Posts Tagged :

how to save my marriage

The Save The Marriage Video Series
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

Over the next little bit, you are going to find a whole series of free videos right here on this blog.  The videos are designed to help you get the information you need to help save your marriage.  Many people find this blog in a search for resources on how to save a marriage and stop a divorce, so I put together this series to get you going.

Will it answer all of your questions?  No, but no resource can do that.  Can it get you started?  ABSOLUTELY!  This is information you can put into place quickly and easily.

And keep coming back for more videos!

Want to Save Your Marriage? Change Yourself!
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

My guess is you are at my site because you want to learn how to save their marriage.  There are relationship issues that must be addressed.  But where do you start?  My answer:  look in the mirror.  You, yourself are the greatest tool you have in your efforts to save your marriage.

Let me tell you about a recent client of mine.

Bart came into my office this week, stuck again.  I say again, because this was not his first marriage crisis.  He and his wife had been to the brink of divorce several times.  In previous crises, they had peered over the edge of the cliff, and decided to back away.

This time, I was not so sure.  This time, Sue was adamant that she had had enough.  Broken promise after broken promise of change had hardened her heart to the possibility of lasting change.

Many times in the past, Bart had loudly proclaimed that he had realized the err of his ways, and was ready to change.  For a little while, he would act differently.  It was all an act, though.  Nothing had really changed.  Sometimes, I think he even believed it himself.

Once again, we were working hard to hold onto a marriage that had been to the edge before, trying to keep them from taking that leap into the abyss of divorce.  But I wondered if we could do it again — could we stop the divorce?

There was a difference this time.  It gave us a starting point.  This time, Bart realized something about himself that he had long ignored and denied.  Bart was controlling.  Overtly and covertly, Bart tried hard to make his world go the way he wanted his world to go.  Only problem was, his wife was caught up in that world.  His world was invading her world.  And she had simply had enough.

Why was he controlling?  The same reason anyone is:  Fear!  Control your world and you can control all the bad things that might happen, or at least that is what we tell ourselves.

Sure, Sue had some areas she might want to change.  Don’t we all?

For Sue, she might want to consider that when someone is in a controlling relationship, at some point, they got into the role of being controlled.  Perhaps she had allowed this to happen to avoid conflict.  Or perhaps it was easier to do this than to make her own decisions.  Either way, it didn’t matter.  She allowed herself to be controlled, and Bart gladly controlled.

One day, Bart asked, “why do I have to be the one to change?  She needs to change, too.”   My answer is one of pragmatics, “Bart, you are here, wanting to save your marriage.  Your wife is not, and she is willing to call it quits.  That means it is up to you.  You can either stomp your feet and tell me how it is unfair, or you can change.  The choice is yours.”

That caught Bart off-guard.  He had to stop and think about this.  He had to face the need to change, regardless of what Sue might do.

This proved to be a bit difficult.  The reason is not because he is not capable of the change.  The reason is because Bart went from working on changing to proving he was changing.  That was a problem.  Can you see it?

Bart began to work to control his world, so that his wife would see he was not being controlling.  In other words, he was using his defense mechanism to prove he did not have a defense mechanism.  We all do that.

We develop behaviors because they worked for us at one time.   They allowed us to have some sense of control and effect on our life around us.
Problem is, they stop working and start creating problems.  Our old behavior in a new world are what trip us up.  Where did we learn the behavior?  Childhood.  Where does it fail us?  Adulthood.  Ouch!

In order to save your marriage, you first  want to adopt a growth mindset.  Don’t trap yourself into feeling stuck!  We humans have a great capacity for growth and change, but we quickly forget it.

Then follow these direct and simple steps:

First step:  face the fact that a)  you have things that you can change, regardless of what is happening in your marriage, and b) you have the capacity for change, growth, and improvement.

Second step:  reflect on what your spouse has been telling you.  Write down at least 5 recurring themes or issues your spouse keeps naming as problems.  Don’t add “yeah, but. . . .”  Just write them down and accept that they just MIGHT be true.

Third step:  reflect on the places where you keep tripping up in life.  These can be patterns that keep seeming to repeat themselves.  They often tell you how you automatically react and respond to situations.  In other words, they describe places that no longer work.  Add them to your list.

Fourth step:  reflect on that list.  If there are some that you simply disagree with (not just deny because you would hate to admit it), then mark a line through them.  Don’t scribble them out, as you might just return to them and see they are more true than you would like to admit.

Fifth step:  make a list of how you might change each of the themes or issues.  Where can you start RIGHT NOW?  Anywhere is better than nowhere.  So start there.

Sixth step:  make it a daily habit to reflect on who you want to be, and what you are doing to get there.  Don’t wait and think you will do this later.  Change takes effort and time.  It took you a while to become who you are, and it will take some time to recreate yourself.

Seventh step:  give yourself some room for “relapses.”  You don’t turn yourself around overnight.  It will take some time.  But one day, you will look back and wonder about that person you had become — and be glad you have become someone better!

Eighth step:  DON’T set out to prove how you have changed.  Simply be the change.  It will be noticed.  Trying to prove something makes you act.  So simply BE the change.

A final note:  just because you are now working on yourself doesn’t mean you should ignore the relationship piece.  Discover how you can transform the marriage while you are working on yourself.  Then, you will be doing both pieces:  changing yourself and changing your relationship.  Learn how to transform your relationship here.

The Royal Wedding: Yours and Theirs
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

Were you up early?  Quite a few people on this side of the Atlantic were up long before the sun decided to get up, ready to watch with the world the nuptials of a future king and queen.  I have to be honest, I was not among them.  But as I rolled out of bed to help the kids off to school, my wife turned on the TV, and I saw a few bits of the royal fanfare.The Royal Couple

And indeed, it was beautiful!  Add a not-so-small amount of pomp, throw in a good looking couple, and stir with our romantic notions, and it was quite the event.  But what does it have to do with a blog about how to save your marriage?

Richard Charters, the Bishop of London, said it best, “in a sense, every wedding is a royal wedding.”

Whenever I see a wedding, it always makes me think of my own wedding, but also weddings in general.

Our wedding was on a blazing hot day in the North Carolina mountains.  My dear mother-in-law had matched those brides-maids dresses to the stainglass windows, so they were certainly staying closed!  And who needs air conditioning in the mountains?

OK, so I remember the heat and the sweat, but I also remember my beautiful bride coming toward me.  I remember the vows I made.  And I remember, as we walked out hand-in-hand, that it all had seemed too easy!  I went into that building single, and emerged less than an hour later, promising to spend my life with someone.  Wow!  We sometimes forget the power of that.

My real pain of watching people marry is knowing just that:  it is easy.  Probably too easy.  My daughter recently got her driver’s license.  She had to drive, under guidance of an adult (mostly me) for 60 hours, by state law, before they would let her have her license.  She had to complete a written test. Then she had to prove it to an officer, that she could, indeed, drive that car.

Marriage?  Just walk right up, maybe with a blood test in your hands, pay a few bucks, and get your “marriage license.”  You are then licensed to marry.  Pretty simple, no?  Maybe too simple.

“Yeah but,” you argue, “a car can be a deadly weapon.”  Correct.  “And so can relationships,” I argue, “given the pain of broken relationships.”  Then you might respond, “but there are just some marriages that were wrong from the start.”

And I would respond that I truly believe this is only a small percentage.  Most marriages go awry, not because the wrong people were together, but because they didn’t have a clue what they were doing.

In many instances, the wedding happens, and everyone congratulates the couple, and off they go to figure it all out on their own.  No mentoring, no “how to” guides, no guidance at all.  Oh, sure, some churches offer premarital counseling.  I should know.  I do that very thing for several churches.

But let’s be real honest here:  couples, before they get married, have no idea what they are getting into.  Think about trying to tell an expectant couple that is dreaming of their beautiful baby, about the sleepless nights, yucky diapers, icky throw-up, or many of the other parenting pieces that fall into your lap.  Would they even hear it?

The best I hope for is that the couple have some sense that they are in for some unforeseen changes, and give them some markers to move toward.  And I hope they know that they can return when they have a tough time.

Why is it that we have this notion that marriage should be easy, and if it isn’t, it was a mistake?  Why don’t we adopt a growth mindset that tells us that everything we do can be improved, as long as we work on improving it?

So what about YOUR royal wedding?  Did it start with hopes and expectations?  It can still happen.  But that does mean giving up on the myth that right marriages just click.  It means looking at successful marriages as continued, daily effort to be a better person and spouse.  THAT is why the royal marriage is in a blog about how to save your marriage!

Strong Marriages Are Grown. They Don’t Just Happen!
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

I opened an email this morning and read a line I see several times a week: “if my marriage is meant to be, then why is it so tough?”

Sometimes, this question is tossed at the person trying to figure out how to save his or her marriage. They write and ask me “how do I save my marriage when my spouse keeps saying it is just to hard, so it must not be right?”

To both, I have the same answer. And it is a very short answer: who told you it should be easy?

Seriously, why do we have such an aversion to the possibility of struggle and growth?

Avoid one, you avoid the other.

Is love supposed to be easy? I certainly don’t think so.

Now don’t misunderstand me. I don’t think anyone should cause more problems, just so you can struggle! But that is different than avoiding struggling.

Just yesterday, I was sitting with a couple. They were treating each other so civilly. They poured good manners toward each other. . . almost too much so!

Finally, I asked about their “emotional constipation.” Everything, good and bad, was all stuck inside. So nothing was making it into the marriage. They were as stuck as their emotions.

But just yesterday morning, I had another couple that suffered from “emotional diarrhea.” No matter what the matter, both dumped their emotions on the other. That isn’t it, either.

But what if we assumed that growth happens from struggle? If you want to build a muscle, what do you do? Don’t you stress it and force it to work? Then it compensates by growing.

The same with a relationship. If we avoid the struggle, we avoid the chance at growth. If we avoid the chance at growth, we become stagnant.

There is NO perfect marriage at “I do.” There is only potential. It is like getting a driver’s license. That doesn’t mean you are a great driver. Only that you can begin the process of becoming a good driver.

So, your mission, should you choose to accept it, it to grow into your marriage. Take the potential and develop your marriage into a marriage you can treasure and love.