Some say that the most important thing in a marriage is to be of one mind. If your partner starts a company selling software, you sell software together; if you sell fried dough sticks at a stall, you sell fried dough sticks together. When the business grows big, you are happy together; when it fails, you share the burden. Many people think that love, romance, and passion are the most important in marriage. But these things often appear only in good times. What truly tests a marriage is never flowers and applause, but downturns and pressure. When someone loses their job, fails in entrepreneurship, gets sick, or is in debt, the other person either starts calculating gains and losses or chooses to stand in the same direction. Only then can you see the true nature of the marriage. Therefore, the most precious quality in marriage may not be virtue or capability, but the willingness to become each other's allies in critical moments. Adding flowers to a cake is not difficult; facing hardships together is the real challenge. Many can enjoy the results together, but few can bear the consequences together. And it is the latter that is the most precious true love in marriage.

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