A metaphor for happy marriage?

This week my new book, Lessons Learned: Stories from Dual-Physician Marriages was released. The book profiles 35 happily married couples who share the lessons they feel have contributed to  the success of their partnerships. 

Over the past two weeks, I’ve spent a few hours watching the Olympics—especially the ice skating events. Seeing the remarkable performance of married couple Madison Chock and Evan Bates made me realize that Olympic pairs figure skating can serve as a beautiful metaphor for a happy marriage.

Here’s why I think the metaphor works so well:

1. Trust at the Center

In pairs skating, one partner literally lifts and throws the other into the air. That only works with deep trust. In marriage, emotional “lifts” happen too — supporting dreams, carrying each other through hard times, trusting that you won’t be dropped.

2. Strength + Grace Together

Pairs skating isn’t just about beauty; it requires strength, precision, and resilience.
Happy marriages also combine tenderness with toughness. Grace alone isn’t enough — neither is strength alone.

3. Individual Skill, Shared Performance

Each skater must be strong individually before they can move beautifully together.
In healthy marriages, two whole people choose to move in harmony — not lose themselves, but coordinate.

4. Communication Without Words

Skaters communicate through subtle shifts of weight, eye contact, timing.
Happy couples often develop the same rhythm — sensing when to lead, when to follow, when to steady the other.

5. Falling Is Part of It

Even Olympic skaters fall. What matters is recovery.
Likewise, happy marriages aren’t free of mistakes — they’re good at repairing them.

6. Practice Behind the Scenes

The flawless performance comes from countless hours of unseen effort.
Strong marriages also depend on daily, quiet work: conversations, compromise, forgiveness

Bottom line:

Sometimes one partner leads the spin.

Sometimes roles reverse.

The music changes — and the couple adapts.

The goal isn’t perfection, but finishing the routine together.

I‘d love to hear your thoughts