Trying to describe a good marriage is like trying to describe your adrenal glands. You know they're in there functioning but you don't really understand how they work.
The prerequisite for a good marriage. . . is the license to be unfaithful.
Good marriages are made in heaven. Or some such place.
Like a good marriage, trust on a team is never complete; it must be maintained over time.
In a good marriage each is the others better half.
If you're in a good marriage, you have the sense that it won't be forever.
A good marriage is different to a happy marriage.
Any good marriage involves a certain amount of play-acting.
A good marriage (if any there be) refuses the conditions of love and endeavors to present those of amity.
There are some good marriages, but practically no delightful ones.
A good marriage is really good after serving together in Washington, D. C.
The point of marriage is not to create a quick commonality by tearing down all boundaries on the contrary, a good marriage is one in which each partner appoints the other to be the guardian of his solitude, and thus they show each other the greatest possible trust.
The mark of a good marriage is partnership and continuing to feel inspired by your spouse.
It's the strings vibrating at the same time but separately that makes a good marriage. It messy, it's complicated and it's quite wonderful.
We had a shared experience. That makes a good marriage better. In many ways our marriage is great because she has made it great.
A good marriage can be ruined by poor communications - and by forgetting to put the lid back down.
Have you ever heard of a good marriage growing in front of the cameras?
Y'know, every relationship is different. There are good marriages, bad marriages, connected partners, unconnected partners.
To me, the difference between a good marriage and a great marriage is conviction.
The most important thing for a good marriage is to learn how to argue peaceably.