Welcome to Joanna Poppink’s Healing Library for Midlife Women

Psychotherapy insights, tools, and support for your journey 

 

Poppink psychotherapy transforms self-doubt and limited beliefs into strength, growth and change.
Move from compliance to authentic living.
 
Joanna Poppink, MFT
Depth Psychotherapist
serving Arizona, California, Florida and Oregon.
All appointments are virtual.
 
Please email Joanna for a free telephone consultation.
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marriage bargain trap

Does she know the hidden marriage bargain?   Did you?

 

Deconstructing Marriage to Rebuild Identity: uncovering the control once accepted

Many midlife women look back on decades of marriage and ask: Was I ever truly seen? On the surface, they may have lived within what society called a successful marriage. But beneath that surface often lived a quiet erosion of self. They learn, over years, that they were trapped in a role they never consciously agreed to.

Karen Horney, a pioneer in women's psychology research at a time when the male vision more severely dominated the field, anticipated what so many midlife women now recognize: marriage has too often been less about love and more about compliance. Culture glorified the devoted wife, but in doing so, it demanded that women sacrifice their independence, ambitions, and even their truth. Women accepted the overt promises of marriage while also believing, over time, that their identity equalled a life of sacrifice. 

Narcissistic Marriage: A Hidden Contract

Horney described how marriage can become a narcissistic arrangement. The husband, often unconsciously, expects his wife to mirror his worth and protect his image. Society reinforces this by rewarding women who comply with praise for loyalty, selflessness, and “being a good wife.”

For many women, the bargain felt invisible at first. They were told, and often accepted, a male-dominated definition of marriage and a woman's role, even a woman's identity: This is what marriage is. But over time, the costs to a woman's heart and soul could become. Familiar Conversations:

  • “You’re overreacting again. You always take things so personally.”
  • “If you loved me, you’d support my decisions without question.”
  • “Don’t make me look bad in front of the kids.”
  • "Make sure I know where you are and what you are doing."
  • "Make sure I know who you are with."
  • "That class or course or hobby is a waste of time. You need to be home taking care of me and the kids."

These words sting because they are not about partnership, but about control.

The Hidden Control Bargains

These bargains are rarely spoken aloud. Instead, they emerge in subtle ways:

  • Silence your anger, and you will be loved.
  • Set aside your ambitions, and you will be safe.
  • Reflect his worth, and you will be worthy.
  • Stay loyal, even when neglected, and you will be respected.

Each hidden bargain limits a woman’s voice, narrows her choices, and confines her life. These agreements trap her by disguising control as care and domination as devotion.

The Trap Becomes the Norm

Because these bargains are reinforced by culture, religion, and family tradition, many women do not recognize them as traps. They are praised for being “good wives,” “devoted partners,” or “lucky women.” What is happening is the slow erosion of their real selves. A woman may find that she no longer remembers what she once wanted, or even what she likes, outside the confines of her role.

 

When Women Begin to See Clearly

Awareness begins when a woman notices the cost of the bargains she has made. She may realize that she has been living as a mirror to someone else’s needs, or that her freedom has been traded away for appearances. This realization is unsettling—sometimes frightening—because it threatens the entire foundation of her marriage. Yet it is also the beginning of liberation.

How Men React to Women’s Awareness

Not all men respond the same way when women refuse to keep the bargains:

Some reflect. They may begin to examine their own assumptions and step into a new, more equal form of partnership.

Some retreat. They withdraw rather than face equality, leaving the woman to choose between silence and loneliness.

Some resist fiercely. They may mock, dismiss, or punish a woman who asserts her autonomy.

Women need to prepare for all three possibilities.

The Risks and Rewards of Breaking Free

 

Breaking free from hidden control bargains does not always mean leaving the marriage—it means refusing to live trapped inside it. The risks are real: conflict, anger, cultural pushback. But the rewards are profound:

  • Regaining one’s voice and choices.
  • Rediscovering a sense of authenticity.
  • Rebuilding life on terms that feel honest and free.
  • Opening the possibility of genuine, reciprocal love.

Divorce: The Breaking of the Agreement

For midlife women, divorce often comes when the old compliance no longer feels possible. Sometimes it’s sparked by health challenges, children leaving home, or the deep fatigue of self-betrayal. A woman might quietly stop smoothing over conflicts, or she may finally declare: I need a life of my own.

The husband experiences this as shocking betrayal: the contract has been broken. But for the woman, it feels like oxygen rushing into a suffocating room.

After Divorce: What Men Seek

Men who relied on narcissistic marriage often look for a new partner who will comply. Age and physical appearance can play a role—youth offers both status and the promise of pliability—but the true currency is compliance. Will she mirror him? Will she protect the image? Will she defer to his needs?

This explains why some men pursue much younger partners: not only for beauty, but for power.

Women’s Awakening: New Eyes in Dating

Midlife women who leave such marriages approach dating differently. With awareness sharpened by experience, they no longer mistake charm for love. They listen for accountability, reciprocity, and respect. They may ask quietly: Does he see me as a partner—or a prop?

And because they know their worth, they are less likely to settle.

Choosing Singleness: A Powerful Path

A growing number of midlife and older women take their awakening one step further: they choose not to remarry at all.

This is not a rejection of intimacy or connection, but a refusal of the old bargain. Such women may enjoy relationships with men—dating, companionship, even love—but they no longer want or need a lifetime contract built on sacrifice.

They find fulfillment in friendships, creative pursuits, spirituality, careers, grandchildren, travel, or quiet independence. For these women, singleness is not loneliness—it is liberation. It is the ability to say: I belong to myself, and anyone in my life is here by choice, not obligation.

Men’s Reactions to Women’s Refusal to Accept the Old Bargain

Not all men welcome this shift. Some develop. They recognize that the old contract was destructive for them as well. They discover new intimacy in partnerships rooted in equality.

But others resist, angry at what they see as rejection. They may accuse women of being “cold,” “selfish,” or “too independent.” These reactions reveal how deeply the narcissistic marriage contract has been normalized in culture.

Positive and Negative Outcomes

The outcomes vary. On the positive side, many women are building relationships—romantic or platonic—that are deeply authentic. They also thrive in communities of women, in creative expression, and in a sense of dignity they once thought impossible.

On the negative side, polarization grows. Some women feel alienated in dating scenes where old dynamics still dominate. Some men, unwilling to change, grow bitter.

But even these tensions mark progress. As Horney argued, real growth always disrupts before it heals.

Practical Takeaways for Midlife Women

  1. Awareness is protection. Recognizing the narcissistic contract is the first step to refusing it.
  2. Partnership is optional. Companionship, dating, and love can flourish without a binding contract.
  3. Boundaries create freedom. If a relationship requires the erasure of your independence, it is not love.
  4. Singleness is not failure. Choosing yourself is a profound act of strength.

Resources

This Website

Midlife Women: When Rage Becomes a Healing Force

Midlife Women: When Disapproval Validates and Approval Undermines

Midlife Women Worksheet: Power After Narcissistic Manipulation

Joanna Poppink, MFT
Licensed Psychotherapist — California, Arizona, Florida, Oregon — online private practice for midlife women
Specializing in narcissistic abuse recovery, transitions, eating disorder recovery, and depth psychotherapy for women in midlife and beyond
To request a free telephone consultation, write This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

    Summary

    Karen Horney’s psychology of women reveals how many marriages were sustained by narcissistic contracts of compliance rather than love. Divorce often follows when women break this contract, choosing freedom over erasure. Some men seek replacements, while women—with new awareness—reshape dating, or in many cases, decide to remain single. For these women, relationships are chosen, not required. Fulfillment comes not from lifelong contracts, but from authenticity, independence, and dignity.

    FAQ

    What is a narcissistic marriage?

    A marriage where one partner expects the other to serve as a mirror for their worth and image, often at the cost of the other’s self.

    Why do many midlife divorces happen?

    Because women stop complying with the unspoken contract, choosing to honor more of their emerging and authentic self. They move toward development and independence.

    Do women need marriage for fulfillment?

    No. Many find deep meaning in singleness, building lives rich with community, creativity, and self-determination.

    How do men react to women’s refusal to maintain compliance to the narcissistic model?

    Some men gain more awareness and develop themselves. They grow into healthier and respectful partnerships; others resist with anger or blame. Some resort to emotional, financial or physical violence.

    What is the positive outcome of this shift?

    For the man: the opportunity to develop beyond his previous limitations and expectations.

    For the woman: the ability to shape her life and relationships by choice, not cultural obligation.

     

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