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save marriage

Rule #6 To Save Your Marriage: Give Up on “What Should Be”
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

What should a marriage be?  What should your spouse be like?  How should he/she treat you?  What should you have done to save your marriage?

Do you hear those questions float around in your heads?  They are all useless.

“Should” is a very dangerous world.  It is based in wishful thinking that never happens.

“I should go to the gym” is very different than “I am going to the gym.”  “I shouldn’t eat that dessert” is a far cry from “I am not going to eat that.”

Should and shouldn’t — useless.  Don’t use them.  Ever.  You really shouldn’t.  🙂

Why is it these words are so useless?  Because they are based in a part of the mind that is not convinced of any change.  It is a reflection of some thought in your mind that is not really even yours — something you should do.  It is external to what you will do.

Where does your idea of what a marriage “should” be come from?  It is not based on what your marriage is, so it is not based in reality.  It may be based on what you see or saw in your parents or grandparents, with friends, in a book, on a movie, or anywhere else.

But it is not based on what “is.”  Nor is it likely to be based on what is coming.

“We should have a better marriage” is not an action plan.  It is simply wishful thinking.  You may either hope for that, or chastise yourself and your spouse for not having it.  But it is not moving you toward it.

That does not mean that I think things cannot change. Quite the opposite.  I deeply believe in the capacity for change, growth and transformation.

It is just that people and situations will not change based on “should.”

In my office, on a daily basis, I hear the word “should” over and over.  “I should. . .” and “we should. . .” echo throughout the day.  Sometimes, I just count how many times I hear it.  Sometimes, I ask the person to restate it as “I will. . .” or “we will. . . .”  Interestingly, many people who say “should” are unable to say “will.”

“Will” is based in exactly that, our “will.”  It is based in action and direction.  It puts us on the hook.  We either have to act, or we have to admit we did not.  “Should” keeps us off the hook, even if the answer is “right.”

Is that voice in your head asking “so what should I do instead?”  See?  That word is so sneaky.

Let’s change it: “What could I do instead?”

I LOVE that change!  “Could” and “can” have potential.  Especially when followed with “this is what I will do.”

So let’s start with what “is.”

Where is your relationship right now?  Where are you starting from?  Be specific.  Accept that where you are is where you begin.

Think of it as the “present perfect.”  No, not a grammar lesson.  But a truth about life.  The present is perfect.

Not perfect, as in “without blemish,” but perfect in the sense that it exactly reflects the actions and circumstances that get us to here.  The present is a perfect reflection of where we have been.

Good and bad, it is a match of where we are.  That includes our relationship.  A marriage, at this instant, is a perfect reflection of all that has happened up until now.

If we ignore our spouse, it is strange to be surprised that our hurt and disconnected spouse reacts to that.

If we work to stay connected to each other, then a relationship that reflects connection and commitment is where we find ourselves.  The present reflects the path that got us to here.

Don’t like where you are?  Change the path!

Is your marriage disconnected?  Is your relationship conflicted?  Is your marriage out of balance?

Assess your role in this.  What have you done to contribute to the current situation?

If you say “nothing,” you have either married a sociopath, or you are ducking responsibility.  Oh, and if you answer “I married a sociopath,” then I have to ask, aren’t you responsible for doing that?

So, let me ask again, so you can reflect, what is your responsibility in where your relationship is now?

Accept that has been a part of what has gotten the relationship to where it is.  Not the whole.  There are two in this.

Another hard one to accept:  you have capacity to change only one part of the equation — you.  No need to start with “yes, but my spouse ______.”  That is especially true if the sentence continues with “my spouse should _________.”

Now, for a moment, imagine what your marriage could be about.  Not what it should be, but what it could be.  Similar, but not the same.  You see, could has potential.

Imagine that, and let’s start building toward that.

If you can’t figure out what it could be, please grab my Save The Marriage System by CLICKING HERE.

Rule 5: Accept that You and Your Spouse See Things Differently
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

Perspective. An important word. Your perspective is the position from which you view the world.

You formed your perspective over a lifetime. It starts with your genetic makeup, then your gender shapes it. Then your family experience shapes the foundations. Then, every experience you have in life either confirms or changes your perceptions and your perspective.

Is it any wonder that you and your spouse are going to see things differently?

As I point out the obvious, let me also point out how often we forget that little fact: we see things completely different than anyone else in the world.

We all have an individual psychological reality — we all have a unique way of seeing and understanding the world around us and the meaning of events that unfold.

The fact that we see things differently is really not the issue. The problem comes when we forget this is the case. We stop realizing we are seeing things differently and think that we are seeing things “the way they are.”

And when a spouse sees things differently, we become convinced that they are not seeing things accurately. This often leads to one of two actions:
1) Trying to correct their “incorrect” view,
2) Wondering what is wrong with us.

First, there is a difference between “incorrect” and “inaccurate.” We all have inaccurate views of reality. They may or may not be incorrect.

I perceive events from how they affect me. I view actions in their impact upon me. You do the same. So, we are going to arrive at very different views of the action.

More than that, we generally tell ourselves stories that put ourselves in the best light.

I will admit it, I like to be:
–the good guy,
–right,
–and consistent.
How about you? Do you want to be the same? I think most people do. So, when I do something that is not so nice, I am going to tell a story that excuses me. And I want to be right, so I am tempted to make sure the “evidence” backs me up. And I want to be consistent. So I look for ways that keep me thinking the same things about myself.

For example, if I believe myself honest and truthful, but then do something that is dishonest, I must find a way to justify that. Otherwise, I would have to change my self-perception. We humans don’t like to do that. We like to be consistent.

So what does this have to do with your marriage?

Simple. We most often forget that people see things differently when we are dealing with a spouse.

It is that assumption that “we are on the same page” that really gets us into trouble.

How many arguments are simply a reflection of a difference of viewpoint? Think of parenting differences. Sure, there are some “wrong” things that a parent could do. But there are far more that are simply differences of perspective and viewpoint.

Yet these differences can end up feeling like “right vs. wrong.” And that is where the problems arise. When we lose track of the fact that something is a difference of opinion, we label it a right versus wrong. And then the arguments deepen.

Or how about with money? For some, money means freedom. For others, money means security. Freedom is all about what money can do for enjoyment now: free to go out to dinner, free to go on vacation, free to buy clothes, etc. Security is all about preparing for uncertanties: insurance, retirement, investment, etc.

Both are correct. And both can be out of balance. And even if a couple both lean toward one end or the other, what is okay for being secure or for enjoying freedom can vary.

No surprise that couples often argue about parenting and finances. And when couples dig in that one person’s view is correct, and the other person’s view is wrong, the arguments are headed nowhere.

That does not mean that everything is alright. It does not mean that every parenting decision or financial decision is just a matter of perspective.

But that is true. It is a matter of perspective — even if the action is “dangerous.”

When couples are able to discuss what is behind the perspective, the couple has a chance of at least understanding each other. Not agreeing, but understanding.

Rule 5 may seem obvious, now that I mentionn it. But how often do you forget it? How often do you assume that either you see things just alike, or that you are seeing things correctly?

Both get us into trouble. Assume you are on the same page, and you will quickly see where you are not. You will quickly discover the many places where you are not just on different pages, but in different chapters.

Assume you are correct, and you a) miss how often your perceptions are limited and b) close yourself off to greater and better options.

As I noted in the first rule, marriage is about being a WE. But I also noted it is not about being in a “mind meld.” Two indivicuals, bringing together their perspectives, is much closer to “reality” than only one person’s views.

But only if you acknowledge this and decide you will learn from ach other, and you will seek to understand where your spouse is coming from.

Be open to the possibility that you and everyone else has a different view of reality.
Be open to the possibility that somoeone else’s perspective may actually be closer to reality.
Be willing to learn from the different viewpoint. You don’t have to agree to understand.
Be sure to explore why your spouse sees something differently. Remember, you are different people with different experiences. That guarantees the specifics of how you view the world will be different.

Why We Don’t Change (And What To Do About It!)
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

A short break in the Top 10 Rules!

I was driving out of my neighborhood, headed to work today.  And I realized I was going a way I don’t usually go.  Or I should say “didn’t use to go.”

What happened?  How did I end up there?

Okay, so give me a second to explain.  There are 4 ways to exit my neighborhood from my house.  I always went with 2 of them.  Then, they decided to do some roadwork off the main road that encompassed two of the exits.  And when I say “roadwork,” I mean wet tar, wet oil, pieces of scrap metal, etc.  In other words, nothing I wanted to drive through!

So, I decided (note I said “decided”) to go another way.  The next day, I head off to the office.  And I find myself driving the old way.  I fussed at myself and turned around.  That afternoon, I automatically headed in the old way.  I fussed at myself again!

The next day, I very purposefully set out to go the new way. . . and started to turn the old way!  “What is up?” I asked myself.  I corrected, and went out the new way.  The next few days, I forced myself to remember to go the new way.

One day, I noticed I was headed out the new way, and hadn’t had to be so purposeful.  It was just the new way out.  And today, a month after the work ended (and therefore my original reason for changing), and I found myself headed out the “new” way (which is quickly becoming the old way!).

How many times do you hear people saying “that’s just not me”?  Often, it is about some change — new hairstyle, new clothes, etc.  Any change somehow challenges our perception of “me.”  Even if the challenge seems fairly innocuous, if not downright useless.

Yet we tend to stay in our routines, regardless of how useful that routine may be.  If our routine is to eat that snack just before bed, even as the scales are warning us about how the “me” is expanding, we are likely to keep on snacking.

Neuroscientists can tell us that the more we do something, the more the habit grows.  And as the habit grows, we create a “groove” in our neurology.  We connect our neurons to that certain habit.

The longer we do the habit, the deeper the groove.  The deeper the groove, the harder the habit is to break.  And the more we begin to see that habit as part of the “me.”

Which means that I discuss doing something different in their marriage.  I request they act differently toward a spouse, stop yelling, bring flowers, call to update, etc., etc., etc.  And the response I get is “I can’t do that.  I just can’t change.  That’s not me.”  Precisely, I think to myself.

But the “me” they are operating from is NOT working, and IS causing a problem in their marriage.  So why not try to change?

BECAUSE CHANGE IS HARD!

At least in the beginning.

Until the change becomes habit — becomes the new “ME.”

Which brings us to the important piece, “what to do about it!”  We all know change is hard.  But change is life, right?

So, let’s start with this:  if it ain’t working, time to change.  Let’s just agree to that.

If we can’t agree to that, then the rest is irrelevant.

Still with me?

Okay, so let’s first define what it is you need to change.  What do YOU (not your spouse, as you have no control over that) need to change in how you interact with your spouse?

Write that down.

Now ask yourself this:  “Is that really a core piece of myself?”  “Does it really define me as a person?”  “What if I do it differently.  Will I be an entirely different person, or will I just be interacting differently?”

Be clear about that.  How you interact is not who you are.  It is a habit of interaction.

Next step:  what is the better way to interact?

Why is it a better way?   Again, be clear about this.

Now, notice when you usually do the old way.  Imagine a time when you did just that, then reimagine it with the new way.

Next step:  assume you will not be perfect.  Remember my driving?  I kept leaving the old way.  But I stopped and corrected.

Same for you.  When you try the new way, if you find yourself starting down the old way, stop.  Apologize, and try it the different way.

Then keep on trying the new way.

One day, and in not as long as you think, the new way will be the old way.

Keep changing.  Keep evolving.  That is the nature of life.  It’s all about growing!

Ready to make a change in your marriage?  CLICK HERE.

Rule #4: Use Civility — Even When You Don’t Feel It!
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

Be civil to save your marriageI remember years ago hearing a Native American quote that we are all born with claws and fangs, but learn to use them as nails and teeth.

Unfortunately, it takes very little for the fangs and claws to reemerge, especially when there is a bit of tension (or a lot!).

When we feel threatened, we find some pretty primitive responses suddenly rush through us.  Fear gets us there.  It creates a very primitive response of fight-or-flight.

And when what is considered to be the most important relationship in our life feels threatened, that response erupts.

When there is disconnection in a relationship, and the conflict becomes entrenched, more and more your spouse becomes an intimate enemy.

We begin to respond in ways that don’t make sense to us in calmer moments.

In the midst of a fight, do you hear that voice watching yourself and thinking “why am I acting this way”?  That is the more civilized part of your brain being surprised by that ancient brain.

Oh, sure, we can justify and excuse ourselves, thinking “how else can I respond, given how my spouse is acting?”

But we know better.  We know we are acting beneath our higher selves. We find ourselves acting in immature, irrational, uncharacteristic ways.

Civility

A major step in saving your marriage is choosing to act civilly. Acting otherwise keeps the cycle going.

So what does civility mean here?

Kindness, respect, positive regard.  Not reacting with criticism, sarcasm, raised voices, veiled threats (or open threats), mocking tones, or demands.

Let me pause a moment and say, this is not about choking down your anger, not talking about problems, or avoiding conflict.

It is simply being kind and decent when you are working on tough things.  And it means being warm and engaging when you are in daily interactions.

Really, it is starting (or restarting) your relating with the Golden Rule: “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.”

Notice it is not “Do unto others as they do to you.”  It is about treating another person in ways we want to be treated.

I am not starting with such goals as being cuddly and loving.  Instad, let’s draw a baseline at a much simpler spot.  It is just about treating the other person (your spouse) with respect.

Did a voice just pop up and say “respect?  I don’t respect him/her.”?

Let me just theorize that there is such a thing as unconditional respect.  This is a layer of respect that is showing respect by actions.  It is not tied to feeling respect.  Perhaps your spouse has done something that disrupts your feeling of respect (maybe even trampling it).

That is not what I am addressing here.  I am suggesting that we all have that choice on how we are going to act toward someone; how we will treat him or her.

Let’s make a choice, a decision, that going forward, we will treat our spouse with civility and respect.

It makes the other rules have far more traction!

Rule #3: The Feeling of Love Follows Loving Action
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

Two people meet, fall in love, and feel the pitter-patter of their heartbeats forever.  They always have that love-sick look in their eyes, even when they are apart.  That is proof that they are the right people for each other.

Or at least Hollywood would have us believe it!

And that one myth is more destructive than almost any other about love and marriage in our culture.

Myth.  That doesn’t mean false.  Just that it does not represent fact.

Here is the truth:  the feeling of love, of being “in love” ebbs and flows through the course of a marriage lifetime.  Sometimes, the feeling is overwhelming.  Other times, it is, well, underwhelming.  Sometimes it is entirely absent.

That does NOT mean the wrong two people got together.  It does NOT mean the marriage is doomed for failure.  It does NOT mean there is no future path.

Think about that term, “madly in love.”  Madness is the same as crazy.  And those endorphin/hormonal/emotional rushes that come at the beginning of any relationship really is just that:  craziness.  In fact, fMRI scans, showing the brain activity, would show the same overactiveness in the brain of an infatuated couple as is seen in those that are insane.

Thank goodness that state equilizes and normalizes!  Otherwise, little would be done in this world by couples.  The single-mindedness of that early stage preempts much useful from happening.

Which is point 1 — that feeling of “crazy in love” is not sustainable.

But point 2 is that doesn’t mean romance of a relationship is gone forever.  Only that there is a shift underway which is widely misunderstood.  And when something is misunderstood, we usually mess things up by taking wrong actions.

So, point 3 is that the feeling of being in love is not dependent of acting in loving ways.  In fact, that is part of what creates the feeling.  Not the other way around.  We do not act in loving ways because we are “in love.”  We are “in love” because we act in loving ways.

Think about it for a moment:  isn’t that what happened in the beginning?  You feel some pull toward someone else.  You are attracted to them, “infatuated,” you might say.  So, you do loving things.  The other person is feeling the same way, and is acting in loving ways.  And there is a back-and-forth interplay of receiving the love, and then acting lovingly.

As that builds, infatuation fuels the love from not only being attracted to someone but getting to know them.

Here is where the story can go in one of two ways.

First, the road that destroys a relationship.  Life begins to creep in.  Perhaps those little idiosyncracies begin to drive you a bit crazy.  Perhaps the schedule doesn’t prioritize the relationship.

At some point, one — and then both, stop acting in loving ways.  They are wanting the love to be shown toward them, but don’t take the time to show it back.

The built-up warm feelings begin to cool.  The reserve is tapped out.

Then, one or both begin to feel unloved.  Feel unloved, and without making a conscious decision to do otherwise, you will stop acting lovingly.

The exact process that led you to fall “in love” is mirrored in the process to feeling disconnection and disdain.  The road up is mirrored by the road down.

Road two is a bit different.  The couple realizes that to maintain a connection, they must prioritize around maintaining the connection.  In order to feel loved, one must be loving.

And most important, there is a realization that the feeling of being “in love” is always (not sometimes, but ALWAYS) fueled by acting lovingly.

As has been said before, “love” is a verb.  “I love someone” is really “I will act lovingly toward someone.”

So why do 50% of the married population follow road 1?  I have come to believe that much of the reason is lack of understanding.  We have been raised on a constant diet of the romantic feeling of love.  We have not taken in the “feel love as a by-product of acting in loving ways.”

When the feeling is missing, we make the natural assumption that something is wrong.  We believe we must have either done something wrong or have the wrong person.

Let me pause just for a moment and tell you that there are times when the wrong two people do get together.  Sometimes, there are some very deep and clear moral divisions.  For example, one believes that an open marriage is fine, while the other believes in monogamy.  Or one person believes that criminal activity is acceptable, but the other believes in truth and honesty.

But too often, two people with too much in common and lots of shared history, one day realize they do not feel “in love,” and begin to believe that they have made the wrong decision.

And they take apart what could be a wonderful, loving marriage.  Mostly because they simply misunderstand what it takes.

Back to our two paths.  Let’s assume that the couple from road 2 keeps on keeping their relationship as a priority.  They treat each other with respect, and act lovingly.  They can continue on that path for a lifetime together.

But more likely for you being on this site, you are not on road 2, but on the first road.  This road is full of people stuck, people feeling hurt, rejected, and hopeless.  Couples on this road move to less helpful and more destructive patterns.

The more unloved we feel, the less loving we become, left to our own devices. Spin that through a couple of cycles, and the relationship can feel hopeless, the couple helpless to stop the process.

But here is the amazing thing:  you can CHOOSE to act lovingly at any moment in time. You can make a conscious decision to stop acting in “less than loving,” if not downright destructive ways, at any time.

In his book, Success Principles, Jack Canfield makes the observation that there is a great equation that can help us all:  E + R = O

The equation says that Event + Response = Outcome.  We often forget the R, our response.  Society often makes us feel that Event = Outcome.  When something happens to us, it creates the outcome.

What Jack is telling us is this:  we ALWAYS have a choice in how we will respond to any Event.  Fact is, there is always a response.  Sometimes we pretend that there is no other possible response.  But there is.

One of my favorite authors, Victor Frankl, states that “Everything can be taken from a man or a woman but one thing: the last of human freedoms to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.”  He continues that “Between stimulus and response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom.”

Powerful words from a man that survived the worst that a Nazi concentration camp could throw at him.

How much less to choose to act lovingly toward our spouse, regardless of what comes our way — regardless of how our spouse chooses to treat us.

Remember, your spouse is acting in a way that reflects what he/she believes is true about YOUR actions.  What if both of you are acting in “less-than-loving” ways, justifying it because of the lack of love on the part of your spouse?

That feeling of love becomes strangled by the lack of acting lovingly.

So now it becomes a choice.  You can ALWAYS choose to act lovingly.  Make that choice, starting NOW!

Are you ready to take action — positive action?  CLICK HERE to learn a step-by-step guide to rebuilding your marriage.

Rule #2: Never Try to Convince, Beg or Plead
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

Rule 2 for saving your marriageYou find yourself in a marriage crisis.  Perhaps your spouse just told you about how unhappy, dissatisfied, disappointed, frustrated, or angry he or she is.  Perhaps your spouse talked about separation or divorce

Your first reaction is likely shock.  You feel that gut-wrenching grab in your stomach, the cold sweat of fear gripping you.  The floor can seem to fall out from under you.

If you are like most people, your initial response is to try to convince your spouse that he/she is wrong.  You beg and plead for an opportunity to change.  For an opportunity to do something different.

You are hoping that your spouse’s mind can be changed.

Reality check:  the reaction of convincing, begging, and pleading sets the stage for an even deeper crisis.  In other words, your initial response may do more to push the marriage into crisis than your spouse was even feeling!

But that doesn’t mean that the marriage has no chance. Or that there is nothing you can do.  Only that your initial reaction may cause more problems.

You want to be opening possibilities, not deepening the crisis and closing doors, right?

So let’s just admit that those reactions are based in fear.  Fear is primitive, and not the best point of reaction.

There are several reasons why this can be counterproductive.

First, you will likely end up reenforcing the beliefs your spouse already has.  The reactions of begging and pleading only make you look needy and unreasonable.  If your spouse has any feeling that he/she is not getting his/her needs met, this reaction will create an immediate thought of “see, this is just what I am talking about.”

Second, if your spouse feels unheard, misunderstood, or ignored, then as you are trying to “convince” him/her, all that will be felt is you being more dismissive of his or her feelings.  You may think you are speaking logically, but it will be heard as you being dismissive.

Third, there is a psychological term that you need to understand:  “psychological reactance.”  This term refers to the fact that all of us, when we feel pushed, pulled, cajoled, etc., will tend to do the exact opposite, even if we agree with direction to which we are being pushed or pulled.

If someone throws us a rope and pulls, we will pull back. We truly are “stubborn as a mule!”

So, don’t give more to push against.

Okay, so we have established that the begging, pleading, and convincing will not convince, but will only firm the beliefs you really want to change.

So how do you respond?

First, let’s talk about some “don’ts.”

DO NOT try to use “reverse psychology.”  This is the type of communication that many resources on the internet suggest.

Reverse Psychology may work on your 5 year old: “don’t you dare drink that milk!  You do NOT want to get strong!”  But it will NOT work on an adult.

It may surprise your spouse, and just for a moment, confuse them.  But then they will be onto you.  And you will lose even more credibility.

By the time your spouse tells you there is a problem, he or she has been thinking about it for awhile.  The various scenarios have been painted.  It may be news to you, but it is not to your spouse.

Whatever reverse psychology you might use, it will do one of 2 things:

  • lead your spouse to think you agree (when you do not),
  • lead your spouse to think you are not taking it seriously (when you do).

So, no reverse psychology!

Also, don’t get caught up in believing you need to fix everything in one conversation, either right after your spouse “drops the bomb” or any other time.  Marriages are not saved or destroyed in a single conversation.

We all are great script writers.  We are worthy of Oscars.  The only problem is, we are all writing the scripts, but no one else is following OUR script!  They are following (or trying to follow) the one in their own head.

While you are rehearsing that conversation and how it will go, realize it won’t go that way, so don’t place all your hopes on that one convincing, transforming conversation.

  • Don’t try to initiate a big relationship talk.  This is not the time to delve into your issues, hashing them out, and hoping for resolution.  Remember:  psychological reactance.  Also remember that the more we talk about our beliefs, the more deeply we believe them.

The more your spouse repeats his/her feelings of unhappiness and belief that the marriage is doomed, the more deeply he/she will come to believe it.

  • Don’t dodge your spouse’s relationship conversations.  Just don’t initiate them or perpetuate them.  Listen.  Don’t correct.  Listen.  Don’t argue.  Listen.  Actively listen.  Ask questions, clarify to make sure your spouse feels heard and that you understand (not agree, just understand what he/she is saying).

If you can’t beg and plead, and you can’t pretend to agree, what can you do?

Gather your courage.  And remind yourself that courage is not the absence of fear, but acting in spite of fear.

Thank your spouse for being honest and sharing.

Be very clear that it probably took a great deal of energy for your spouse to even speak.  This is true, even if you do not agree with what your spouse said.  It still took energy.  It was a risk.  Honor that, even if you don’t like what was said.

For example, “Wow!  That must have been hard to say!  That is hard to hear, but I am sure it was harder to say.”

Accept that what he or she said is what he or she feels (at least right now).

For example, “I think I understand how you are feeling.  Is this right? (then repeat what you think you heard)”

It is important to check to make sure you understood.  I have heard from many people that assume they are headed for divorce, when in reality, the spouse just needed the relationship to change.

You can also verbalize that you are a bit surprised (if you are), and that you do not feel the same way, but certainly understand that is how he/she feels.

Also, you can state how sad you are that there is so much disconnection that you were unaware (if you were unaware).  If you were aware of the disconnect, you can say it:  “I have been feeling disconnected, too.  I am so sad we are at this place.”

Be careful.  This is not the time to problem-solve.  No suggestions of how to fix the problem.  At this point, you want to hear your spouse, let him/her know you listened, that you know it was hard to say, and a statement of your own sadness.

There is time for rebuilding in the days to come.

Ready to get started rebuilding?  CLICK HERE  to grab the Save The Marriage System.

Rule #1: The Goal of Marriage is to Build a WE
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

Rule 1 Save MarriageDo you want to know the one, biggest, simplest, and most difficult secret of marriage?  It is right in front of you, but you may miss just how important this one is.

In fact, this is the one piece of information I try to get into every person I see BEFORE they get married.  And it is my central goal of working on marriages.

Miss this one, and you will always be caught in malnourished and hobbled relationship.

Ready?  Marriage is about building a WE.  It is about becoming a solid team, always having each other’s back, and always in each other’s corner.

WE.  Get there, and you will have a successful marriage.  Notice, I did not say you would have a trouble-free marriage.  Only that you would have a successful marriage.

Every single marriage in the world has challenges and difficult times. The question is really about how you approach the difficulties, not whether you have them.

Being a WE is what gets you through the difficulties.

First, let’s talk about what this does NOT mean.  This is not being in a permanent “mind-meld” with the other person — liking the same things, wanting the same things, thinking the same things, completing each other’s sentences, blah, blah, blah.

Second, it is not giving up yourself for the other person, or the other person giving him- or herself up for you.

It is about two people deciding — committing — to being a team, a unit, a new entity.  It is about each supporting the other, but also looking out for what is best for BOTH, for “the whole.”

How close to that are you today?

  • Do you find yourselves in power struggles?
  • Do you argue about money, sex, parenting, and other central issues?
  • Do those arguments often end with little-to-no movement?
  • Do you feel like you are in a stalemate?
  • Do you both constantly keep saying (silently or out loud) “What about me?”
  • Do you feel like you are headed in different directions?
  • Do you feel the need to disagree or argue your point, even when you mostly or completely agree?

The more you answered “yes” to the above the more you can be sure you have not “made the leap” to being a WE.

Or perhaps you can answer this one question:

  • Do I feel more alone than I want to in this relationship?

If that is “yes,” then you know that you are not quite there.
But that doesn’t mean it is your fault!  Quite the opposite.  Unfortunately, our culture does a very bad job in preparing people for marriage.

In other words, nobody told you the goal of marriage was to build a WE, and if they did, they probably didn’t tell you

  • a) how to do it, and
  • b) how subtle it can be.

Some couples actually make it there, almost by accident.  Others seem to struggle against it, refusing to see the obvious need to get there.

So, let me make a blanket statement:  I have never, in well over 20 years of working with couples, seen a couple who made it to WE end in divorce.  But I have seen, repeatedly, when a couple does not get there, the relationship at least deteriorates over time, often ending.

There are several reasons why people don’t make it to WE.  Quickly, let’s look at why people don’t get there.

Lack of understanding that this is the goal.
This is where our culture has failed us.  We have done a poor job, as a society, of letting peope know this is even what marriage is about.  Thus nearly 50% of marriages end.

Fear of a loss of individuality.
While this is not what happens, since there is so poor of an understanding, people fear this.  Again, this is merely a misunderstanding of what it means to be a WE.

Caught in a Fear/Anger cycle.
So, if you don’t know this is the goal, and you get caught in the ensuing power struggles, over time, the anger builds.  And anger is really a secondary response to fear.  The fear is that you will not get what you need, which triggers a very primitive response, which only leads to more power struggle, more fear, more anger.

Perceptions and Misperceptions of each other.
And once you have slipped into the power struggle, and the anger/fear cycle, you begin to justify the situation.  We all misperceive the other person.  We begin to only see the shortcomings, the lack of investment, etc.  At that point, the perception is that the other person is not on your side.

Which raises the question, “How do you get there?  How do you become a WE?”

Let me assure you it is possible, and it is even possible if one of you is resistant to getting there.

And let me assure you that we humans are actually designed for this.  We are wired to be in relationship, to create that level of relating.

So, what we really have to do is get ourselves out of our own way and let what should happen actually happen — become a WE!

I tackle this in detail in my Save The Marriage System (learn more by CLICKING HERE), but let’s talk a little about how to get there.

Starting Points:

  • Do not try to address WE with your spouse.
  • Work on YOUR concept of WE.
  • Until you understand WE as a concept, you cannot expect your spouse to accept it.

Specific Steps To Being a WE:

Step 1  

  • Make a careful examination of the places that you think “you/me” instead of WE.
  • Remind yourself that you are part of a WE.
  • Ask yourself this, “Where do I need to let my spouse in MY world?”

Step 2

  • Train yourself to think in terms of “we” and “us,” not “you” or “me.”
  • Whenever there is a decision, ask the magic question:  What is best for US?
  • This is a “magic question” because the answer is more creative than “what is best for me” or “what is best for you.”
  • It forces you to move to WE.

Step 3

  • Accept YOUR FULL RESPONSIBILITY to be a WE, regardless of your spouse’s outlook or actions.
  • Refuse to be lured into an “if you don’t, I won’t” approach.
  • Invite your spouse into WE by your actions, not your expectations.

Now, time to get started!  Go work on creating the WE you need in order for your marriage to survive and thrive!

New Series: 10 Rules For Saving Your Marriage
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

In the last two days, I have heard the same thing. Once by email, once by phone. Yesterday, the email said “I don’t have much time. Can you tell me just one thing I can do to save my marriage?”

This morning, the voice on the phone said “Help! I am desperate! I don’t have time to go through all your material. Just tell me, what can I do RIGHT NOW to save my marriage?”

No, I didn’t laugh. Instead, I was sad. I always am sad when I hear about marriages in such deep trouble. But I am just as sad by the attitude that says “there has to be just ONE thing I can do to turn this around.”

Bad news: there isn’t.

Good news: there are plenty of things you CAN do.

Which led me to think: what can I do to get you some actionable information RIGHT NOW. Not one thing, but what if I can point you in the right direction with a number of small things?

Small things, added together, grow to large things. And large things can make the difference.

As Jack Canfield states, if you even take 5 whacks at a tree every day, no matter the size, one day it will fall.

With that, I decided that I would start a new series: 10 Rules For Saving Your Marriage.

These are rules I have gathered in the last quarter-century of working with couples. They apply to every situation — sometimes crucially and sometimes just enforcing the others. Violate any of the rules, though, and you will see your efforts to be limited, if not useless.

With that, let’s get working to save your marriage — not with ONE thing, but 10!

Stay tuned!

If you want to save your marriage, CLICK HERE and get started with the whole system!

It Worked. . . and Yet!
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

Have you seen the cartoon that recently went around? The man is desperately looking for his iPad. It seems to be lost, and he is lost. He prays to God that if God helps him find the iPad, he will do whatever God wants.

A few minutes later, he locates his iPad, illuminated by rays of light from above. The man grabs his iPad, turns his face upward and says “never mind, God, I found it!”

I chuckled a second time when I read an email from a customer. His marriage is great. Never better. His wife and he are under the same roof, talking, and moving forward.

So, I was a bit surprised that he wanted his money back. What? My material is designed to save a marriage.

Not just save it, but massively improve it.

Not just improve it, but radically alter it, so that the problems never reemerge.

Not just stopping problems, but making it into a world-class marriage.

And the couple is on their way. But he is just not sure if he wants to give me any credit or not.

Huh?

Sometimes, we forget where we were when we were in pain, and pretend we don’t need help.

If you are ready to get help for your marriage, if you are ready to move your marriage not just out of trouble, but to somewhere great, let us know!

We are here, waiting to help YOU!

Time. . . And Marriage
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

Last night, I had the chance to watch the movie, In Time. If you are not familiar, it is a dystopic future that divides the “haves” and “have nots” by who has time. Literally. The general population are programmed to live for 26 years (barring an accident or someone stealing their time). But the wealthy have become immortal, as they have time.

Their slogan, “for the few to be immortal, many must die”. So, they hoard time, and meanwhile, the masses live, quite literally, minute-to-minute.

So, my analysis of the movie is that it is a very intriguing and thought-provoking idea caught without a decent plot.

But, as I said, it makes you think. Time as the ultimate commodity. What if that was the case?

Oh, yeah. It is! When we make a purchase, we are trading the time it took to make that money for that product. That $5 coffee? Calculate how long it took to make the $5, then decide if it is worth it. And that is without adding in the loss of that $5 for future earnings. We trade our time for our possessions. And experiences. The movie is already true!

But what does that have to do with marriage? Lots!

How much time do we waste acting as if our marriage was worthless? For instance, think of all the time a couple loses in worthless arguing and struggling, somehow pretending that a) there must be a winner, and b) if they keep going, they will arrive at a conclusion.

Scoring points. That is the typical goal in most arguments. “Let me prove my point, and then you will see I am right.”. But how many of those arguments are just differences of opinion? Take those out, and you have a 90% reduction in arguments, making the other 10% much easier to solve.

Or how about how much time we spend unhappy, but unwilling to really work at it?

Now, some will use this as rationale for divorce. Get out of a bad relationship and move on.

If only it were that easy! People greatly underestimate the devastation of a divorce. It is crippling to kids, adults, finances, etc., etc., etc.

But being stuck isn’t the answer. Here’s the deal, pointed out in the movie: we are going to die. How we spend the time between here and there is our only choice. Wasting it in conflict, or using it to build a treasured relationship?

Your choice.