The Winter of Marriage
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.


I love to trail run. I love the feeling of going through the woods, feeling the ground beneath me, usually just behind my yellow Lab. Now, I don’t live in what anyone would consider to be the Mecca of trail running.

But there is this one trail. . . I figure I have run it over 600 times. It is my standby trail, about 7 miles long. After that many runs, I know what is coming, and exactly where I am. I don’t have to think about it, I just go.

But one of the things I really love is watching the seasons change as I run the same stretch of land. I watch the progress of each season as I go: the growing warmth and green of Spring, the heat and humidity of Summer, the cool colors of Fall, and the bitter solitude of Winter. . .

Which led me to contemplate this about the seasons: Marriage is a lot like the seasons of the year. And we don’t act like it is.

We like to think that a marriage is going to be just like it was (fill in the blank). We expect that we will always be gushing with love, passion, emotion, etc., that many feel at the beginning of a marriage. Unfortunately, that is not reality.

So what if we shifted our thoughts a little bit? What if we started to expect that marriage is more like the seasons of the year? This changes two things:

  1. We stop pretending that nothing will change. We accept that things will change, and that this is OK.
  2. We come to believe that the place we are will change.

In other words, things will not stay as good as we wish them to, but they won’t stay as bad as they can get sometimes. Life is change. Life is shift. Life is seasons.

You may be reading this because you find yourself in the Winter of a marriage. It can all seem so cold, so barren, so desolate. It can seem that nothing will get better. We think back to the cool of Fall, wishing it was back. If you aren’t careful, you can fool yourself into believing that something better can ever come.

But Spring is always just around the corner, if we wait for it. Sometimes, we decide to just move to Antarctica, camp out in desolation. But if we just wait it out, Winter leads to Spring.

It may come slowly: kinder words toward each other, a hand held, a hug accepted. But soon, the Spring thaw takes over and their is growth. Spring can take some cultivation, action, effort.

I grow Banana trees in my backyard (yes, bananas can grow in Kentucky!), and when I plant the stalks each year, it is in the early days of Spring. The brown stalks have no leaves, look dead, and just sit there. . . for what seems like forever! But I have faith. I keep on watering. Then, one day, I notice a little green beginning to break through the top. Then a leaf erupts. Suddenly, the plant takes off!

But guess what? Even during the period when the plant looked dead, it really wasn’t. It was hard at work on the inside, getting ready to shoot up!

Sometimes, marriage is the same way. Things just look dead, but there is lots of activity on the inside. Both individuals may be working hard to get things going, even if it is outwardly invisible. Suddenly, Spring arrives.

And Spring is followed by Summer. Those fun, lazy days. Life just seems so much easier. The rhythm of life changes to an easier pace. Life (or the relationship) is enjoyed and savored.

But just when you think you have it figured out, some leaves start falling. Cool breezes kick up. In marriages, the assumption that you finally have it all figured out gives way to new disagreements and realizations that you really don’t see things alike. The cool can be breathtaking, but it is easy to pretend that the cold is not coming. After all, there are still warm days.

Until one day, there is frost on the ground. Conversations screech to a halt. Tensions create distance. Distance leads to more cold. At that point, both people are wondering what happened to the relationship. How did it get so cold, so distant?

Well. . . that is the cycle of life! Winter does come. But so does Spring.

As cold as it is, I still drag myself out to run the trail, because Winter may not be quite as enjoyable, it can be beautiful — and Spring is coming!

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More marriage saving information can be found in my ebook, available by CLICKING HERE.

A Thankful Attitude Can Save Your Marriage
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.


In the United States, it is around Thanksgiving, a time set aside to be thankful. For far too many people, it really becomes an opportunity to eat a big meal, watch a little football, and take a few days off work. Too bad!

What an opportunity to set aside a time to do what we should always do: focus on that for which we are thankful. In fact, the latest research on our health and our ability to thrive shows that those who are thankful and express gratitude live longer, have more meaningful lives, and report higher levels of happiness.

Trouble is, when we have problems, we tend to forget to be thankful. This often has very detrimental effects on our lives and our relationships.

One place this is particularly true is in marriage. Usually, we start relationships being so thankful for the person we met. In fact, when I am talking with pre-marital couples, this is a common theme. It never fails that each is thankful for having found the other. And they can even tell me what they are thankful for.

Then, somewhere along the line, as arguments and conflicts take their tolls on the relationship, we begin to lose track of that for which we are thankful. Suddenly, we are much more aware of what the other person does that bothers us (or doesn’t do that bothers us). We lose track of what the other brings to us and to the relationship. And that is when the relationship hits the wall.

In fact, I believe that this process is what creates the real crisis. When we fall out of touch with being thankful for our spouse, our spouse begins to feel unwanted, unloved, unappreciated, and “wrong.” That is when people start asking “what did I do wrong?” with no answer. You see, our minds either operate on gratitude and thanksgiving or fear/hurt and protection. There is not much in-between.

Soon, neither can tell someone what they were thankful for, and then, neither can even tell what he or she likes about the other person. At that point, contempt and anger begin to set the emotional tone of the relationship. We begin to focus on what we are not getting, completely ignoring what we are getting.

Sound familiar? If you are in that situation, it is one all-too-common, and one that is entirely avoidable! But the time to turn the tide is now. In order to make the shift, you have to take the relationship off automatic, which is where gratitude turns to resentment and thankfulness turns to insufficiency.

Our minds work in predictable ways, when we don’t intervene. But we can easily intervene. We just have to quit allowing the process to run on automatically.

Here are some steps to return to thankfulness and gratitude:

  1. Remember that no spouse is as bad as we paint them in our down moments. Our perceptions are skewed when we are upset, angry, or resentful.
  2. Remember that people really do the best they can, where they are. This does not mean someone couldn’t do better, only that they are doing the best they can now.
  3. Remember what you loved and appreciated in the beginning. In fact:
  4. List what you would have said at the beginning of the relationship to this: I am thankful for my spouse because. . .
  5. Ask yourself whether those items are still true. If so, focus on being thankful for those items. If not:
  6. Ask yourself whether they are really not true, or if you just refuse to see and acknowledge them. Often, we lose track with our spouse’s true nature, and create an image that is not true, then keep looking for facts to support that image.
  7. Work to accept your spouse. In fact, this is the greatest, most important point of all. We all deserve to be accepted for who we are (not the same as how we act). We all want that from our spouse, but few want to extend that to our spouse. This has the power to transform your relationship with your spouse.

Thanksgiving always begins with acceptance: “Thanks for getting us this far. We can go further, but we are glad to be here.” Isn’t that the real message of Thanksgiving Day? Be thankful for where you are, wherever that is, because it is not where you were before. Look forward to bigger things, better days, by starting with acceptance of where you are and who your spouse is. Then move from there!

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More marriage saving information can be found in my ebook, available by CLICKING HERE.

Bad Advice!: Not All You Read Is Helpful!
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

OK, rant time!

I have tried, for as long as I have been on the internet, to avoid pointing the finger at marriage advice on the internet. But I can’t be quiet any longer!

When I started offering help with marriages in 2001, there were maybe 2 of us on the internet. Now, there is an explosion of ebooks and advice on how to save your marriage. Most even borrowed my subtitle: “Even if only you want to.”

My problem is not about the competition. In my mind, there really is no competition. If people are genuinely offering good advice with the intent of helping to save a marriage, I have no problem.

I have often said that my job is to put myself out of business. If I could save every marriage, my job would be done! I could pull out the hammock, put it up between the coconut trees, grab my cool drink, and watch the tide come in. Not much chance of that little fantasy!

So, my problem is not the “competition.” It is the horrible advice I am seeing out there. You probably have seen it, too. And you may have even been tempted by it.

Almost always, the advice tries to give you some easy answer (or an answer you would love to hear). Saving a marriage takes effort! No amount of “magic potions,” hypnosis, reverse psychology, “make your spouse jealous,” or “how to be a great lover” advice is going to put “poor Humpty together again!”

So much of the advice is based in deception! Who ever believed they could fool someone into staying married?? Oh, sure, the reverse psychology (basically agreeing with your spouse, so that they are disarmed) may give you a little time to get moving, but very little time. Whenever we seek to manipulate someone, it will come back to bite you in the butt!

Magic potions? Come one! Love, and restoring love, is magic enough. Saying a few wishful words is not going to make it so. If you have seen “The Secret,” that is my biggest gripe with it. It is not that I don’t believe in intention. I do think that what we focus on, we often create. If nothing else, because we notice what we focus on, this works.

But if we think we can just sit back and imagine our spouse coming back, then we miss the important part: action! Something has to change. We have to change! Again, I am not against visualization. It is a fine place to start, but you can’t imagine yourself into a new relationship! You have to take action — and you have to take the right action!

Which brings us to the information that inspired this rant! I was reading an article by someone who wrote an ebook (“He Who Shall Not Be Named,” mostly because name-calling seems a little juvenile). Now this person is really an internet marketer that decided there was a buck to be made here. Which is why I think the advice is so dangerous. It is not tested, not clinical, and based in making money.

What this person suggests is aimed at men: if you are separated, you should date and pursue other women! He says this will help with your self-esteem and -respect! He says it will make your wife jealous!

So, first, this may fit into some male fantasy, but it is just that — fantasy!

Second, it basically means that someone is going out to “use” someone as a way of getting a spouse back. Does that not just seem really cruel, and in fact bordering on immoral? It is not that someone has decided that the marriage is over and starts looking to establish another relationship. It is establishing a “relationship” with the plan that it will get a marriage back on track!

Third, in many instances, the end result is one of two paths: it either tanks any chance at reconciliation or creates more wounds that must be overcome. Many spouses will see this as a sign that the marriage really is over, and emotionally leave at that point. The rest, if there is a reconciliation, will now have a trust issue and hurt that must be overcome.

Finally, anyone that sees this as a path to self-worth and self-esteem has WAAAY underestimated their worth. Reducing oneself so a “conquest” is a low place to go.

So, as you look for advice, I would hope you would pose a couple of questions:

1) Consider the source. Is this an expert or just someone with an opinion?

2) As you read, does the person offer the promise of an easy and simple, no work answer? Marriages do not get in trouble overnight, and it takes a while to get them back on course.

3) Can you, with integrity, follow the advice? At the end of the day, you have to live with yourself. If you manipulate someone, are you OK with yourself? If it works, will you say to yourself, “yeah, but I tricked him/her into staying”? Above all, be true to yourself.

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More marriage saving information can be found in my ebook, available by CLICKING HERE.

Change Your Attitude & Change Your Marriage
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

Do I have your attention? Are you thinking I am blaming you for your marriage?

That is not my intention. The reality is, though, that you are searching for help with your marriage. So, there is nothing I can do about your spouse, but there may be something I can do to help you change, or even save, your marriage.

I constantly hear cries of “it’s not my fault,” or “there’s nothing I can do.” That misses the fact that in any situation, there are two sides contributing to the problems at hand. It may be that your spouse is the primary problem. But honestly, I always see that there are two sides.

In fact, I have come to see relationships like algebra (no math lesson here, as it is certainly not my favorite subject, but I want to make a point). In algegra, there are always two sides to an equation. And both sides are held together by an “equals” sign. One side must equal the other. Make a shift on one side and you must make the same shift on the other side. In other words, both sides must be kept balanced and equal.

The same is true in marriage. If one person makes a shift, the other person must make a shift, just to keep the relationship equation in balance.

You may have already tried making shifts, and become increasingly frustrated that you can’t seem to do anything that makes a difference.

I would submit to you that there is one fundamental shift you can make that will change the relationship: your attitude. One of my favorite writers was Viktor Frankl, survivor of the concentration camps. And my favorite quote from him is “The one thing you can’t take away from me is the way I choose to respond to what you do to me. The last of one’s freedoms is to choose ones attitude in any given circumstance.”

We tend to give up that freedom. We allow the other person to change and affect our attitude. Often, in the midst of a crisis, we find that we have lost our natural attitude and have become something we are not. It is always possible to choose to correct this.

Let me be more clear: you can choose your attitude. If you do not, the attitude will choose you, and it will likely be negative, short-sighted, ego-centric, and incorrect. A choice in attitude can lead us to hopefulness, patience, understanding, love, respect, and creativity.

Some helpful attitudes:

  • An attitude of Forgiveness. We can choose to take on an attitude of forgiveness, and simply let our spouse “off the hook” for every small transgression. I am not saying that you just forget major issues. In fact, forgiveness is not about forgetting. It is not allowing the actions to hold you emotionally hostage anymore. More specifically, forgiveness is letting go so that YOU do not have to carry it around. And too often, it is the small issues that do the most damage, the daily “slights” that we build up until we see the other person as despicable.
  • An attitude of Acceptance. What would it mean to accept your spouse, just like he or she is? No more attempts to change, either directly or by manipulation, your spouse into what you want. You simply accept him or her for who he or she is. That would be a great gift. . . and is the start of true love.
  • An attitude of Respect. Let’s face it: when we live intimately with someone, we see them at their weakest. Sometimes, we see only the weakness and stop seeing the greatness. We, in essence, lose respect. But what if you focused on their strengths, their gifts, their quirkiness, and decided to extend respect? That may revolutionize your relationship.
  • An attitude of Civility. I was recently listening to a recording about providing good customer service. The expert suggested you remember what has been done to you. Do the things you liked, don’t do the things you didn’t like. (Sounds a great deal like the Golden Rule!) That would be civility. Don’t like to be yelled at? Don’t yell. Like to be treated lovingly? Treat lovingly. You get the idea.

Think of it this way: if you do not take back control of your own attitude, someone else gets to control it. And from what I see on a daily basis, when we do this, we are always on the losing end of the deal! We are much better off assuming control than being controlled. Your attitude is yours. Treat is as such!

So, if you want to change your marriage, start with your attitude. You can probably think of many other attitudes you could choose. Go do it! Transform your marriage!

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More marriage saving information can be found in my ebook, available by CLICKING HERE.

The Rumor: I Am Who I Say I Am!
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

OK, today I decided to make a personal response. I have read in several forums that there is a belief that I am the same person as several other ebook authors. In other words, there is a belief that I am a pseudonym.

Believe me when I tell you, I am not. I am Lee Baucom. That is the name my parents gave me, and I have never written anything on marriage under any other name.

Today, I read two posts, believing I was the same person as TW Jackson. That is the “author” of The Magic of Making Up, and the true author is Travis Sego, an internet marketer. So, some folks are correct in assuming there is a pseudonym in play. Trouble is, it ain’t me!

Let me show you a picture of me and my family.

What this points to is how cynical we all have become by what is on the internet. We have begun to doubt that anyone is who they say they are. I see it everyday, when you can make yourself into whatever image you wish online. Generally speaking, people can hide behind a facade.

I have worked hard to be transparent. I have a phone number on my website (502-802-4823, so call and see if it is not MY voicemail), and an address (4949 Brownsboro Rd., Suite 147, Louisville, KY 40222 — feel free to write). I can’t promise I can answer every phone call in person, or respond to every email or regular mail. But I can promise, I am Lee Baucom, and that is the only person I have ever been.

Just wanted to clear that up! Thanks for reading.

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More marriage saving information can be found in my ebook, available by CLICKING HERE.

Baucom’s Wager
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

What is Baucom’s wager? Glad you asked. But first, you get a short history/philosophy lesson. I promise it won’t be painful.

Back in the 1600’s, philosopher Blaise Pascal was struggling with the many topics that could not, at that time, be proven. He was pushing for people to use reason. Into that fray he stepped, trying to address belief in God. The obvious then is still the obvious: God remains unprovable (and undisprovable) by science. So, Pascal saw it as a matter of faith.

He proposed a wager that is now know as Pascal’s Wager. The wager is this “People should believe in God, as it makes reasonable sense. If you believe in God, and there is no God, you have lost nothing. If you believe in God, and there is God, you have gained everything. If you don’t believe in God, and there is God, you lose everything.” In essence, the only losing position was not believing in God, and finding that there is God. For Pascal, it was clear that it only made sense to believe in God.

Now, here is Baucom’s Wager. I apply it to whether or not you should work to save your marriage. Don’t worry, it is not about God, merely that I am borrowing Pascal’s frame. So, here is my Wager:

  • If you work on your marriage, and it cannot be saved, you have lost nothing.
  • If you work on your marriage and save it, you have gained your relationship.
  • If you do not work on your marriage, you have lost the relationship.

In essence, it is reasonable to work on the relationship. You have nothing to lose and everything to gain!

Let me know what you think about my wager, and if you are ready to take the wager, you can grab my ebook and special reports.

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More marriage saving information can be found in my ebook, available by CLICKING HERE.

Vote To Save Your Marriage
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

Today, in the US, it is Election Day. By tomorrow morning, we will have a new president elected.

We talk a good bit about the responsibility and the right to vote, to let our voices be heard. Sometimes, especially when you are on the losing end of that decision, it can seem like a lesson in futility. So many voices shouting to be heard. So many voices not heard. But that is the nature of a democratic process. It is not the individual voices, but the combined individual voices that make a difference.

You may be wondering: what does this have to do with marriage? You see, I am not here to convince you to vote for a specific candidate, or even to vote in today’s elections (however, if you choose not to vote, you do give up your right to complain later).

My interest in this context is your marriage. You see, we vote in lots of ways every day. When we decide, for example, to work on our marriage, we have voted for the marriage. In fact, I have often used that analogy with couples struggling to decide on whether to stay married or not. Often, one will want to stay in the relationship, and the other is undecided. That feels like pressure on the one that is undecided, so I will note that the reality is this: one has voted, and we are waiting for the other to cast the deciding vote. In order to stay married, it requires an unanimous decision. One vote for and one against or two against end the marriage. One for and one undecided means we still have to wait for the final vote. Two votes for, and the marriage will survive.

As I see it, every day requires at least a tacit vote to be married. Sometimes, when we make that more conscious, we get better results. If, every day, we say, “I choose to be married. My vote is to stay married,” we are much better off.

May I invite you to cast your vote of “be married?” We will have to wait for your spouse’s vote.

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More marriage saving information can be found in my ebook, available by CLICKING HERE.

In These Uncertain Times. . .
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

Wow, what a difference several months can make! We all knew that the economy was tough several months ago, but we never saw the depths we have gone to!

A recent American Psychological Association study showed that almost 3/4’s of people are worried about money. Debt is going through the roof, both on a national level and as individuals. And according to the same study, financial disagreements are at the top of the list for marital disagreements and divorces.

And that study was done before the floor fell out! Now, we watch in fear as banks struggle to survive. We watch as our home values plummet, and for those with variable rate mortgages, the payments go up. Less value, higher cost. That does sound like a recipe for stress!

In these times, it makes sense to find security and love from our spouse. Marriage should be a refuge from the storm, not merely another location of crisis.

I have heard from people who have told me that they are so exhausted by trying to keep their heads above water that they don’t have the time or resources to deal with the marriage. Wrong approach! This is the time to invest in the marriage. This is the time to dig in and hold on.

A previous post noted that not divorcing can save the average home $20,000, just in the first year. Over time, that number goes way up. The results of divorce include lost value in a home, the costs of maintaining two households, the reduction in retirement savings, and the liquidation of assets at the worst possible moment.

In recent days, we all have been reminded on how little control we have over our world. We can’t control the price of gas, can’t stop the stockmarket’s drop, can’t control the loss of credit, can’t stop our house value from plummeting, and can’t stop the worldwide crises.

But we do have some control on our little world in our home. We do have options on whether to provide shelter for each other in the storm. We have control on whether our marriage falls apart or not.

I heard a recent story about how many married women are going onto singles websites. There seems to be a group of bored people (not just women) who are not getting their needs met in marriage. The old reason was the “golf widow,” those who felt abandoned by partners hitting the golf course.

The new term is “downturn widow.” That describes someone who has lost time together with a spouse who is working harder, longer hours, and trying to stay above water. Imagine this shift! Before, it was a sense of being abandoned in favor of a pastime. Now, it is a feeling of abandonment because a spouse feels the need to put more effort into surviving. How tragic!

I am not saying that this describes the majority of people, but it does point to a current pulling society toward a sad conclusion: marriage is for the good times, not the bad times.

That is the sad part. In the good times, we should relish our marriage. In the bad times, we should seek shelter with each other.

Our world gets more and more unstable. Find stability in your small world!

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More marriage saving information can be found in my ebook, available by CLICKING HERE.

A Personal Note: 20 Years Of Marriage!
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

I have to pause and make a personal comment. You see, on August 13th, my wife and I celebrated 20 years of marriage! I tease that it was one hot day when we got married. It was in the mountains, but we really didn’t expect 90-some degrees, and since the stain-glass windows matched the bridesmaid’s dresses (hey, it was the ’80’s!), they were closed. . . many people thought I was tearful through the service as my father handed my a handkerchief. Actually, I was wiping sweat away!

Anyway, I was just thinking about those 20 years and the changes they have brought! We have two wonderful children, lots of experiences, and a great marriage. Some folks might say “oh, sure, you are a marriage expert.” But trust me when I say that your own marriage is a whole different creature than someone who is coming to you for help.

I firmly believe that 100% of marriages have difficulties. It is just the nature of being so intimately connected with someone else. You can’t go through too much life that closely connected without having conflicts and difficulties. But we have a commitment to get through those tough times. Marriage is about savoring the good times and working through the tough times, as a team.

Just the other day, we had a disagreement. During a lull in our discussion, my wife went downstairs. I soon followed, just to get another point on my side of the debate column. In the midst of my “making my point,” my wife looked at me and said, “look, we are in this for the long-haul. We have to work it out, and this doesn’t seem to be helping.” I agreed.

Several people have made this point, “you can be right or you can be happy, but you can’t be both.” When we opt for “right,” we end up in arguments that are rarely productive and usually about fairly trivial issues.

Marriage certainly is a challenge, but marriage is a challenge that leads to growth and change. It is like building muscle. If we don’t challenge our muscles, we don’t build any strength. When we opt to work through our struggles, we strengthen our marriage.

So here we are, twenty years later! Strange how we arbitrarily choose certain years as representative of mileposts in life. Twenty years is one of those years. But you see, I think a marriage is built day-by-day. Couples decide to work together each day, which add up to weeks, which add up to months, which add up to years.

In those years, we have been through financial struggles, professional struggles, transitions from graduate students to professionals, from childless to parents, had some health struggles, and more than our share of joys in all those areas. And through it all, what I am most thankful for is that I knew I had someone on my side, and I was on someone’s side. I am always aware of how much better it is to face the world together than alone.

My wife has supported me in many ventures, some that worked and others that failed. I have tried to do the same. My wife has loved me whether I was sick or well (and I am not fun to love when I am sick!). I have tried to do the same. Through it all, we are a team, and for that, I am most thankful!

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More marriage saving information can be found in my ebook, available by CLICKING HERE.

Inertia and Momentum: Physics and Marriage
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

There are two laws of physics that seem to me to be important for a marriage: inertia and momentum. Don’t worry, I am no physicist. I can tell you what little I know, and why it matters to your marriage.

First is inertia. An object at rest remains at rest (unless a force acts upon it, but more on that later). And second is momentum. An object in motion remains in motion (unless a force acts upon it, and ditto about later). Oh, and momentum builds, when gravity is pulling.

But let me place this into the context of marriage. Really, there are two types of marriages: those caught by inertia and those catching momentum. Either marriages are moving forward or are stuck and falling apart.

I can’t tell you how many times I have heard “I knew things weren’t that great, but I thought that at some point, we would get it back together.” Instead, the spouse announced that he or she was unhappy and was leaving. That marriage had been caught by inertia, stuck in one place.

Then there are marriages that seem to get better and better. They have found what works, and they are moving forward with it. Those marriages gain momentum.

Here’s the thing: moving from inertia to momentum is tough! Now we are onto that “force” issue. The laws of physics always use that phrase “unless a force acts upon it.” That is true in marriage. The relationship is caught by inertia. . . unless someone applies some force to it. A marriage that is moving ahead continues to move ahead. . . unless a force acts upon it.

If you have ever rowed a boat, you have experienced the movement from inertia to momentum. A boat that is still is at inertia. The first couple of pushes of the paddle are tough! The boat only slowly moves forward. But keep rowing, and the boat begins to move easier through the water. Rowing becomes easier, and the boat moves quicker. The boat has shifted from inertia to momentum.

So, let’s say that your marriage is at a point of inertia — stuck! You may take some action. You may do something to improve the situation. But it feels awkward, strange. It is met with resistance. Your spouse looks at you strangely, or asks what you are up to. Or simply says “too little, too late.”

Then, you say to yourself, “well, this isn’t going to work!” The laws of physics are in play. If you quit then, you didn’t do enough to overcome inertia. Keep acting. Keep trying. Keep looking for opportunities to connect.

Over time, the momentum begins to build. Then, one day, you notice you have just the marriage you have always wanted! All because of a little physics!

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More marriage saving information can be found in my ebook, available by CLICKING HERE.