Photo Credit: Brook Mosser - Instagram: @brookmosser |
From the
letters I receive, I think it’s safe to say that none of us expected marriage
to be so hard. Most of us thought we were marrying our best friend and lover
and looked forward to being with them forever.
But it
doesn’t take long for the marital bliss to wear off. Couples write me saying
that the trouble started as soon as they got back from their honeymoon…or even
during their honeymoon!
If we marry, we will have
trouble.
It turns out
that the Bible warned us that if we married, we would have trouble (1 Corinthians 7:28 NIV)!
The Bible is
not an antiquated book filled with rules to make us miserable. God’s commands
are designed to help us, not to harm us. So when the apostle Paul warns us that
if we marry, we will have trouble, he is just giving us a heads up on what to
expect. Paul points out that marriage itself brings distractions -- as opposed
to celibacy. These distractions that come to the married create distress and
troubles for the marriage.
How we handle conflict is key.
Nothing
kills the feeling of love like conflict…whether it’s overt conflict or simmering,
below-the-surface conflict.
Conflict in
itself is not bad. In fact, it’s essential and unavoidable in good
relationships. But it’s how we handle the conflict that can be
deadly to a marriage.
The quicker couples can accept a
degree of conflict, the better off they will be.
Again, God
has allowed these marital stresses. Obviously, I am not saying that all conflict is designed by God, but I
encourage couples not to freak out and claim they've made a mistake because
they have tension in their marriage. They are in the center of God's will, not
outside of His will!
You don’t need to stay stuck in a
cycle of conflict.
This is not
to say that God wants us to stay stuck in conflict! The good news is this cycle
can be broken. We call it the Crazy Cycle, and we made some discoveries that can help you get out of this
cycle and begin to enjoy your marriage again.
What did we discover?
Research reveals that during marital conflict a husband most often reacts when feeling
disrespected and a wife reacts when feeling unloved.
Though we all need love and respect equally, the felt need differs during conflict. For
example, if a woman feels unloved during conflict, her natural reaction is to
respond disrespectfully. And when a husband feels disrespected during conflict,
his reaction is to respond unlovingly. This is when the Crazy Cycle starts to
spin: “Without love a wife reacts without respect, and without respect a
husband reacts without love.”
Both need love and respect but there's a different
emphasis. The best way to respect a wife is to love her based on her need for
love. The best way to love a husband is to respect him based on his need for
respect.
Make your marriage easier!
Are you
ready to break the cycle of conflict and move towards more peace in your
marriage?
Try a new
approach. The next time the Crazy
Cycle spins out of control, ask yourself:
Does my wife need reassurance of my love even though we are in conflict?
Does my husband need to know I respect him even though I don't agree with him on this issue?
Remember,
some conflict is healthy. It’s how you deal with that conflict that can make or
break a marriage.
Try more love and
respect and see if your marriage gets a little easier.
Emerson
1 comment:
We don't usually understand when we get married that God orchestrated this union of two very different people in order for us to each grow up! Character weaknesses such as self-centeredness needs to be addressed through safe, healthy conflict. We are like fine sandpaper, polishing each other to make the other more beautiful and whole. Or another way to say it is, we are like mirrors for each other; sometimes we balk at what we are being shown, but it is for our growth and ultimate good.
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