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What Do You and Your Husband Have in Common?

Posted: November 9, 2012

The advertisement for a marriage seminar caught my eye.  It asked the question, “What do you and your husband have in common?”  An anonymous woman had scrawled across it in red ink, “We were married on the same day!” I burst out laughing.  But early on in my marriage, I probably would have burst into tears.

My American husband, Jim, and I met in Nairobi, Kenya. I was twenty, lonely, on the rebound from a broken relationship, and had no family in the country.  My parents had returned to England because my father’s tour of duty with the Royal Air Force had ended.  Instead of going back to England with them, I decided to stay.

Shortly after that I met Jim.  He strode into the small, English church I had attended since becoming a believer three years earlier, and all my female senses went crazy:  Who is this man? Is he single? Is he passing through town or is he going to be here for a while?  How do I get to meet him?  Well over six feet, dressed in a tan, tropical suit, Jim’s physical appeal oozed out of him. The fact that he pulled out a small Bible and joined in the singing only heightened my determination to find out who he was.

Two years later we married in the same church. Arriving in America six weeks after the wedding, Jim began a rigorous five year surgical training program. When I did see him, he was exhausted. Sleeping and studying filled what little time he spent at home. When we talked, we clashed.  Issues we’d never seen as potential problems tore at our relationship: different backgrounds, opposite perspectives, and incompatible personalities. Neither of us knew how to respond to the pain we both felt.

In my early twenties, unhappily married and with no family or friends to turn to, I wanted out.  My dream of living an exciting adventure as a newlywed in my adopted country had become a nightmare.  I was more lonely and miserable than ever.

Crisis Point

After several years of constant blaming and fault-finding, ping-ponging between frustration, rage, and depression, I came to the end of myself. I was emotionally exhausted. Instead of my incessant pleading with God to change Jim, the Holy Spirit impressed on me “Poppy, look at yourself.”

What I saw wasn’t pretty.  But it was the best thing I could have done. My attitudes were not loving or kind. I was not patient. And I allowed my negative thoughts to influence my mood which produced my less than godly reactions and words.

Moved by the Holy Spirit, I sobbed “Lord, please change me.  I have become someone I never wanted to be—bitter, angry, sarcastic, and hurtful.  I need You to touch my mind, my moods, and my mouth if I am to ever become the woman You want me to be”.

Did this miraculous transformation happen overnight? Did God wave a magic wand, suddenly turning me into a sweet, submissive wife who never disagreed with her husband ever again?  Nope.  In fact, the inner transformation I needed is still going on decades after that crisis point. But change has happened.

Perhaps the following six realizations that helped my marriage will help you.

Change Points

1. Realizing: I had not married my clone. Of course we saw things differently. But even if he made me mad or sad, that didn’t make him bad.

2. Realizing: We hadn’t come from the same home. We had been shaped by very different upbringings, as well as parental personalities, and practices. What I assumed were “normal” family and marriage behaviors didn’t mesh with Jim’s views of normal.

 3. Realizing: Our brains were wired differently. God created man and called it good. He also created woman, and called it good. I had not married my girlfriend and it was unrealistic of me to expect him to act like one. I had married a man created to respond to life as a man.

4. Realizing: We don’t have the same emotional needs. I have to say what I want, not expect him to decipher hints or simply “know” what I want.

5. Realizing: We can learn ways to communicate and build understanding.

6. Realizing: Conflict and different points of view are inevitable. Observing how both of us react and respond, plus choosing to make necessary adjustments, show respect and created trust.

If these keys to understanding your husband have helped you, you’ll find many more in my book, Why Can’t HE Be More Like ME? available at Amazon.com and all booksellers. Be encouraged. You can grow closer and learn to accept the man you married—even if he never thinks, reacts, communicates, or handles conflict like you. 

Poppy Smith inspires women to grow spiritually, emotionally, and personally through her inspirational Bible teaching and books.  To know more or invite Poppy to speak, visit her at: www.poppysmith.com

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0 responses to “What Do You and Your Husband Have in Common?”

  1. hmclaughlin says:

    Reblogged this on Heidi McLaughlin’s Blog.

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