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Posts Tagged ‘ Manage the Conflict in your marriage ’
Unrealized expectations leave us disappointed. Ii our expectations are unrealistic for our marriages, we’re setting ourselves up for a fall. A few of the most common expectations include:
Marriage will complete me. Perhaps we grew up with parents who didn’t care for us
Like they should, or with siblings who stole the limelight, or in some other painful
environment. We may expect marriage to reverse all the negatives we’re carrying
Into it.
My spouse won’t hurt me. As the first expectation sees marriage as the healing
agent, this one sees marriage as the ultimate safe heaven. The first hurt we
receive from a spouse is catastrophic.
Life will be easy now. This is the happily-ever-after expectation of fairy tales. If we
have this expectation, every unhappy moment in a marriage then brings
disappointment and possibly fear.
Love will keep us together. As the song says, “All you need is love.” Well, not so,
because you will need more than your love. This expectation, by far, produces the
Greatest disappointment as it batters the very thing that is supposed to hold us
Together-our love . Every time we hurt one another, intentionally or unintentionally,
love is perceived as increasingly less effective until, in the end, we can easily say
our relationship just wasn’t meant to be.
How do you combat unrealistic expectations? With realistic biblical ones. No one is perfect, including your spouse. No one person will ever fulfill all your needs, nor, will you supply all your spouse’s needs. Only God can. No marriage is free from discord, and no spouse is completely unselfish
Marriage brings together two people who have many human frailties that are at first magnified, then hopefully, in Christ, strengthened into godly traits. But it takes a lot of humility, grace, and constant work at understanding what is reasonable for you and your spouse to expect from each other.
4. Selfishness
During dating, most of our energy is exclusively focused on the other. But something strange happens after we say,” I do.” The giving often becomes taking. The “Island of we” becomes an “island of me.” In our marriage we don’t really want to hurt each other. We say hurtful words. You know the routine. Like the apostle Paul in Romans 7:15 (NKJV), regarding his walk with the Lord, we can say, “I don’t understand myself a all, for I really want to do what is right, but I don’t do it. Instead, I do the very thing i hate.”
Marriage was designed to be a team effort, one of loving and giving, of making a commitment to our mate. Lately, in our culture, marriage has been reduced to prenuptial agreements, occasional intimacy (or none at all), and quickie divorce. Selfishness creates an “island of me,” where there is a wall around me. On the “island of we,” there is a wall around us.
5. Scripts from the Past
A lot of our behavior is influenced by our past scripts, scripts that were written for us long ago. We find that we now faithfully follow them, and our scripted behavior is reinforced as we hold tightly to them. For instance, if one or both of our parents abandoned us when we were children, we will live today as if we expect those we love to abandon us in the here and now. Such scripts distort current reality and cause us to act and react in what can be very destructive ways. These scripts also impact how we give and receive love.
If this sounds true for you, look for those elements of your life that are unresolved. Look for the physical, emotional, or sexual abuse, the effects of parental divorce and/or abandonment. Look for the gross failures and the emotional loss and deal with them in sound biblical ways.
6. Speed
Relationships and intimacy take time. Time to understand, enjoy, and respond to one another-time to satisfy the other’s needs and have your own needs satisfied. When we live life in the fast lane, there is precious little time for the building of intimacy. We’re the microwave generation addicted to speed. Every element of our likes seems to be a trade off, and often we end up trading off the very steps to intimacy the time to nurture our mates and our marriage.
Both partners in a marriage succumb to these pressures to varying degrees at various times. So we think a date night will solve our problems. What happens on date nights when things haven’t been going well? One lousy night! The result is loneliness, anger, feelings of rejection, and sorrow-enough to rip the foundation out from under most couples. A natural response to this pain is to create space, a gap between you and your partner. A subtle, even unintentional severing of relational strands takes place characterized by some pretty hurtful communication patterns.