Saving A Marriage Requires Reaching Outside of Yourself
https://savethemarriage.com/stmblog/wp-content/themes/corpus/images/empty/thumbnail.jpg 150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D. Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D. https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/669b7e375d93f77521ddaba08adb8063?s=96&d=blank&r=pgAt its best, marriage calls us to reach beyond ourselves, to love and show love to another. Two people doing that is magic! Both people are meeting the other person’s needs, and getting their own needs met. But what happens when that process begins to fail? The process is like a whirlpool, sucking the relationship down.
John and Susan were caught in that process. In day-to-day life, a wonderful marriage slowly decays when energy isn’t added in. That was true for these two. John was running after a successful career. Susan was working, but had eyes on a family. While both felt the stress, they decided “now or never,” and launched into parenthood.
Time was eaten up by children’s events and work demands. . . or at least that is what Susan and John kept telling themselves. But in reality, every day, they chose to NOT spend time connecting, NOT spend time together, NOT nurturing their relationship. And like any neglected muscle, their love began to atrophy.
For a while, life can pull you through this. But eventually, the relationship finally rises to consciousness. Unfortunately, neither John nor Susan thought “Wow, I am really not putting into this relationship.” Instead, both began to ask themselves, “what am I getting out of this? Where is the love coming toward me?” Unfortunately, right after asking themselves that question, each answered with “if I am not being loved, I am going to stop reaching out with love.”
The relationship further deteriorated. But now, instead of benign neglect, it was fueled by anger and resentment. John finally announced, “I have had enough. You don’t love me, I don’t love you. I am leaving.”
Susan was devastated. She told folks “I knew we had problems, but I thought we had made a commitment.” But in her own head, she was thinking, “How dare he say I wasn’t loving him. HE wasn’t loving me! This is HIS fault.” And John was equally convinced that Susan was at fault.
The moments of doubt, about how each might have played a role, was justified in each of their minds, pushed away by blame.
Was there a way out? Yes. Would it be easy? No.
If either had set aside blame, and decided to release their hurt, anger, and resentment, there was a possibility. Either could have reached out toward the other, providing love and support. That might have saved their relationship, and restored the flow of love between them.
A seemingly easy thing to do, but hard in practice. Why? Because we humans are so good at self justification. We continue to use our own thoughts to prove our reality. And we all have one well-established tape playing in our minds: “It’s NOT my fault!”
It really isn’t either person’s fault, but that message keeps either from asking “what can I do to change this?” and then acting on it.
Marriage is about reaching out, over and over, toward the other, until it is a habit. Sometimes, it is made for difficult by anger and resentment. Sometimes, it is flexing atrophied muscles. But sustained effort in the direction of the other can save your marriage.
Don’t be sucked down the whirlpool! Reach our toward the other. Ignore that voice saying “it isn’t my fault,” or “why should I reach out?” or “I will if he/she will.” To quote one company, “Just do it!” Reach out in love, and see what happens!
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Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.
Dr. Baucom is internationally known for his methods and approaches to saving marriages. For over 25 years, Dr. Baucom has been helping people around the world to save, restore, and create the relationships they desire and deserve. He is the author of the book, How To Save Your Marriage In 3 Simple Steps, and creator of the Save The Marriage System, as well as numerous other resources.
All stories by: Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.