The Daily - Sunday Special: Un-Marry Me!
Episode Date: February 18, 2024Today we’re sharing the latest episode of Modern Love, a podcast about the complicated love lives of real people, from The New York Times.Anna Martin, host of the show, spoke to David Finch, who wro...te three Modern Love essays about how hard he had worked to be a good husband to his wife, Kristen. As a man with autism who married a neurotypical woman, Dave found it challenging to navigate being a partner and a father. Eventually, he started keeping a list of “best practices” to cover every situation that might come up in daily life – a method that worked so well he wrote a best-selling book on it.But almost 11 years into his marriage, Kristen said she wanted to be “unmarried.” Dave was totally thrown off. He didn’t know what that meant, or if he could do it. But he wasn’t going to lose Kristen, so he had to give it a try.For more episodes of Modern Love, search for the show wherever you get your podcasts. New episodes drop Wednesdays.
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Hey, it's Michael.
Most weekends, we bring you the Sunday read,
but today we're doing something a little bit different,
sharing the latest episode of Modern Love,
a podcast from New York Times Audio
that explores the complicated love lives of regular people.
Enjoy it, and if you like it,
head over to the Modern Love feed
for new episodes every Wednesday.
Take a listen.
From The New York Times, I'm Anna Martin.
This is Modern Love.
Welcome to a new season.
If you listen to the show, you're clearly into stories about relationships.
So you may have heard of a guy named Dave Finch.
relationships. So you may have heard of a guy named Dave Finch. There was a time when a lot of people wanted to hear his ideas about making relationships work, because he seemed to have
solved a big problem in his own marriage. As he tells it, the problem stemmed from his overpowering
need for order and predictability. And it came out in all kinds of everyday situations, with his wife,
Kristen, and their two kids.
Take this for example.
I had it in my head that nap time was 10 o'clock and 2 o'clock
and if the 2 o'clock nap didn't happen
because somebody dropped over for a visit
or because they were, you know, fussy and not going down for a nap,
I would start to almost spiral in a way.
It was this sense of panic and I would lash out and try
to seize control. And she would say, why are you freaking out, Dave? I already have two babies who
won't go down for a nap. And now I have a husband who's freaking out because babies won't. They're
babies. They don't always take a nap. And I remember saying to her, you told me nap time is 10 and 2. So if it's not 10 and 2, you have to tell me that.
And she was thinking, why would I have to tell you that? Be an adult.
Don't be a third person in this house I have to take care of.
Tensions kept building between the two of them. But then they had a breakthrough.
Dave went to a psychiatrist.
Five minutes into the conversation, I was like, you can stop. You have Asperger's. This was in 2008, so they were still using the word Asperger's,
but it was so revelatory for me because for three years, the most important person in my life was
saying things like, you just don't get it, Dave. And in that moment, she saw me not as a husband who is a walking checklist of deficits,
but as a human being who is wired a certain way,
who doesn't mean to be making things difficult all the time.
It's not all his fault.
These days, the term Asperger's isn't used much,
but it refers to an autism
spectrum disorder. After that diagnosis, Dave began to understand all the ways his brain worked
differently. The autistic mind craves predictability. And when that prediction doesn't
match reality, it's considered a personal violation. And that's why the autistic brain starts to spiral and
feel very anxious and dysregulated. I needed to understand what was expected of me,
how I needed to show up in those situations.
I really needed a sense of control, a sense of structure, a sense of predictability.
Dave couldn't get predictability, but maybe he could figure out
how to be a better partner. So he came up with an idea. Every time Kristen got frustrated with him
about something he did or didn't do, he wrote it down. So maybe he could get it right the next time.
One rule he had was be present in moments with the kids, which meant playing with them instead of getting annoyed
when they didn't follow exactly the rules of a game.
Another rule was, just listen.
When Kristen had a problem, she didn't need a literal spreadsheet of solutions.
All she wanted was for him to show a little empathy.
Dave's list of rules got longer and longer. Don't change the radio station when
she's singing along. Don't sneak up on her and surprise her when she's pouring coffee. She hates
that. Apologies do not count when you shout them. Don't just take what you need from the dryer.
Fold all the clothes and put them away. He wrote all these rules down on post-it notes and little
scraps of paper and kept them in a drawer in his bedside table.
Dave talked about all this in a Modern Love essay, which led to a best-selling book called The Journal of Best Practices,
a memoir of marriage, Asperger syndrome, and one man's quest to be a better husband.
And he became a public speaker.
Thank you. I am Dave, and it's really exciting for me to be able to come and talk to you this morning.
Sharing what he learned with other struggling couples.
The big game changer for people is adaptability.
A willingness and an ability to change, to adapt, to unlearn old behaviors.
And it's hard, but it is possible.
Thank you.
Seems like a happy ending, right?
But listen to this one interview Dave did at the time.
Ira Glass, the host of This American Life,
asked Dave how Kristen felt about one of his best practices.
It was the rule about acting empathetic.
But wait, is that satisfying for her?
I mean, if you say to her, like,
God, that must be terrible for you,
and you're not really empathizing,
and she knows you're just saying it by rote
because you've been trained to do it,
is that actually satisfying to her?
That's a really great point.
I can now surmise, you know, using intellect,
that, yes, that must have been very trying for her.
Still, Dave stuck to his best practices for a few more years, until one day...
I'd just gotten out of the shower, and Kristen marched into the bathroom and said,
I have a revelation to share with you. We're done being married. We're just done.
And I said, wait, wait, wait, wait. What do you mean
we're done? She's like, this marriage, this thing we're doing, the thing we've been doing,
and it's exhausting for both of us. We're not doing that anymore. We're just, we're done being
married. I said, wait a minute, wait a minute. I've been doing the best practices. I've been
working the method. I'm about to go give a lecture in
Missouri about how to be a great partner in a marriage. I said, so we were separating? She said,
no, more like we're detaching. And I remember asking, detaching? What does that even mean?
Because to me, it sounds like we're not married anymore. And she said,
you know what, Dave? We'll call this unmarried. And then she just turned around and left the room.
We'll be right back.
Kristen had just dropped this major bomb on Dave,
right as he was getting out of the shower, no less.
So was this the end of their marriage or just another bump in the road?
I asked Dave to sit down and talk with me about it.
Dave, welcome to Modern Love. Thank you so much for coming on the show.
Thank you so much. I can't wait to have this conversation together.
So let's pick up where we left off. What did you do after Kristen told you she wanted to be unmarried? You were literally heading to give a talk about how to have a successful marriage.
I had to climb in the car and drive all the way down through Illinois to get to Missouri.
No. And then drive through Missouri.
And I had given so many talks at that point.
I wasn't worried.
I knew I could get my way through the talk.
The bigger picture was like,
I'm about to go tell these people this,
and my wife just said,
I don't want to be married anymore.
Yeah, what was going through your head on that drive?
I just replayed that moment over and over.
What could she mean?
I didn't go to a place of positivity when she said that.
The eight or nine hours I had in the car right after that moment were catastrophizing and trying to imagine new scenarios of what our life would look like.
But really, it was just replaying with deafening loudness the conversation that we had had that morning.
Oh, Dave, I'm like feeling really crushed.
It was a moment where I felt I had lost my partner.
I was starting to feel what must have been grief.
What you thought it meant then was, we're done.
Yes.
What you thought it meant then was, we're done.
Yes.
It just sounded to me like this is the first step in what is ultimately going to lead to divorce.
And I thought, it's not even that I need Kristen to be my wife.
The scary thing for me was everything I was doing, it's still not good enough. How is this person going to stay in my life if I can't be good enough even after all this work? That was the scariest part for me. In the days and weeks
after that conversation in the bathroom, you started to see what Kristen meant by unmarrying.
What did you see her doing as she put unmarrying into action in her own life?
So I was very confused.
And since she wouldn't give me a definitive, we are terminating the marriage, I knew that
we were still in a relationship.
And I remember even asking her at one point, I was like, am I supposed to be like dating
other people?
She's like, God, no.
I was like, okay, so we're still faithful to each other, right? And,
and which is good because I don't want to go out there and start dating people.
And I'd asked her like, does that mean I don't have to do household chores? Or like, she's like,
no, you still have to do the dishes. You still have to, I was like, God damn it.
But as I started observing her, what she was doing was going out and having long coffee dates with
friends. And she was treating herself to leisurely strolls in the mid morning. She was journaling.
She was reading books by Brene Brown and Annie Lamott and all these great thinkers.
and Annie Lamott and all these great thinkers.
And she was like, Dave, go mountain biking,
take trips by yourself, go whatever.
And so I started aping her work.
Okay, Dave, I gotta know what that meant for you.
I started saying, well, I've noticed that she's really gotten into essential oils
and burning white sage and energy clearing the house.
I could do that too. So check this out. Here's my white sage that I still, well, there you go.
Oh my God. I went full woo for about three months where I was like, you know, I had my chakras
tested and that didn't feel right. I was like, I'm not experiencing the joy that she seems to
be experiencing in her
new Kristen renaissance of just living her life outside of the marriage. So then I tried to
get myself some friends and I architected how to get friends. And I went out there and I
experimented and, um, I was needing from them all the stuff I was needing from Kristen,
which was like this constant sort of, you know, brotherhood, companionship, awesomeness.
And after a while, I was too much for them. And they were like,
dude, no, I don't want to be macho with you anymore. This sucks.
I mean, during this time, if you went somewhere together and you had to introduce her,
what would you even say? Like, how would you explain your situation to someone? So at this time, I was meeting a lot of new people, a lot
of philanthropists, a lot of business people. And I had to go to a bunch of different functions and
stuff. And sometimes Kristen came along. And when we went somewhere and I would introduce her,
I would introduce her kind of awkwardly as my not wife anymore. Oh my God, Dave. I'd be like, hi,
I'm Dave. This is my, not really my wife, Kristen. We're kind of married, but apparently we're not.
And she would get, she would get so angry. What would she say? She would roll her eyes and go,
oh my God, I'm his wife. I'm Kristen. She did not love that I had taken off and put away my
wedding ring and put that in a drawer. And I replaced it with a skull ring that I had taken off and put away my wedding ring and put that in a drawer
and I replaced it with a skull ring that I had bought from an artist in Spain.
Oh my God, you're taking this, you are confused, but you're taking it to a different level.
Yeah, I was very chippy about this. This was like, I didn't sign up for Unmarried. I didn't
work this hard for the last six years to be floundering like this.
Yeah.
But I wasn't introducing Kristen as my not really my wife anymore.
To get under her skin, I truly thought that I couldn't introduce her as my wife anymore
and that I didn't know what else to call her since we were both clearly married.
what else to call her since we were both clearly married. And I mean, through all this, you're watching Kristen seem comfortable with your new relationship dynamic. She's having a life. She's
having fun outside your relationship. And when you try to do similar things, it's not working.
Was it confusing to you? Was it painful? Yes.
So what I was observing was Kristen doing the work that was helping her to thrive.
And it was bringing her back online.
It was bringing her joy back into the world.
She was alive again.
She was flourishing.
And I was still struggling.
And I felt very lonely in that.
There were periods where I even felt resentful, where I was like, so she has moved on from trying to be somebody who the marriage is all that makes her happy.
She's moved on from that.
She's running a different playbook now, and I felt sort of abandoned in my ridiculous best practices
and frankly felt like I was floundering.
And how long did it take for being unmarried to start making sense to you?
One of the very first times that I understood what she meant by unmarried, probably four, maybe five years after she introduced the idea to me, was that she was done managing my energy.
Wait, four or five years?
Yes.
Wow.
So the next phrase that she coined after unmarried was energy manager. And she was done
running 10 steps ahead of me, making sure that the environment that I was in was something safe,
feeling and predictable and within my control. Because if I got into a bad mood, then she would
get into a bad mood. So to avoid me getting into a bad mood and her ultimately feeling that same way,
she would prevent the sort of things that she knew would trigger my bad moods.
And it was exhausting for her. And I didn't even know that she was doing this. So she was this unwilling participant in my grand experiment to create the best possible husband.
was, I'm out of the experiment and neither one of us needs to be working this hard all the time.
You stop trying to be this perfect husband. I'm going to stop trying to manage your moods and your energy and being your partner in this big experiment. I'm going to work on making myself
happy. I suggest you do the same. If we're going to stay together, I really need you to be happy
for yourself, by yourself,
and then we come together in the middle and share that happiness.
Wow.
I mean, that feels like progress.
I totally get what she's saying, too, about energy manager.
That's so real.
But I mean, now you have to manage your own energy.
How did you do that?
A fellow classroom dad, you know, the parents of somebody my kids went to school with, pulled me aside and was like, hey, you ever been mountain biking?
You want to go mountain biking with us this weekend?
Me and a group of guys are going.
I was like, oh, yeah, okay.
And I was immediately addicted.
First ride, I was like, I need to do this every day for the rest of my life.
And I am
all in. And Kristen said, perfect, Dave, that's the sort of heat that you need to follow. Like,
follow that, chase that feeling. What does that feel like? You don't need me to be part of that.
Go find a hobby that lights you up. And so I was like, all right. One of the first times where I thought, you know, maybe this unmarried isn't so bad. I was flying weightlessly down the side of a mountain in Park City, Utah, having the time of my life, laughing out loud, hooting, hollering, feeling every turn and every jump and every near-death experience with a tree or a rock and laughing
the whole way down the mountain. And I got to the bottom and I thought, you know what?
I'm here by myself. This feels like my soul is alive and on fire and I love it.
And I texted Kristen. I was like, I think I know what you mean.
texted Kristen, I was like, I think I know what you mean.
The previously married you, not the unmarried you, would not have done that, would not have leaned into this hobby, would not have leaned into this freedom?
No, because my Asperger model for faithful good husband was you do everything with your spouse, everything that you do that
you enjoy, every hobby, every undertaking, every lawn project, every whatever is with your partner.
I had become someone who is determined to be Dave Finch relative to his marriage with Kristen. And if it's a good
marriage, then I'm a good guy to be around. And if it's a bad marriage, then I suck.
But behind the scenes, Kristen had a different take. She was looking at it like, he's going to
all this trouble, all this effort, living and dying by rules. And Kristen was like, he's going to all this trouble, all this effort, living and dying by rules. And Kristen was
like, why don't you be Dave Finch? I'll be Kristen Finch. We'll have our marriage. And Dave, your
hobby cannot be our relationship. I started to see that what Kristen really meant, and this is
semantics, she probably meant anti-married. The way that we are married is not
working. We're going to flip it. It was more of a divestment from all the things that were really
holding us up in our relationship as opposed to a termination of a marriage. I just want to be
clear. Unmarried, anti-married kind of looks a lot like just being married? Yes. We are still totally subscribed to the traditional trappings of a marriage, meaning
we still live together. We are intimate with each other. We are exclusively faithful. Neither one of
us has any intention, design, desire to go outside of the marriage for anything other than friendships and hobbies.
It's more that we have parted ways with the other traditional trappings of marriage,
which is expectations and me needing you to be this thing that will never materialize.
Me needing the relationship to feel a certain way. We are anti-married because by throwing
those things aside, we actually have more room to enjoy watching each other flourish,
supporting each other, cheering each other on, being there when things are hard for each other.
The aspects of our marriage that we wanted in the first place, which is that joy of being together.
The marriage that she was done having was the marriage where
everything was a project. She was looking at it like, he's going to all this effort. I just want
to sit on the couch with him and watch TV. I just want to take a road trip with him and the kids to
an amusement park and just have fun together. I don't want everything to be a homework assignment.
Right.
But now, thanks to Kristen's
wisdom, we are committed to our own happiness first so that we can bring our happy selves to
this relationship. When Kristen said, hey, Dave, we're detaching, we're unmarried,
she knew that I wasn't going to organically feel my way through a very gray situation. She knows that I need
parameters. I need language. And I think she needed language too. So Dave, have you gotten
better at navigating those gray areas? Like, can you give me an example of what it's been like for
you to ease up on your project of having rules for everything in your life with Kristen?
I have. And here's an example. This past Thanksgiving,
Kristen decided, hey, we're going to do a Friendsgiving with her closest friend,
basically her sister, her ride or die down in Texas. And I said, sure, you know, we'll do a Friendsgiving. But behind it, what I'm thinking is, well, wait, Thanksgiving is a very specific set of events that happen. And now we're changing that. Is this even going to be a Thanksgiving? Or is it going to be just a complete, you know, nebulous, undefined scary fest for three or four days?
It wasn't even defined how long we would be there.
That's tough for you.
It is tough for me.
And the first impulse that comes in to my mind is, all right, we need some parameters on this.
I need to understand how do they prepare their turkey?
Is it brined? Is it deep fried?
This is Texas. It's Dallas. So is it going to be barbecued somehow, like under the ground with
some kind of seasoning on it? I don't know how they do it. So then I decide, all right,
you see what you're doing here, self. You could beat yourself up for the next three or four weeks
and try to understand this
and be miserable by the time you get in the car to go to Dallas. Or you could set one rule.
And that one rule is there really are no rules. When we go down there, if you're having fun,
then things are going in the right direction. Wow.
Did your hack of the one rule is there's no rules, did it work?
It did. And I knew it was working the next morning on the drive because normally I insist on driving always.
And I actually let Kristen drive for a couple hours. And
we all just had fun in the car. And I think if you're on a family trip,
and you're all having fun, by the time you reach your destination, you're still having fun and
laughing and it's going well. That's a miracle. Yeah. So after this 12, 13-hour drive, we pull into our friend's driveway.
And what I didn't know is that things were just going to get even better.
These are like exceedingly decent people, which means that they do not tart up their Thanksgiving dinner.
It was a turkey.
It was perfect.
Like everything you want in a turkey.
Like it was just a turkey. It was perfect. Like everything you want in a turkey. Like it was just a turkey. The best thing was the moments when Kristen would come over with either a glass of wine or a cup of tea or whatever. Kristen would come over and just sit down next to me and kind of lay into me like a blanket.
it. And I was like, all right, this is, I could do Friendsgiving if that's what this is. I could do this every year. Like the whole thing from start to finish, as much as I wasn't sure about
a Friendsgiving, I'm not sure I would do it any other way now. Dave Finch, I truly feel like I
took a masterclass in relationships and emotion and marriage. After all this, do you still stand by
your list of best practices? All of the best practices amounted to a surface clean to fix
myself so that I would appear to be the world's greatest partner. My bigger work then, my deeper
clean, is to be somebody who goes out and creates for himself a life that they
can then share with that chosen partner. But I stand by it. And so does Kristen. There were a
couple of clunkers. Some of them were truly admittedly. We all got some clunkers. Some of
them were aspirational. The two that come to mind are the laundry thing, right? Like I still to this
day root through the dryer for the one or two things I need and leave the rest in there. Oh, I wish you hadn't told me that. Oh, we'd come
to such an understanding. I'm so sorry, Anna. You just hurt my heart, but okay. I have my
limitations and that's one of them. I'll take it one step further. Since I am no longer somebody
who pines for everyone to like him, I'll admit this to you as well.
Not only do I do that, I will root through the dirty clothes hamper to take out my dirty stuff and just wash that.
Because it makes it so much easier when it's in the dryer for me to just take it out because I don't have to sift through other people's clothes.
All right, listeners, you can direct your hate mail to...
Kristen Finch.
Modern Love is produced by
Julia Botero,
Christina Josa,
Emily Lang,
and Reva Goldberg.
It's edited by Mark Pagan,
Jen Poyant,
and Paula Schumann.
Our executive producer is Jen Poyant, and Paula Schumann.
Our executive producer is Jen Poyant.
This episode was mixed by Daniel Ramirez.
Our show was recorded by Maddie Macielo.
Fact-checking by Caitlin Love and Kelsey Kudak.
The Modern Love theme music is by Dan Powell.
Original music by Dan Powell,
Marion Lozano,
Pat McCusker,
and Diane Wong.
Digital production by Mahima Chablani and Nelga Logli. The Modern Love column is edited by Daniel Jones. Mia Lee is the editor of Modern
Love Projects. I'm Anna Martin. Thanks for listening.