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Reality
Check
by Gary Chapman
“If
you read these four statements with a niggling sense that, yes, these
falsehoods have crept into your own thinking, get ready to clear your
mind with reality.”
If
you’re feeling dissatisfied with the love in your marriage, give
your life a reality check. It could be you’ve been buying into these
four common myths:
My state of mind is determined by my environment.
People can’t change.
When you’re in a bad marriage, you’ll either have to resign
yourself to a life of misery or get out.
Some situations are hopeless.
If you read these
four statements with a niggling sense that, yes, these falsehoods have
crept into your own thinking, get ready to clear your mind with
reality.
Exposing
Four Myths
First, your environment certainly affects who you are, but it does not
control you. If you believe myth #1, you’ve got a victim mentality.
The second myth fails
to reckon with the reality of human freedom. Your local library is
filled with accounts of people who’ve made radical changes. Consider
Charles Colson, the Watergate criminal who later began an
international agency to offer prisoners spiritual help. People can and
do change--sometimes dramatically.
As for the third
myth, why limit your horizons to two devastating alternatives? I’ve
seen couples come to counseling, convinced they’ll end up divorced,
only to amaze themselves and each other by building love between them
again. You’re only a prisoner by your own choice; you can dismantle
a prison without leaving your spouse.
The fourth myth flies
in the face of God’s truth, which insists that there is always hope
because he is all-powerful.
It’s time to throw
out the myths and get ready to accept these six positive realities.
Reality
1
I am responsible for my own attitude
Trouble is inevitable, but misery is optional. Sometimes when two
people are in a troubled marriage, one curses while the other prays.
The difference is attitude.
Focus on how terrible
the situation is and it’ll get worse. Focus on one positive thing
and another will appear. In the darkest night of a troubled marriage,
a light always flickers. Zero in on that light and it will eventually
flood the room.
Wendy’s husband
hasn’t had a full-time job in three years--not that she’s whining
about it. "Now that we can’t afford cable TV, we’ve done a
lot more talking at night," she says. "We’ve learned a
lot. It’s amazing how many things we can do without that everybody
else thinks they have to have. It’s been a challenge, but we’re
making the most of it."
Three weeks after I
met Wendy, I encountered Lisa, whose husband had been out of work for
ten months. Lisa had been frantic with worry the whole time and had
reached a point of mental and physical exhaustion. She was certain
they’d lose everything. She moaned about having to drop cable TV and
not being able to have a second car. She lived on the edge of despair.
Similar problems,
completely different attitudes.
A "positive
mental attitude" might sound like pop psychology, but the
injunction to pursue "the bright side" is as old as Paul’s
letter to the Philippians: "Do not be anxious about anything, but
in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your
requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all
understanding, will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus.
Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is
right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable--if
anything is excellent or praiseworthy--think about such things"
(Phil. 4:6-8).
Reality
2
Attitude affects actions
You may not be able to control your environment (sickness,
irresponsible or addicted spouse, teen on drugs, an abusive or absent
parent), but you choose what you’ll do within your environment. Your
attitude will greatly influence your behavior. If you’ve got a
pessimistic, defeatist attitude it’ll be expressed in negative words
and behavior.
Wendy built her
marriage during the stressful years of her husband’s unemployment.
She affirmed him when he got discouraged and assured him they’d make
it until he got a full-time job. They both got part-time jobs. She
came up with an idea to collect aluminum cans so they’d have
"fun" money. They got so creative--from picking up pop cans
on their evening walk to collecting regularly from local businesses
and restaurants--that soon they were able to eat out and go to the
movies every week. Wendy’s positive attitude led to positive action.
Meanwhile, Lisa
criticized her husband for ten months, telling all her friends--while
her husband could hear her--how disappointed she was in him. She
refused to work herself, and she spent most of her time sleeping or
watching TV. No wonder their marriage was in serious trouble. Her
negative attitudes and actions compounded the original problem.
Reality
3
I can’t change others, but I can influence others
It’s widely assumed that you can’t change your spouse. But don’t
overlook the less obvious truth: that you still have great influence
over him or her. Because we’re relational creatures, we’re
influenced through our relationships.
I don’t mean
manipulation. That never works, because the moment your spouse
realizes you’re trying to exert control, there’ll be rebellion.
Nobody wants to be controlled.
But all married
couples influence each other every day. When a guy comes home, kisses
his wife and says, "I missed you today," he’s influencing
her in a positive way. But when a guy comes home and walks straight to
his computer room without acknowledging his wife’s presence, he’s
influencing her negatively. A woman would respond differently to those
two different approaches.
This radical reality
can bring about amazing changes in a spouse when one partner is
willing to choose a positive attitude that leads to positive actions.
One woman told me, "I can’t believe what’s happened to my
husband. I never dreamed he could be so loving and kind."
Reality
4
My actions are not controlled by my emotions
Pop psychology pushes the myths that "you are what you feel"
and that authentic living is being "true to your feelings."
It’s a short leap from that kind of thinking to "If I don’t
love my spouse, I might as well get out. It would be hypocritical to
stay married."
People are more than
their emotions. Human beings respond to life in four ways: with
thoughts, feelings, desires and actions.
Thoughts
interpret experience. You see dirty dishes in the sink at 10:30
p.m. and interpret that your wife is lazy. You see and hear your
husband mowing the grass and interpret that he is a responsible
individual.
Emotions
accompany thoughts. If you think your wife is lazy, you might feel
disappointment, anger or frustration. If you think your husband is
responsible, you might feel grateful, encouraged or happy.
Your
desires respond to your thoughts and feelings. Those dirty dishes
may create a desire to give your wife a lecture. Seeing your husband
hard at work on the lawn may give you a desire to take him lemonade or
to express your thanks when he’s done.
Either
way, eventually you take action. If you let your negative emotions
and desires control your actions, you’ll make the situation worse
with a negative action--and that stimulates a negative response in
your spouse.
But you’ve got a
brain. You can reason, "What’s the best thing to do?" How
about washing the dishes yourself and saying, "I love you. I
didn’t want you to have to face those dishes in the morning"?
How about handing your husband a glass of lemonade with a word of
thanks instead of "It’s about time you mowed that jungle!"
Ultimately, your
actions are far more important than your emotions. In fact, your
actions will affect your emotions. If you’re depressed and a friend
calls to ask you out for a root beer float, you could deny your desire
to mope and instead choose an action that will get you out where you
can experience other, more positive emotions.
Don’t buy the myth
that your emotions dictate your actions. You’re in charge of what
you do, and positive actions hold the potential to bring healing to
your relationship.
Reality
5
Admitting my imperfections doesn’t mean I’m a failure
You know what I hear from most couples when they come in for
counseling? He says, "She’s critical of my job. She puts me
down in front of the kids." She offers, "He’s married to
his job and has no time for me. He expects me to be a slave."
Each points a finger at what the other has done to make the marriage
miserable.
Over the years, their
blame habit has built up a stone wall between them, a monument to
self-centered living and a barrier to marital intimacy.
Admitting
your own past failures means you're no longer using your spouse's
failures as an excuse for your own.
Then wall can be
demolished, but it requires both partners to admit that they’ve
failed each other. Many times, one spouse is more at fault than the
other, but neither is perfect. Your spouse knows you’ve failed, and
you know it. Acknowledging your imperfections is simply admitting
you’re human.
Then get free. Asking
for forgiveness of past failures is one of the most liberating of all
human experiences. Even if you’re the only one acknowledging your
imperfection, you begin to tear down that wall.
Hang in there. If
you’ve hurt your spouse deeply, he or she may question the sincerity
of your plea for forgiveness. He or she may not express forgiveness at
first, but you’ve done the best thing you can do with a failure of
the past and you’ve planted the idea that the future is going to be
different.
Admitting your past
actions doesn’t mean you’re accepting all the responsibility for
your troubled marriage. It means you’re no longer using your
spouse’s failures as an excuse for your own. You’re taking
responsibility for your own actions and you’re paving the road of
hope for a new future.
Reality
6
Love is the most powerful weapon for good
French novelist Victor Hugo wrote, "The supreme happiness of life
is the conviction that we are loved." Sigmund Freud said,
"Love is the first requirement of mental health." Everyone
agrees that love holds a central place in our search for meaning. But
somehow we’ve ended up focusing more on receiving love than on
giving it.
Folks who come to me
for counseling say things like, "If she’d just be a little more
affectionate, then I could be more responsive to her." See how
this husband waits for love before he’ll give it? In a relationship,
someone’s got to take the initiative. Why do we always expect it to
be the other person?
To put love to work
as the most powerful weapon for good, you’ve got to stop thinking of
love as an emotion. Love is an attitude followed by appropriate
behavior. Love says, "I choose to look out for your interests.
How may I help you?" Then love is expressed in actions.
And the good news is
that, because it’s not an emotion, love can be chosen and learned.
The apostle Paul wrote to husbands, "Love your wives, just as
Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her" (Eph. 5:25).
In another letter, Paul challenged the older women to "train the
younger women to love their husbands" (Titus 2:4).
Reality
Living, Reality Loving
When you throw out the four myths and get real, love has a chance to
flourish. Your attitudes and actions can stimulate positive emotions
and even actions in your spouse. As you behave with real love and your
spouse responds, you’ll find your love growing--in both actions and
emotions.
So even for a
marriage that has grown cold, there’s always hope--because there’s
always the option of reality love.
___________________
Gary Chapman is a
pastor and counselor based in North Carolina. He is the author of
several books, including Toward a Growing Marriage (Moody).
Reprint permission
granted by David and Claudia Arp at www.marriagealive.com
.
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