Marriage, from a Single College Student
Saturday, April 2, 2016
Cleave Unto Your Spouse
So many times in a new marriage, creating a balance of your relationship with your family and in laws can be tough. You grew up in one family and now you are connected to two families, with different schedules, holiday gatherings and traditions and so on. To add to that, a lot of spouses come from divorced families, creating an even more hectic dynamic. Trying to establish your marriage and your relationships with the extended family can be difficult. Sometimes, it could seem like it is a matter of life and death.
In James M. Harper and Susanne Frost Olsen’s Creating Healthy Ties with In-laws and Extended Families they stated, “Elder Ashton reminded us that in cleaving to a spouse, married children should be faithful and supportive to their spouses, but not forget their parent” (pg 327). With that said they strongly urged to remember that you are now married. Your spouse is your partner and you need to make life, family and marital decisions with your spouse and not your parents. Parents can urge you or try to control your decisions in children, jobs and so forth by trying to still have a handle on your life. You need to separate from that while not distancing yourself completely with your family. This can be extremely difficult for a wife or husband who is particularly close with a mother or father. You have to find a balance and establish boundaries to better create a strong marital foundation with you and your husband.
You want to have the most successful and happy marriage that you can. You must realize that for that to work, it's no longer just about you and your family. It is now you and your husband and everything he is bringing to the table. That mean's his past, hist traditions and his family. It will be a important key, to take the time to talk with your husband and learn to think about them to find a common ground.
Saturday, March 26, 2016
Become One
I have talked before about the roles of a husband and a wife. They are different but the two vital roles should play as equal partners. But a marriage is not a 50-50. If we base our ideas on the concept that marriage is about equality and splitting it 50-50 we are doomed to fail. We have to come together and both do our best to give a 100%. President Henry B Hyring said, "Our Heavenly Father wants our hearts to be knit together. That union in love is not simply an ideal. It is a necessity."
With this said, It is not just us each trying to give 100% it is making up for your spouse when they can't give a hundred percent. If we are suppose to become one, then you have to be the extra 20% if your spouse can only give 80% and so on. We have to work hard to complete one another not just giving out part and walking away for the situation or the day. We must serve one another and pick each other up when one of us can't stand on our own. We all have bad days, get tired, or are stressed, so we need to work hard to be there for each other and become one.
With this said, It is not just us each trying to give 100% it is making up for your spouse when they can't give a hundred percent. If we are suppose to become one, then you have to be the extra 20% if your spouse can only give 80% and so on. We have to work hard to complete one another not just giving out part and walking away for the situation or the day. We must serve one another and pick each other up when one of us can't stand on our own. We all have bad days, get tired, or are stressed, so we need to work hard to be there for each other and become one.
Monday, March 21, 2016
The sacred blessing of Physical Intimacy
This misunderstanding is a huge thing that prophets and leaders of the church have tried to address. President Hugh B. Brown said, “The sex instinct is not something which we need to fear or be ashamed of. It is God-given and has a high and holy purpose.” If we believe and are raised to believe to fear Sex. That it is a sin and the only purpose of it is to bear children, we are missing out on such a crucial and wonderful gift that we are given y God. We don’t need to fear it, or never speak of it. We should rejoice it. We should love our spouse, be spiritual and physically intimate, and love deeply, just don’t misuse or take the blessing for granted and use it in ways it is not meant for.
Thursday, March 10, 2016
Tear Down Your Walls
A common issue I see in couples these days is the fact that they are so focused on their dreams and ideas for their future independently, that they build up these walls in between them and their spouses. Having a dream is a wonderful thing. It is just how far are you willing to let it affect you and your marriage. Now don’t get me wrong, I am not saying that if you want to go to church and your spouse is athiet that you stop. I am not saying if you want to sing or go into a field of study and your spouse questions it, don’t let them hold you back. What I am saying is, we all make life plans when we are independent, single, on our own, on where our life is going to go. When a partner comes into the picture that plan will have to adapt, because it is not a duo, it is not just you anymore. But are you going to be so stubborn on keeping the plan you made on schedule, that you will build a wall between you and your partner.
I have a friend who is so extremely successful, independent and driven. She has practically planned out how her life is going to go. She wants to go to this school to get her Bachelors, this to get her masters, she wants to become a CEO , all these things, which are wonderful dreams to have! But she also wants someone who is already successful. Who is just as smart and talented and has his life together. That is another dream. She has recently found an amazing gentleman who is loving, caring, and they work so well together. However, even though he has ambitions, his grades aren’t the best, he hasn’t finalized on a career path and a major and so on, and this is making her build a wall in between her and him because her dream was supposed to be this successful intelligent man.
The guy just got done with his first year of school after a mission and took some very hard classes. He jumped right in when he wasn’t ready. He has plans and wants to support and provide it is just going to take time. But the fact that he is not where she wanted him to be when they were to be married, she is building this wall. She is so incredibly happy with him, but because of her idea and dream she made of her life when she was single and he hadn’t walked into her life. She questions walking away.
My point is, is this particular dream worth breaking hearts or throwing away something great, because it is not what you planned or initially wanted? If your spouse is not what you expected or they aren’t as clean, smart, funny, or emotionally connected as you had wished for, are you going to let that get in the way, or are you going to step back, adapt reevaluate and learn to live and love the things about them that weren’t what you expected?
It is your choice, but my advice is to learn to love them.
Friday, March 4, 2016
You are not marrying a walk in the park
When we find a person that we love and want to spend the rest of eternity with, sometimes we forget that we are also marrying issues, baggage, and a person who has different opinions, ideas, and habits than yourself. We all grow up with different backgrounds. Our parents taught us different things or we were immersed in different trials. Coming to the conclusion, we are all different. Even if you marry your best friend, someone that you have a lot in common with, there will still be differences in how you live, cope, and deal with different situations.
In John M. Gottman’s Book, The Seven Principles for Making a Marriage Work, Gottman talks about there are two different types of problems that come up in a marriage. There are solvable problems that the couple can actually solve and move on. Then there are perpetual problems that will last your entire marriage. Sadly he stated that 69% of marital problems are actually perpetual problems that you and your spouse will continue to fight about for your entire marriage. But don’t let this scare you!
Just because there are problems or continued problems doesn’t mean that a marriage is unsatisfied. Actually the happiest of marriages have these perpetual problems, they just have noted the problem, learned how to deal or approach the problem, and mindful of the problem. The main thing you need to do is to make sure that you always listen and be mindful of not just your feelings but also your spouses as well.A marriage was never meant to be easy, but you are a team now. Be mindful of them just like you want them to be mindful of you
Friday, February 26, 2016
We are all Equal but Different
In, The Family: The Proclamation to the World, it states, “By divine design, fathers are to preside over their families in love and righteousness and are responsible to provide the necessities of life and protection for their families. Mothers are primarily responsible for the nurture of their children. In these sacred responsibilities, fathers and mothers are obligated to help one another as equal partners.” Now I am not about to go into a long speech about how wives are meant for the kitchen and husbands are meant to go to work and provide. What I am getting at, with this quote, is that husband and wives, in their marriage and in their home, have particular roles that they fill (may be flip flopped or divided differently), but even though the rolls are different they are equal partners. For a marriage to work well and in synch, both the husband and the wives need to respect, honor, and listen to one another. If one partner decides that they don’t need to listen or hear the other one, you are doomed to ultimately fail.
I have heard so many times that a marriage is 50-50. However, actually, a marriage should be 100-100. You give it everything you have. But the key is, you work together as a team. Wives need to respect their husbands as well in turn Husband needs to respect their wives. You have to show respect. You have to hear each others opinions, you can’t just make decisions about your life on your own anymore, because your spouse is part of your life now. You are not just deciding for yourself, it is going to affect both of you. If the man is the head of the house hold in your family, not only should the wife support him, but the husband needs to show respect and love towards his wife. If either one of you tries to overpower the other, instead of sharing and being equal partners, you will hurt one of you, if not both. Tearing down the bonds of marriage that you took so hard building up.
Respect, love and care for another. You are both equal partners with different responsibilities. Without both of you, the foundation of your marriage will surely crumble.
I have heard so many times that a marriage is 50-50. However, actually, a marriage should be 100-100. You give it everything you have. But the key is, you work together as a team. Wives need to respect their husbands as well in turn Husband needs to respect their wives. You have to show respect. You have to hear each others opinions, you can’t just make decisions about your life on your own anymore, because your spouse is part of your life now. You are not just deciding for yourself, it is going to affect both of you. If the man is the head of the house hold in your family, not only should the wife support him, but the husband needs to show respect and love towards his wife. If either one of you tries to overpower the other, instead of sharing and being equal partners, you will hurt one of you, if not both. Tearing down the bonds of marriage that you took so hard building up.
Respect, love and care for another. You are both equal partners with different responsibilities. Without both of you, the foundation of your marriage will surely crumble.
Saturday, February 20, 2016
Coming Closer in Your Marriage
I once was sitting in Relief Society, a recently turned 18 year old, surrounded by woman from 6-60 years older than myself. I was the only single woman in the room and I was nowhere close to getting married. The lesson we were being taught, was how to strengthen your relationship with your husband and bring a good foundation of the Gospel in your home. Needless to say, I didn’t have much knowledge on the particular subject. The sister that was teaching that Sunday, started off one of her points in the lessons by saying, “My husband and I have absolutely nothing in common, we don’t like the same hobbies or the same shows, so I was faced on the decision on how to grow closer to my husband…” Now I, being a not so mature individual, accidentally, and quite rudely, let out a whisper snotty remark about something a long the lines of, “Nothing in common,Whaa, did you guys go your single, I’m single, lets have babies!” Now other than the fact that it wasn’t the nicest thing to say, and that my what I thought whisper, traveled far enough that most of the room heard me, I was not justified in my comment. Actually, I was completely wrong to jump to the conclusion and opinion that I made.
There are many people, I have found, who get married and have almost nothing in common. The husband likes sports or gaming, the wife likes reading and music. They do not share the same hobbies or styles, but yet fell in love and wanted to spend all their life together. It very well i,s that having things in common will make the marriage a bit easier, but don’t mean that you are doomed without it. John M. Gottman, in his book, The Seven Principles for Making a Marriage Work, talked about “Four Pillars of Shared Meaning” These including, Shared rituals in connection, like eating together at dinner. Traditions or weekly traditional gatherings to spend with each other and family. Being able to talk with each other and get to know each other and the struggles of each days draws you closer together. This can strengthen your marriage.
The next pillar being to “support each other's roles”. You and your spouse both play a part as husband and wife or mother and father. You each have roles. I don’t mean wife's in the kitchen and husbands at work. What I am trying to say, is when you get married you take on different roles that both of you will decide or naturally fall into. To become closer, you must support each other and have each other’s backs. Don’t throw someone under the bus or leave them hanging when they need help.
Number three, “Shared goals”. If you haven’t yet talked about it, sit down and figure out what your goals are for your marriage, your family, and your kids. What do both of you want to happen or strive to become. What do you want to maintain? What do you want to change? Figure out theses goals together and work towards them together. When both you and your spouse know where you are headed, you will naturally come closer together when trying to receive and accomplish those set goals.
Lastly, “Shared values”. Now not all the time are the husband and wife the same religion and beliefs. We all have different ideas and opinions. Surely having common beliefs will definitely help create a strong bond and foundation for the marriage and your family. But if this is not the case you can also sit down with your spouse and decide, what values do we want in our home? When both of you know and work towards those values it also makes you come closer together.
Having a lot in common, in the sense of what you like to do for fun, is not a make or break for marriage. Carve out time every week and/or every day to really just spend time with one another. Even if that just means over food (Which is always a delicious choice). Figure out where both of you want to go, how you want to live and support each other all the way. Make a marriage that is strong together.
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