There are some things in life where you really, really hope the first time is a charm -- marriage, declaring a college major, and bungee-jumping, for example.

Most parents will tolerate a few academic false starts (or force you to pick up the tuition tab for the fifth, sixth, and seventh years). And every bungee instructor will quadruple-check your harness.

Yet despite the staggering rate at which official couplings go splat, many people make multiple attempts at marriage. Even in the best of circumstances, those who have been hitched (formally or not) drag more than just half of a CD collection and in-law issues down the aisle. They also bring into their relationships a full trunk of financial baggage that can't be kicked curbside.

Money details for do-overs
If your first coupling wasn't happily ever after, there are things to do to get it right the second time around.

Dredge up the past: Yes, you need to have "the talk." No, it doesn't have to be squirmy and painful. To break the ice with your bride or groom, start with a few warm-up questions (e.g., "If you had $50 to burn, what would you spend it on?") and then move on to the harder questions (e.g., "Let's talk about how your mother handled the family finances.").

Deal with your exes: Divorce is complicated and can leave both emotional and financial scars. Some of the sore spots -- such as long-forgotten joint credit cards -- can take a while to surface. Don't ignore potential past mistakes that could haunt your new romance. Fess up and face them together.

Discuss how you'll handle the day-to-day: There are bills to pay, accounts to reconcile. And somebody has to give the dog her heartworm pill. There are many unpleasant tasks that need to get done (and not necessarily how you'd like them to be), so you might have to bite the bullet and, yes, compromise. (Stop making that sour face.) Play to each of your strengths -- maybe one of you is a whiz at balancing a budget and the other is great at shopping for cheap travel deals. Divide and conquer. As for the "his," "hers," or "ours" account question, there are pros and cons to each. See "Should You Have Separate Accounts?" to decide what makes sense for you.

Consider getting a prenuptial or postnuptial agreement: Should your starry-eyed love flicker out, or if one partner -- cue stage whisper -- dies, such documents identify the assets each of you is bringing to the marriage and spell out who gets what. When you make any joint purchases, be sure to discuss how you will handle these assets.

Develop a new estate plan, including new wills, durable powers of attorney, living wills, health-care proxies, and trusts: Bummer, I know. But even worse is going through an emotionally trying time without these important documents in place. At a bare minimum, there are five things your honey has to know. (Click that hyperlink and hit "print" to get it done.)

Don't feed each other's bad habits: Maybe you're both on the same page about spending and saving. But is it the right page? Part of being a team means that one person sometimes needs to play "bad cop" for the good of the union.

Bask in your togetherness: There are a lot of other financial benefits to being part of a twosome, such as scoring banking deals, insurance savings, and more. Make sure you and your Sig. O make the most of them. (Here's how to cash in on coupledom.)

Plan your future together: The past matters, sure, but the future is what keeps your relationship going. Just because you're starting over doesn't mean you're starting financially anew. Consider the shared knowledge, fully funded IRAs, and savings tricks you each bring to the relationship. Then combine your talents and start making plans to make your money go even further together. Pick goals that keep you both jazzed about what's in store for your relationship. Plan your vacation, early retirement, or home addition. Then map out the money details that will get the job done.

These are some key nuts-and-bolts moves that will smooth the transition into a second marriage for people who have merged their money with another's in the past. All this stuff is important, though, whether it's your first or fifth time saying "I do."

More ways to keep the love torch lit and the finances up to snuff: