When unhappiness sets in, and there is no comfort or trust in the spouse to support you in all your emotions, then you have all kinds of problems.
There is a song by Meatloaf where he sings: “Will you love me forever ... will you make me happy for the rest of my life?” This is the expectation in modern dating, and it’s nothing short of delusional and out of proportion.
“Will you allow me to be sad when I just need to be sad or cry?” If you can do this for the person you love, you are a vehicle to helping them be happy. In turn, you are happy.
The lesson is this: A happy person is one who is allowed to be sad. The person you love allows you the room and time to let you get through your sadness. We don’t have to get the person we love to feel happy and cheerful again in order to get them back to themselves. In their times of sadness, they are very much themselves.
More in Dr. Alice von Hildebrand
Allow the people you love to be openly sad. Their sadness and tears in front of you is a great trust. Give them their time and foster happiness. Give them your permission to be sad, and be there with them, without judgment. Be comfortable with sadness.
It does seem impossible to be happy (truly happy) unless we have someone we love to get through our sad moments with. God knows something about sadness that is key to happiness.
Christ was sad. He sighed and He wept. He wept over Jerusalem, He wept at the death of His good friend, Lazarus before raising him from the dead. He was in agony in the garden. St. Thomas More wrote extensively about this which you can read in the book, The Sadness of Christ.
Christ is always someone we can be sad in front of. And He is always the source of happiness that is experienced as we are in communion with Him, particularly together through sharing His sorrowful passion. We should take comfort in that and be imitators of Christ when someone we love needs to be sad.