deb, I always felt happier and lighter when I left.

Deb was one of those people who could look at my face and read my thoughts. She would hear me say, “Everything’s great. Everything’s fine,” and then say,“Cut the crap. Tell me the truth.” She would listen to me vent for as long as it took for me to run out of steam, and then would ask me a single question that rendered me speechless. Deb had moved from just 20 minutes away from my house in Pennsylvania to Virginia a year earlier. I missed her dearly.

True friends do not tell you what you want to hear. They are brave enough to tell you what you need to know.

As we waited for our table,we sat at the bar and sipped cabernet. Once at our table, we each ordered a flight of wine and a cheese plate. As we drained our glasses and neared the end of the cheese, we decided to get a bottle. Deb wrote a wine blog and had written a wine book. She was undecided between two wines. She reached into her purse, pulled out her cell, and dialed Keith, her husband,who knew even more about wine than she.

I listened to her talk. I watched her move her hands and smile. I thought about my marriage. I thought about my cell phone, the one that hadn’t moved from my purse since my arrival hours before. I hadn’t called my husband to tell him I had arrived safely. I had not checked to see how he was doing. I had not thought of him once.

Deb was telling Keith about the conference, about the hotel, and about the restaurant. They spoke as if they hadn’t seen one another in weeks. They spoke as if they had so much to tell one another that they could easily talk all night, fall asleep,wake the next morning, and still find more to say.

I would not call Mark. Not now. Not later. Not the following day. I wouldn’t because I feared I would hear a voice that was unhappy to hear mine. He would sound harried, as if he had one hundred and fifty more important things to do than to talk to me. I wanted what Deb and Keith had, but I wasn’t at all confident that I could ever have it with Mark.

Deb closed her phone. She’d made a decision. She ordered.The wine arrived. Near the end of the bottle, she asked, “How’s Mark?” and, in my drunkenness, I related the 7 million reasons why I was unhappily married.

She listened.

“Our marriage is dead,” I complained.“We have nothing to say to one another.”

She nodded.

“Whenever I call him, he sounds unhappy to hear from me, as if I’m bothering him. I think he secretly hates me.”

She nodded.

“He never helps with the parenting. He’s never home. It’s like I’m a single mother. I earn nearly all the money. I do all of the housework and 90 percent of the parenting. I’m exhausted. I can’t go on much longer. I want to feel loved, and I don’t think he loves me anymore.”

“Why are you still together?” she asked.

“I’m only staying with him for Kaarina’s sake,” I said.“There’s nothing left between us. If we didn’t have her, we’d have nothing in common.”

“You shouldn’t stay together for your daughter,” Deb said. “If you got divorced, she would be fine. My son was fine after my first husband and I split up. Lots of kids do just fine after divorce.You’ll do more damage to her by staying in a loveless marriage than you will by getting out of one.”

I asked, “How did you know it was time to give up?”

“I knew it was time when I suggested we try marital counseling and he wouldn’t go. I’d run out of options,” she said. “Have you tried everything?

Have you tried marital counseling?”

There, the question that would leave me speechless.No,we hadn’t tried that. Instead of marital counseling, I’d tried crying. I’d tried yelling things like,“Our marriage is in the toilet!” I’d tried saying things like,“I’m miserable in this marriage!” I had once mildly suggested that we try counseling, but I’d said it more as a threat (“We need marital counseling!”) than a suggestion.

He’d replied, “If you really think we should try it, I guess I can make time for it.” Neither of us had made time for it. I had a business card for a counselor. Had I not made the call because I secretly wanted my marriage to fail?

“You need to try everything,” she told me as we paid the bill.“Promise me you will try everything. He probably just needs you to tell him what you want. Men are clueless. Never forget that.”

Try everything to save your marriage, even things that you don’t think will work. If everything doesn’t work or your partner refuses to try anything, consider divorce. No one deserves to be stuck in a miserable marriage—not even you.

I promised.

The next morning, I woke with a wicked headache, a dry mouth, and a heart filled with hope. I was going to fix my marriage. I could do this. I really could. Deb was right.

Later that evening, I sat next to Mark. He was in his usual spot on the La-Z-Boy.The remote was nearby. His muddy green eyes were mesmerized by the motorcycle race unfolding in front of him on the TV. I looked at his thin blond hair, the creases on his sun-baked face, and the slight downturn of his lips.

What had happened to the carefree, grinning guy who’d once found himself hopelessly besotted with me? Where had he gone? Who was this stranger who now shared my bed? What had become of us?

I turned off the TV. I held my hands in my lap. I looked at him, and I said, “We’ve got problems. We haven’t had sex in months. I think about either divorcing or killing you several times a day, sometimes several times an hour. I’m worried that, if we don’t focus on fixing things, one of us is going to have an affair, and, I’m worried that the one of us most likely to have the affair is me.”

I shed no tears. I made eye contact almost the whole time. I didn’t raise my voice.

His features softened. The hardness I’d gotten so used to seeing was no longer there. He looked at me tenderly.

“You’re having an affair?” he asked, his voice pinched, an octave higher than usual.

“No, I’m worried that I might. I feel sexy. I notice men looking at me. I want to feel loved, and I don’t feel loved by you. I worry that, given the opportunity and a moment of weakness, I might turn to someone else to feel loved.”

He asked, “Are you really that disappointed? Are things that bad?”

“Yes, I am. Yes, they are,” I replied. “Don’t you think so?”

“Things are hard right now. We just moved. Moving to a new home is stressful, but things will get better. Kaarina’s getting older.Things will get easier.You’ll see.”

“No,Mark, they won’t, not unless we make them better,” I said.“If we don’t work on things now, we’re going to end up getting a divorce.”

“What do you want?” he asked.

What I really wanted, I did not want to say. I wanted to be married to another man. I wanted to be married to someone who came home from work by 6PM, and who came home happy to see his wife and daughter. I wanted to be married to someone who,when he got home, played with his daughter or offered to cook dinner rather than sit in front of SpeedTV or get lost in cycling news sites on the Internet. I wanted a man I craved to touch, and who craved to touch me. I wanted someone who noticed that the trash was overflowing and who took it out before the dog got into it and dragged it through the house. I wanted a husband who listened to me when I cried, got angry, or told him I was disappointed with his behavior or our marriage. I didn’t want one who, instead, sometimes suggested that I was hormonal and that the mood would pass. I wanted a man who looked at me with love in his eyes and who seemed happy to have me in his life. I didn’t want a man who acted as if I was his greatest life complication, the weight tied to his ankles that was dragging him deeper into the ocean.

Dare to dream about the spouse you wish was yours. Dare to ask your spouse to become that person.

Could he become the man I wanted? I wasn’t sure he even wanted to.

After a long silence, I said,“I want to find things to talk about over dinner. I don’t want to eat in silence. I want you to look at me with love in your eyes. I want to have a sex life again. I want to hold hands. I want you

to act as if you love me. I want you to make me and Katarina your top priorities, above your store, above your bike, and above your friends.”

“You are my top priorities. I do love you. I love you both,” he said, bewildered.

“I need you to show it,” I said.

“Maybe I need you to show me how,” he said.

“I’ll try,” I said.

“What should we do next?” he asked.

“Are you willing to do marital counseling?”

“Yes, whatever you think we need,” he said.

“You’ll make time for it?You won’t cancel the appointments?You won’t complain about it?”

“I’ll make time for it,” he said.

Although our marriage felt dead, we didn’t suffer from anything that would rule out resurrecting it from the grave. Neither of us was addicted to anything other than caffeine. We weren’t co-dependent. He wasn’t emotionally

or physically abusive, and neither was I. Neither of us was an overspender or gambler. We were both intelligent, reasonable people. Perhaps most important, we both wanted to save our marriage.

That night, I started Project: Happily Ever After. Would it work? Could a marriage as bad as ours actually be saved?Would I ever feel attracted to my husband again? I didn’t know for sure. What I did know was this. This project of mine--It required a gigantic leap of faith.

Can your marriage be saved? That depends on the answer to one question: Are you both willing to try to save it? If the answer is, “Yes,” then start a marriage project that spans four months. If, at the end of four months, you see any improvement and you are still both committed to making it work, give it some more time and effort. If, on the other hand, there’s no improvement, your future together is pretty grim. view abbreviated excerpt only...

Discussion Questions

From the author:

1.The author opens with her death fantasy, one that is very elaborate and detailed. Have you ever imagined your spouse dropping dead? If so, what were the circumstances and did it make you feel guilty?
2.When the author started her marriage project, did you think it would work? Why or why not?
3.Did you think the book could possibly have a happy ending? Why or why not?
4.Do you think this story offers hope for other unhappily married couples? Why or why not?
5.Do you think all marriages can be saved? Why or why not?
6.Should unhappily married people stay together for the kids, even if their marriage is hopeless?
7.What illusions did you have about marriage years ago that you no longer have now?
8.What is your definition of “marriage”?
9.How have fairy tales, romantic comedies and other media distorted our ideas about what it takes to have a happy marriage?
10.Do you believe in the idea of soul mates?
11.Do you ever wish your partner could just read your mind?
12.Do you ever say you are “fine” when you are really pissed as all get out?
13.What is your definition of “Happily Ever After”?
14.The author writes a short fairy tale in the chapter titles. What did you think of this technique?
15.The author talks directly to the reader in a number of places. Did you find this engaging and effective or tiresome and overdone?
16.Would this book have had the same impact if the marriage had not been saved and had instead ended in divorce?
17.The author used self-help to heal her marriage rather than going to marital therapy. What do you think of this decision of hers, and is it one you think you might make for your own marriage?

Notes From the Author to the Bookclub

Note from author Alisa Bowman:

Dear Reader,

I once worried that my friends and family would think I was weak, pathetic, or mentally unbalanced if they knew that I no longer wished to have sex with my husband, that I practiced daily acts of marital sabotage (washing my clothes and not his, hiding the remote, forgetting to tell him that his mother called), or that I took my mind off my misery by planning his funeral.

A friend suggested marital counseling but, as one of the country’s most successful ghostwriters of self help books, I choose a different strategy. I read 12 marital improvement books, perused the Internet, and interviewed happily married friends.

Four months later, we renewed our vows.

I wrote Project: Happily Ever After to tell that story. I wrote it for everyone who is—right now—in that scary place I was before my project: feeling alone, scared, unbalanced, and hopeless. I wrote it to start a conversation about the aspects of marriage and relationships that no one talks about.

People say that it’s a “good read” “delightfully funny” and “worthy of a thriller.” You can be the judge of that.

If you’d like enter to win one of 5 free copies of Project: Happily Ever After, please email me at [email protected] and tell me what makes you feel alone in your marriage or relationship.

And if you’d like to enter to win a host of prizes—ranging from a Kindle to free stays at B&Bs to vouchers for marriage counseling—visit http://www.projecthappilyeverafter.com/2010/10/the-fabulous-phea-giveaway/.

Q&A with Author Allison Bowman:

Q: You planned your husband’s funeral to the last detail. Why did you do this and do you feel guilty about it?

I used to think I did it because I had a screw loose. It wasn’t until I began talking about my marital problems that I realized I wasn’t state hospital material. I told one friend, “I used to want my husband dead, but we’ve really worked on things, and I feel much better.” She replied, “I’ve wanted to kill my husband! I have this fantasy about pushing his back up against a wall and strangling him. I just want to strangle him sometimes!”

Another friend said, “Me, too! I’ve just wanted to hit him so hard. What is it about husbands? Why is it that they can get us madder than anyone else? I didn’t know anger until I got married.”

Yet another simply said, “Been there.”

These were people I’d assumed were happily married. They were women who, to the outside world, seemed to have doting husbands who were wonderful fathers. They were men who, on the surface, seemed to be madly in love with their wives. Yet they’d all had the funeral fantasy.

The funeral fantasy gave me emotional solace during a very difficult time in my life. It allowed me to see what was wrong. It allowed me to see what I wanted to change. It allowed me to yearn for more, and it allowed me to see my life without him and understand that the marriage I had was worth saving.

Q: Your marriage was in such a dark and miserable place when you started your marital improvement project. Did you think that the project would really work?

Truthfully? Not really. During the first few weeks of the project, I was only doing it so I could tell my friend Deb that I really had tried everything. I also wanted to give it one last-ditch effort for our daughter’s sake, but I didn’t have great hopes for turning things around.

I promised myself that I would continue to try as long as two things were happening:

1. My husband was trying.

2. Our marriage was improving, even if just a little bit.

Both of those things were happening throughout the marriage project, and they are still happening to this day.

Q: When did you know that you were going to write a book about the story of your marriage?

As I was working on my marriage, I was sending very long and somewhat humorous emails to Deb, the friend who convinced me to work on my marriage. One of these emails, for instance, was about The Martini wax. Another was about the New York trip. Another was about the Relaxed Hug.

She kept emailing back telling me that she laughed until she cried. She encouraged me to send my emails—as is—to Slate.com and Salon.com. I didn’t have the courage to do that at the time, though, so I continued to focus on Fall From Grace, the unfinished novel depicted in this book.

During the midst of the marriage project, I signed up for an essay writing class. At first I had no idea what I was going to write about. I kept thinking, “Why am I taking an essay class? My life is so boring. I don’t have any interesting stories to tell.”

Then I thought about those emails that Deb had encouraged me to turn into essays. I started with The Martini email. My teacher loved it. So did everyone in the class.

One day, not much later, I was walking my dog. I started thinking about how I had my husband’s funeral completely planned out. I wondered, “Do other people do this?” And just like that, this line came to me, “I knew something was terribly wrong with my marriage when I planned my husband’s funeral.” You never saw a woman walk back to her house so fast. I sat at my computer and started typing. Before I got up from the desk, I had an entire first chapter.

Q: You also have a marriage blog. When did that come about?

Other writers had been telling me to start a blog for a while. Nowadays, nearly every freelance writer has one. I’d resisted starting one, though, because I didn’t know what I would blog about. Most freelancers write about writing, and I didn’t want to do that. Then one day I had one of those “Duh, you silly person” moments and realized my blog should be about marriage. I launched ProjectHappilyEverAfter.com in October 2008.

Q: What does your husband think about all of this?

When I told him that I wanted to write a book about our marriage project, he said, “Sure, why not?” At the time, I assumed he thought I’d never finish it. He probably figured it would just end up being one more half-written project, like the novel.

When I finished it, I asked him to read it. I was just terrified. I tried not to stare at him as he turned the pages. I thought for sure he was going to come to the end and say, “I’m sorry. I just don’t feel comfortable with you doing this.”

He never said that. He got to the last page and he said, “This is really good. I can see you talking about this on Oprah.” I hugged him. I cried and I thanked the gods that I’d married him in the first place.

He was just as supportive about the blog. I think he could see that writing the book and the blog made me happy. They both allowed me to express myself with writing in a way that I had not been able to do before. I also felt as if I was having a direct impact on other people’s lives. Not a day went by that I didn’t get an email or a comment from someone who wanted to let me know how much my advice had helped. It was so gratifying and heartwarming to know that I was making a difference.

He might be clueless in some ways, but I’m sure he knew that a happier wife was more likely to want to have sex and be less likely to nag him. A happier wife was more likely to make him happy.

Q: Are you against divorce? Do you think all couples should work on improving their marriages?

I’m not against divorce. I’m against misery. Many people stay mired in bad marriages for years, mainly because they don’t have the courage to either work on their marriage or end it.

I think most couples should try to work out their differences before ending it, though. If you don’t try everything, then you’ll always have that nagging fear in the back of your mind, “What if my marriage could have been saved? What if I didn’t try hard enough? What if I’ve just made the biggest mistake of my life? What if he/she really was my soul mate?” If you try marital counseling or something else, at least you’ll know you gave it your all.

Not every marriage can be saved, though. Some people are not meant to stay together. There are two ways to know if you should give up on your marriage. They are:

1. Your spouse refuses to try.

2. You both try, but you make no progress. After four months, you are just as miserable as when you started.

If either or both are true, I think divorce is the best option. I don’t think anyone is obligated to stay in a bad marriage, even if kids are involved. You deserve to be happy. If you need a divorce to be happy, get one.

Q: You write about some very intimate, personal stuff. How do you approach the issue of transparency?

Many years ago, I was a very secretive person. I was also very depressed. I’ve since learned that I’m much happier when I keep no secrets. I have nothing to be ashamed of and nothing to be embarrassed about. I’d rather people know the real me. If they know everything about me and still like me, I know they are true friends. If I hide parts of myself from people, how will I ever truly know what they think of me?

I used to worry about the effects my writing would have on my daughter, especially the sex column I write for Sex Is magazine. She’s only five now, so I’m not sure what the future holds. I like to believe that I’m a better parent because I can talk and write about these issues openly. When she’s older and it’s time for that birds and the bees discussion, I know I’m not going to have any problems. For me, talking about sex is no different than talking about eating. It’s something we all do.

I’m sure she’ll hate that I write about my sex life when she’s thirteen, but she’s going to hate something about me during that time in her life anyway. Teenagers are universally embarrassed about their parents, even parents who don’t write about blowjobs and bikini waxes.

My general rule about the transparency is that it has to have a point. I don’t write about my sex life just to be graphic. I always make sure I have a point or that I’m trying to be helpful. It’s my hope that someone can benefit from every word I write. I write to help others—to help them feel normal, to give them courage, to inspire them, to offer solutions to their problems, and yes, to make them laugh.

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  "SUCH an education in making a better marriage!"by Mariska v. (see profile) 02/11/11

I loved this book so much. It's so honest, with such incredibly revealing details about Alisa's marriage -- it made me feel sane, it gave me some excellent advice, and it make me laugh so hard! She's really... (read more)

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