My husband and I celebrated our 30th wedding anniversary in March, and I can’t believe how fast it’s gone.
Thirty years sounds like a lifetime, and in many ways it is. We’ve raised two kids, built careers, navigated illness, experienced loss, and grown through more life stages than I could have imagined when we first started out.
Looking back, I’ve realized that a long-lasting marriage doesn’t just teach you how to stay together. It teaches you how to live. Over three decades, the lessons become less about the relationship itself and more about what actually matters.
Laughter is everything
The most important lesson, by far, is laughter. It’s something I say all the time, but after 30 years, I know it’s true. If you aren’t laughing together early, when life is easy and fun, you will struggle when life gets hard. And life gets hard. There are seasons you don’t see coming, moments that test you, and experiences that shift everything.
Laughter becomes the thing that pulls you back to each other. It softens the edges of stress, diffuses tension, and reminds you why you chose each other in the first place. It gives you a way through when there isn’t a clear solution. The couples who last are often the ones who can still laugh together, even when things are tough.
Experiences matter more than things
Another lesson that becomes clearer over time is that experiences matter far more than material objects. I couldn’t tell you what gifts we exchanged for most anniversaries or holidays. They’ve faded into the background.
But I can vividly remember trips we took, places we explored, and even the simplest moments where everything just felt right. Those are the things that stay with you.
When you’re building a life, it’s easy to focus on accumulating things that make you feel secure or successful. But what you end up valuing most are the shared experiences that create memories, connection, and meaning over time.
The years with your kids go fast
Raising kids brings its own lessons, and they really only become fully clear in hindsight. When you’re in the middle of it, the days can feel long and exhausting. Your life revolves around children’s schedules, activities, and constant demands on your time and energy.
But when you look back, it feels like it all happened in a blink. One day you’re packing lunches and driving to practices, and the next you’re standing in a quiet house wondering where the years went.
Thirty years of marriage have shown me that those seasons are incredibly short, even when they don’t feel like it in the moment.
It makes you realize how important it is to be present while you’re in it because you don’t get that time back.
Trust and shared values matter most
Over time, you also learn that trust and shared values matter far more than getting everything right. No one has a perfect marriage for 30 years. There are disagreements, misunderstandings, and moments where you fall short.
What carries you through isn’t perfection, it’s knowing you’re on the same team. It’s having a foundation of trust and a shared understanding of what matters most. That becomes the anchor during the harder-to-navigate times, when life feels uncertain or overwhelming.
Life goes faster than you think
The biggest lesson of all is how quickly life moves. After 30 years together, especially after walking through life, loss, illness, and grief, you become much more aware of how precious time really is.
You start to see how much of your life is already behind you, and it changes your perspective on what’s ahead of you. The things that once felt urgent or frustrating don’t carry the same weight anymore. The small stuff becomes just that, small.
You become more intentional about how you spend your time and who you spend it with. You stop getting caught up in things that don’t matter and start focusing on what does. You appreciate the everyday moments more because you understand how quickly they pass.
Thirty years of marriage didn’t just teach me how to be a better partner. It taught me how to live a better life. It taught me to laugh more, to value experiences over things, to be present with the people I love, and to let go of what doesn’t matter.
Because in the end, life goes fast. And how you spend it and with whom matters more than anything.
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