If Marriage Were an Airplane, Which Matters More—the Engine or the Wings?

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plane-is-taking-off-at-sunset
(Image/bt.dk)

I’m not an aviation expert or aeronautical engineer, but I’m pretty sure airplanes need their engines AND wings both to be working properly for a flight to be successful.

And think about how much is at stake.

When an automobile stops working, we can usually pull it over to the side of the road without much danger or risk.

Even when a boat hull fails, we have a fair chance of surviving with floatation devices and swimming, so long as land is within reach.

But when an airplane stops working, the results are usually very, very, very bad. We don’t need to talk about it.

I’m probably biased because nothing worse than divorce has ever happened to me, but I perceive the stakes involved in marriage to be similar to an airplane ride. If you’re anything like me, a part of you dies once you don’t get to be someone’s spouse, or someone’s all-the-time parent anymore. A part of you dies once you realize you’re a single parent and have to go through life under conditions you’d never even conceived of before.

Damaged, maybe broken. Baggage. Guilt. Uncertainty. Maybe anger. Probably regret.

You get it.

Divorce sucks ass.

I’ve not been in an airplane accident, but I can imagine they are, you know, really awful.

So which matters more?

The engine?

Or the wings?

How Marriage is Like an Airplane

I think it’s easy for people—young people, particularly—who have never been taught otherwise to think about marriage the same way they think about their current dating relationship with their girlfriend or boyfriend.

You remember being in high school or college-aged and feeling in love?

It was the cutest shit, ever. You missed one another because you were apart all of the time, either living with your parents in high school, or involved in various social or educational activities in college, or super-busy at work during your early adult years.

It’s EASY.

And I think young men and women ask themselves after a year or two of dating: Is there any reason to believe we can’t just keep doing this forever?

And of course, everyone thinks they can.

Everyone thinks they can be Forever Boyfriend and Girlfriend.

Two individuals with individual lives who complement one another so well.

But then MARRIAGE happens—or even just a marriage-like forever commitment and co-habitation scenario materializes—and suddenly we’re dealing with something else. And I think the ability or inability to understand the difference between the before and after is what determines the success or failure of most marriages.

A marriage is like an airplane.

It’s NOT two individual things in close proximity to one another.

It’s two things (the spouses) totally and complete fused together to form ONE thing (the marriage).

One spouse is the wings.

One spouse is the engine.

And to put it bluntly, the reason MOST relationships fail is because one of them stops functioning as its needed.

When the engine dies, the plane crashes.

When the wings fall off, the plane crashes.

When one spouse isn’t giving to the marriage what the marriage requires, the marriage dies. Every time.

We can’t rely on just one critical airplane component to get us to our destination.

We can’t rely on just one spouse to hold a marriage together, and certainly not to nurture one and make it thrive.

A marriage isn’t just two things.

A marriage is one thing. One vitally important thing.

But a marriage is comprised of two individual, but equally vital parts. One cannot work without the other.

You can be broken wings before you’re airborne.

You can be a non-firing engine while sitting still on the ground.

You can NOT feel the pressure of being responsible for the lives of others as a single person with no one but yourself to care for and answer to. That is an option, and one worthy of consideration.

But we all know that’s not what most people do. Most people get married, or couple up. About 95 percent of people, in fact.

And as soon as you do, you no longer get to take days off. You don’t get to only function some of the time.

When the plane is in the air, there’s very little margin for error.

Once you take the vows—once you promise someone forever. Once you make and share children. Once you form a home. A life.

You’re an airplane in flight.

Maybe the wings.

Maybe the engine.

In either case, there’s only one way that it ends the way you want it to—working in tandem every day, forever.

And the sky is a blank canvas, a crossroads with never-ending options, a compass with unlimited possibilities.

A place above the clouds.

Where love is the fuel.

Fly.

15 thoughts on “If Marriage Were an Airplane, Which Matters More—the Engine or the Wings?”

  1. I LOVE IT!!!!!! (Nothing else to add here, other than a “hip-hip-hooray” for a post well written).

  2. Wings.

    If you have a momentary – or even extended – loss of power from the engine, you can glide for a long time. When power is restored, you can continue flying normally. And even if the engine never comes back on, you can often glide to a safe landing.

    If engine is all you have, then when it stutters, you’re going to crash. I’ve flown in airplanes like that. If the engine fails, you can take a couple of minutes trying for an inflight restart. If that doesn’t work, the only option is to pull the handle and eject. I never had to do that in an airplane – but I did have to do that in my first marriage.

    1. Damnit, Ken.

      You literalist.

      How about we limit it to jet planes without thrust, or wings where the slats, spoilers and flaps aren’t functioning?

      Work with me here, man.

      1. “Work with me”, you say. OK. We’ve all known people where the relationship was “all engines”; incredibly intense and hot, went straight up, flamed out quickly, and crashed hard. All engine is bad. Unless you’re Elon Musk. (You can quote me on that.)

        Wings, on the other hand, can keep a good relationship going even through times of trouble. As Jenny4 notes below, every relationship WILL have problems; money, health, sex, whatever. Good wings, like a sailplane’s, will keep you up for quite a while, even when the engine is off or idling. You can even catch thermal currents that will lift you very high without any thrust at all. And if that doesn’t happen, at least the bump at the end of the flight can be gentle. We’ve all known people who have just coasted along in their relationships for years, without seeming to put forth much effort, gentle, calm, serene, and going places without _seeming_to_ push too hard.

        So while every airplane needs a balance between wings and engines, the wings are most important if you plan on a long flight.

        Literalist? Yeah, when it comes to airplanes. Look at my WordPress avatar and you’ll understand. 🙂

    2. Love this analogy. You can last just a little bit without an engine but glide a long time with wings. I could take this a step further and say sometimes spouses carry the marriage by themselves, independently due to whatever reason (health, financial, general assholery) but they can’t carry the burden forever. It all eventually crashes if both aren’t working together. Great stuff.

    3. I was going to say the same.

      You need both for a normal flight, but Scully demonstrated that if you lose your engines, you can still save the crew and passengers by using what you have, your wings, velocity and altitude to find a safer outcome and ditch in the Hudson River.

      So the plane may be your marriage, the two adults the crew, and the children are the passengers.

      If the engines stall, you may be able to restart. But if not, you may be able to find a safer outcome.

      But if someone pulls the wings off, it’s hard to recover from that.

      Too many people pull the wings off their plane by choosing divorce when all they needed to do was restart their engines.

  3. You absolutely hit it, Matt. That’s exactly it. An airplane works same as a relationship. Even though I haven’t been in a marriage (and never plan to anymore) but in a serious – very serious tbh – relationship, I still know how it feels. I’ve been in the airplane, it took off and it crashed. And it hurts. But it’s a good way, actually perfect, to explain how this world works…
    Thank you for sharing this. You really hit it! Ciao, L

  4. LOL, I like it, Matt. Well done.

    You actually need two people with angel wings! Seriously,none of us actually are or ever will be, but if you both strive to serve one another, marriage just glides right along. I think a big problem is that there are often too many engines sputtering and not enough wings.

  5. Thank you for another brilliant analogy, Matt! I love the way you put the most complicated ideas into the most relatable terms, like a Master Storyteller. I know that some folks will try to turn a plane or a dish symbol into just that, an actual plane or dish, God bless them. But your symbology wonderfully reveals the most detailed nuances in ways that cold and dry terms could never do. Thanks again.

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Matt Fray

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