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Looks
Don’t Matter... Do They?
by
Renae Bottom
“But
did these shorts adequately conceal the burgeoning cellulite along the
back of my thighs? Another loud summons from my husband convinced me
that they did.”
We
were about to leave the house for a night out with friends. My husband
hollered that we’d be late if we didn’t get going. I hollered back
that I was ready. Really, I was standing in the bedroom, half-dressed,
with my back to the full-length mirror, twisting my upper torso as far
to the rear as possible. I craned my neck to catch a glimpse of my
posterior. Did it stick out too far in these jeans? Ugh. Yes. I dumped
the offending jeans on a growing pile of discarded outfits and grabbed
some shorts instead.
Again,
I went to the mirror. Again, I contorted my body. This time the rear
view was better. But did these shorts adequately conceal the
burgeoning cellulite along the back of my thighs? Another loud summons
from my husband convinced me that they did.
I
grabbed my purse and rushed out the door, biting back the question I
so desperately wanted to ask: "Do I look fat in these?"
Fairy tale vs. reality
"Mirror, mirror on the wall, who’s the fairest of them
all?" We learn that rhyme as children. And sadly, that’s when
many of us decide the "happily ever afters" are for the
beautiful people; the rest of us must struggle with a more troll-like
reality.
But
eventually we grow up, and something magical happens. We find our
special mate, the one God prepared just for us. We say our vows and
embark on our own "happily ever afters." Nothing left to
fear from our Ugly Duckling days, right?
Maybe.
For many of us, that old connection between appearance and self-worth
is hard to break. Ask any woman who’s ever taped a picture of a
swimsuit model to her refrigerator in an attempt to resist leftover
cheesecake. Or any man who has quickly surfed past the television
commercial where a guy with washboard abs demonstrates a home workout
machine.
The
fact is, images of the "perfect" body abound in our culture.
If we allow ourselves to be influenced by a preoccupation with good
looks, physical appearance can become a source of insecurity not only
in our minds but in our marriages as well.
In
his book Women Are Always Right and Men Are Never Wrong (Word),
conference speaker Joey O’Connor puts it this way: "Despite all
the beauty and glamour we see in magazines, on television commercials
and in movies, physical fitness is no measure for a healthy marriage.
A healthy marriage is characterized by how husbands and wives honor
and respect each other, regardless of physical appearances."
O’Connor
refers to the message of 1 Samuel 16:7: "Man looks at the outward
appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart." Then he asks two
vital questions: "Whose standards do you use to define beauty and
attraction in your marriage? Do you judge your spouse based on outward
appearance or by what’s in his or her heart?"
Do
looks really matter?
Most people would agree that physical attraction is a vital ingredient
in a healthy marriage. But that’s exactly what it is--an ingredient.
It was never intended to be the whole meal.
"Marriage
was designed by God to meet relationship needs on a human level,"
says Beverly Burch, a Chicago-based psychotherapist who specializes in
individual and marital counseling. "Very few of us are
classically beautiful. Most of us aren’t going to get on a magazine
cover. What’s deeply satisfying in a relationship is a [person’s]
personality."
Physical
attraction is a vital ingredient in a healthy marriage. But
it was never intended to be the whole meal.
Dan
and Roxie, of Madrid, Nebraska, agree. Married 24 years, their
relationship has grown past the initial attraction phase. "Sure,
Roxie’s appearance was the way I was first attracted to her,"
Dan says. "But marriages don’t last if they’re not based on
something besides looks. As time goes on, you turn more from the
physical to the spiritual."
Roxie
chimes in: "Appearance matters, but … humor always meant more
to me." She believes personality traits, such as a good sense of
humor, are what really go the distance in a marriage. "Sickness
or weight gain, I don’t think that would matter," she says.
"We’re all eventually going to get older. It’s personality
that counts."
Advice
for the other half
It’s great when a marriage, like Dan and Roxie’s, matures to the
point where intimacy increases and friendship deepens over the years.
The relationship provides joyful nurture and loving security for both
partners. The 1 Samuel 16:7 model, based on inner qualities rather
than outward appearance, is firmly in place.
But
for some couples, physical appearance takes center stage--becoming a
source of resentment or even rejection. When that happens, Beverly
Burch advises, it’s time for some honest evaluation.
"You
have to find out why appearance is an issue, and who it’s an issue
with," she says. Feeling angry or dissatisfied with your
spouse’s looks, or with your own looks, can be the symptom of a
deeper problem. And usually the key is found at the relationship
level, not with the numbers on the bathroom scale.
If
bitterness over physical appearance has infected your marriage, Burch
suggests that you and your spouse consider these questions: Has there
been some deep disappointment within your relationship? Has your
marriage become less satisfying, making physical appearance seem much
more important to you? Have you stopped growing in intimacy, so that
appearance is all you have left?
Sometimes
one partner believes appearance is more of an issue than the other.
"Stereotypically, it might be the wife who’s ashamed of her
looks," Burch says. "That keeps her from being herself with
her husband. She can actually create the situation she fears by not
letting her husband connect with her personality."
On
the flip side, insecurity may prompt some people to become preoccupied
with dieting and "looking good." They feel most valued for
their appearance. They may even fear that if others really knew them,
they’d find little to love.
"But
people who are preoccupied with their looks are self-focused,"
Burch says. "Self-focused people don’t give as much [to
others]."
And
that can open the door to the worst enemy of any
marriage--selfishness. "I’ve never seen a marriage fall apart
because one person wasn’t beautiful," Burch says. "Usually
it’s selfishness, on one or both parts."
No
one would minimize the importance of a healthy lifestyle. Paying
appropriate heed to your weight and appearance can be a positive
measure of self-worth. But an attitude that consistently makes outward
appearance the yardstick for determining attraction is a roadblock
that can hinder the growth of true intimacy within your marriage.
Feeling
angry or dissatisfied
with your spouse's
looks, or with
your own looks, can be the symptom of a deeper problem.
"Appearance
is such a superficial thing to pick on," Burch says. "Be
honest with yourself. If you waved a magic wand and the other person
were suddenly beautiful, or you were suddenly beautiful, would you
truly be satisfied?"
Remember,
God looks at the heart. He loves you and your spouse unconditionally.
He designed your marriage relationship to be a source of intimate
acceptance and love. He can use prayer, honest communication and
perhaps the help of an understanding pastor or Christian counselor to
make your partnership all that he intended it to be.
But
do I look fat?
When I frantically try on 12 different outfits before leaving the
house and still fight the urge to ask "Does this make me look
fat?" what I’m really seeking is relationship reassurance. I
want to know if my husband loves and accepts me for what’s right
about my heart and not what’s wrong about my body.
I
know he does. And I feel the same for him. That’s just the kind of
personal need that marriage was designed to fulfill.
If
you or your spouse need to work at losing weight or at facing the
physical changes that come with illness or aging, remember that such
tasks are made easier within the framework of unconditional love and
honest acceptance.
In
his book, Joey O’Connor gives this advice: "Whatever you look
like and however you feel about your body, use what you’ve got to be
attractive to your spouse, but more important, work on being a person
of the heart."
_____________________
Renae
Bottom is a writer, teacher and volleyball coach. She and her husband,
Mark, live in Grant, Nebraska, with their two children.
Reprint
permission granted by David and Claudia Arp, MSSW at www.marriagealive.com
.
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