This is an article that I saw and thought Yeah! This is so true! I keep hearing about people ending their
marriages and I feel sad for them. It’s
like they need to really get to the point where their marriage is the most
important relationship they have. It has
to be that thing that they put lots of value on... that they are willing to
fight to keep!
By Kevin East
It's
true. Occasionally, my wife and I get into it. Figuratively
speaking, we kick, punch, claw, wrestle and just plainly get mad.
Throughout our marriage, the fighting hasn't gotten better; it's actually
intensified. And now here we sit, with a total of 5 kids in our home, and
we realize we have a problem. The problem: we aren't fighting enough.
For years we have spent time with couples in pre-marital counseling, talking to
them about how God's desire in marriage is oneness. This oneness can be
described as intimate, sacrificial, transparent love for each other. It's
the type of love that demonstrates to this world the love that God has for His
people. Our other option - isolation.
Years ago Steph and I attended a marriage conference hosted by Family Life. This lesson of oneness vs isolation has
probably been what Steph and I remember most about that weekend. We
walked away realizing that unless we were purposeful at pursuing each other, we
would slowly drift apart.
Fast forward all the way to a few weeks ago. Steph and I were on a date,
fumbling around over dinner. I asked her the question how she thought we
were doing with having 2 foster kids in addition to our 3 kids. (A total
of 5 under the age of 5). What we realized on that date was that we were
drifting. Our marriage was fine, but we could see the small degree of
separation that was forming due to all the craziness of life.
Even after our date I sent out this tweet:
"It's Date night with Steph. Can't express how much we needed to reconnect."
When you first get married, you kind of just ride on that cloud of the
freshness in marriage. That lasts for a while. And then change
begins. Add a child, some financial difficulty, some unexpected changes
at work, and the next thing you know, those "troubles" that scripture
promises begin to tear you apart. Fighting for oneness as newlyweds only requires what an
obese man with a really soft pillow could win. It requires little stamina
and the "punches" feel more playful than anything.
For us, we realized we need to step up our game. The enemy wages war on
marriage, and we are in it to win. The fight I picture now is of an MMA
fight. The pillows have been reduced to almost bare-knuckle
fighting. "Eye of the Tiger" is playing in the
background. We - like Rocky did - are running up the steps of the
Philadelphia Museum of Art, training for a fight that is ongoing in our
marriage.
We talked
about a few changes we needed to make:
Recognition that we need
to fight harder. The first thing for us was just realizing that
our fight needed to intensify. Once that happened, we were on the same
page to talk about changes together.
Pray
together more regularly.
This isn't just before meals, but earnestly seeking the Lord together.
This has been something we've in which we've been lazy. We want that to
change.
Go on
more regular dates.
We go on dates pretty often. What we realized, though, was with each
child we have added to our finally, it increased the need for us to get away
and connect. So for us, what might have been once every 2-3 weeks needs
to be once every 1-2 weeks.
Be
purposeful on dates to interact at a deeper level. Our dates had become routine.
We'd go out to dinner and then to Starbucks, or maybe a movie. What was
missing was a deeper, more intimate conversation. We don't want our marriage
merely to survive, but to thrive. For this reason, we are making these
changes.
How
about you? Is your marriage drifting? Have you already noticed it
was? If so, what did you do about it?
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