How Sean Lowe and Catherine Giudici Bested Those Bachelor Odds

Lest Sean Lowe and Catherine Giudici Lowe forget where their journey began, they need only walk past the master bedroom in their Dallas-area pad. 

That's where the graphic designer has framed the final final rose season 17's Bachelor presented her back in that Thai forest in late 2012 right after he promised to tell her he loved her every day of the rest of their lives.

"It made sense to dry this one and make it permanent because it was accompanied by a ring and a proposal," she explained to Entertainment Tonight in 2017, "so this is a really special thing."

Because that last rose ceremony, complete with an elephant ride and a $75,000 Neil Lane diamond is as much part of their story as the the sweet, suburban life that followed. "We don't want to shy away from the fact that we got engaged and fell in love on The Bachelor," she said, "so that is the only red rose I will allow in my house!"

So, uh, we know one thing Sean won't be bringing home to celebrate their tenth wedding anniversary Jan. 26. 

Though it makes sense that the Seattle native, 37, would be appropriately leery of allowing too much bad Bachelor ju-ju into their house. After all, it's not as if ABC's love hunt is teeming with success stories.

In 27 seasons of the original iteration of the series, in which an eligible, well, bachelor, is tasked with finding his forever in a group of 25 or so hopeful brides, exactly one guy—the 40-year-old former Kansas State football player—has wed his final rose recipient. (Though Jason Mesnick and Arie Luyendyk Jr. get partial credit for reversing course post-finale to commit to their runners up and both Matt James and Zach Shallcross have a shot at joining Sean in the winner's circle.) 

"This is the moment my life changed forever," the founder of stationary company LoweCo reminisced of Sean's proposal ahead of Peter Weber's final episode in 2020. "Seven years and an unnecessary amount of dumb jokes later, I'm not sure it changed for the better."

Ah, the public roast, a surefire sign your union is strong enough to withstand any gentle ribbing.

Because a decade removed from their televised vows, the Lowes are parents to sons Samuel, 7, and Isaiah, 5, and daughter Mia, 4, and the unofficial Mom and Dad of Bachelor Nation, often called upon to give their sage wisdom on how to make things work after the helicopters, hot tubs and endless glasses of champagne are packed away.

For all their shared trolling, the home they've built in Dallas complete with pee wee football games and Frozen viewings and online trolling only rivaled still closely resembles the ideal she and the season 22 lead envisioned when they rode an elephant off into the Thai sunset, final rose in hand. 

"Every day, we get to love on each other and spend so much time together," Catherine told E! News last year. "And I know it sounds so corny, but in the beginning of our relationship, we wanted to build a house full of love and full of laughter. And we've created that. And it's so wonderful for us to live out what we said we were going to do."

And as much as raising kids can seem like an exercise in chaos, "We feel so grateful that our kids get along with each other and they're sweet, they're polite, they're curious," raved Catherine. "So we feel like we've been dealt a very good hand right now. And we're just taking it in."

 

For all the glamour surrounding their courtship, this is the true fantasy. 

"Honestly, if I could capture the feeling that we have in our house, it is exactly what we wanted," said Catherine. "We're living in a dream world. We're very, very blessed."

And after countless interviews, blog posts and one book—Lowe's 2015 tome, For the Right Reasons: America's Favorite Bachelor on Faith, Love, Marriage, and Why Nice Guys Finish First—they've come up with a few working theories. Will you choose to accept their recommendations?

Sure, the Texas-bred real estate developer did the requisite spin around the Dancing With the Stars ballroom, but after collecting his sixth-place finish with partner Peta Murgatroyd, he and his new bride happily retreated to the 'burbs á la OG Bachelorette Trista Sutter

And while they're not above a bit of sponcon or a stint on Marriage Boot Camp ("I'll admit it: I did it for the money," he revealed in a blog post) mostly, as he put it to Entertainment Tonight, "We're not the typical Bachelor couple. We don't do a lot of the Bachelor reunions and go and meet up—that's just not us. We live our own life and do our own thing, so we don't really feel that pressure and that's the way we like it."

Though some pairs can be wishy-washy in their plans to make it work, the future Mr. and Mrs. Lowe made the practical choice to close the more than 2,000-mile gap between them.

"I give a lot of credit to Catherine because Catherine had to leave her hometown of Seattle, leave her job, leave her friends and basically start a new life with me," he told E! News in 2019. "But she committed to love me and to work on our relationship and she continued to work after we were married in our marriage to be the best wife she possibly could be, which isn't always easy after making all those sacrifices."

Though Sean gives his bride the credit for fully buying into their romance post-show, he did his part, too.

"In the circumstances where you start your relationship, everything is against you and especially with the man being the lead on a show like this there's a lot of female attention that you get and a lot of just new, exciting things you could take advantage of," she noted to E! News of his unwavering commitment. "And I think that Sean did a really good job of making it clear that he was not interested in anybody else even though he could've."

The key to that, Sean says, was not buying into his own hype. Though the born-again virgin Bachelor was certainly in demand with his clean-cut looks and good guy charms, "Despite the attention you receive, the talk shows you're on, or the money you're offered, you're still just a normal person," he stressed in a 2015 blog post. "Don't let the 'fame' stuff go to your head. I've heard first-hand from a couple of different bachelors how being in the spotlight was detrimental to their relationship. Don't let the bright lights and sparkly things distract you from the person you love."

It's number two on Sean's 2015 list, right after committing hard. In those heady early days of secret happy couple weekends and making plans for their televised vows, "everything was so exciting," he recalled. "We were in love and we couldn't imagine having hard times or experiencing any issues that might endanger the relationship. That naivety wore off pretty quickly once we were thrust into the real world." 

There, they struggled with each other's various quirks and Catherine went through bouts of homesickness made all the more difficult by Sean's lengthy DWTS rehearsals. "Your relationship is going to run into issues both big and small. It's imperative that you find a way to work through them," he shared. "If you do, you'll come out even stronger. I look at our marriage now and am amazed how much we've grown since those first few months of being together."

Proving some well-worn phrases are well-worn for a reason, Catherine told Entertainment Tonight their first year of marriage was, indeed, the hardest: "But once you go through those hardships, you grow, understand each other better and understand what you need better."

She's kinda messy; he's super neat. Not huge things, but issues that can feel magnified in those initial months of cohabitation. "We really had to understand our boundaries," Catherine told ET, "what makes each other tick, what things we need to let go and what things are important to each other."

While Sean mastered the art of listening ("I was a typical dude," he admitted. "If she was upset about something, I would say, 'If you just do this, that would fix the problem.' Well, she's not looking for me to fix the problem—she wants me to empathize,") Catherine adopted a mantra that's helped her at peak annoyance.

"I think I have learned better patience when it comes to our marriage and that rage is kind of a waste of time," she noted to E! News in 2018. "I've been slower to anger when I remember how much Sean loves me and I'm better at explaining how I feel."

This is one Sean feels should be in relationship guidebooks. "I wish someone would have prepared me better for this," he admitted to Redbook in 2015 when they were just one year into their marriage. "It's difficult to know how to love your wife when you've upset her. Because so many times when I've upset her, I end up getting upset just because she's upset and it's a bad way to behave. In that moment, what she really needs is for me to love her."

Granted, Catherine offered her tips to Glamour back in 2014, well before kids, but its best to establish such practices early. "Carving out a date night every week or two is a something that works for us," she explained, sharing that they'd each made a list of dream dates ranging from casual to fancy, then swapped notes. "It'll help to understand what the other person expects so your date can be enjoyable all around," she said.

Thanks to those cheat sheets or what she calls "your Dating for Dummies guide," Sean knows she prefers theme dates "such as going to a Chinese restaurant and then the Chinese Lantern Festival or grilling hotdogs and watching a baseball game," she said. "As long as there's intention behind it—a plan—I'll swoon."

He really meant it back in Thailand when he vowed to say "I love you" on the regular.

"Not only has he told me," she shared with ET of his daily affirmations, "he's shown me. If I say, 'Baby I need you to change this diaper, will you do that?' He's never said no to me once. And…as a new mom, as a wife, you just need someone to say, 'I'll do it.'"

Particularly when, as Sean joked on Instagram, "We're multiplying like rabbits over here."

The oft-cited guide helped them learn early on that "Sean is a Words of Affirmation guy," she shared with Glamour. In addition to laying it on thick with the compliments, the stationary designer leaves him notes "to tell him how much I appreciate him."

He, in turn, "holds my hand everywhere because I'm a Physical Touch kind of girl." And, et voilá, one happy couple. 

This story was originally published on Wednesday, April 29, 2020 at 3 a.m. PT.

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