6 Signs Your Marriage Is Suffering From Erosion

Tanner and Megan’s pastor referred them to us for a Marriage Intensive. Unlike most couples who call, they had not experienced an affair or major financial mistrust in their eleven years of marriage. However, Tanner and Megan had lost that loving feeling, in fact, they did not have much like for each other anymore.

Megan shared how Tanner was never fully present in the home, frequently leaving early for work and returning later in the evening after work and a work out. Tanner described how he had a great mother for his children and a wonderful room mate in Megan, but he had not felt loved or desired by here in years.

How The Marriage Relationship Erodes

Megan and Tanner’s relationship was a perfect example of how neglecting their marriage had eroded their love. We recently took a writing retreat in the Texas Hill Country. Sitting under a beautiful canopy of the leaves and limbs of a huge tree along the Guadalupe River, we noticed that a few feet of its many roots were exposed. It was apparent that the winding river and wind had eroded the fertile foundation soil that the tree’s sturdy trunk had grown in. It left the tree appearing vulnerable to a sure death in a future storm or heavy wind.

How Cultural Differences Impact Marriage

It is a beautiful thing to watch when two people fall in love. Over the course of several months, our friend’s love interest becomes all they can talk about. Finally we meet them and see for the first time how much in love the two are. We love watching our friends begin their healthy, life long relationships!

At our last Life Together Forever Weekend, we enjoyed seeing couples from various cultures together in one huge conference room. Watching cultures interact was fun for us. Many couples in attendance were married across cultures. In fact, we believe there is rarely a couple who came from the same culture.  Even if you grew up in the same race, ethnicity, neighborhood, church, etc., as your spouse, there are things about your culture that are different from your spouse’s.

Cultural Differences Are Exciting Early In Relationships

“There was a time when everyone on the earth spoke the same language.” Genesis 11:1 (VOICE)

What makes marriage last?

We just completed our Houston Marriage Retreat 2015 where 100 couples spent all day Saturday and half the day Sunday in a series of exercises and workshops focused on helping them reconnect, recommit and restore relationships. As with every event we do, we love to hear from couples about what a difference it made in their lives.

Daniel and Kim told us that they had participated in one of our Marriage 911 weekends about a year ago when they were on the brink of divorce. They found themselves challenged and began the process of doing the things they needed to do to create a healthy marriage. Knowing that they needed more, in the spring they attended a nationally promoted marriage program. They told us that they spent over $800 that weekend and left feeling really bad about themselves and their future. “It was one speech after another for the entire weekend. Our marriage was worse than before we attended.

Last weekend they experienced our Life Together Forever Weekend. In a better place than when we first met them, the exercises were able to break through into new areas of emotional connection than ever before. “We love that your weekends are focused on making the marriage relationship better. Making us talk about things we usually don’ t talk about in a room full of other couples who are having the same discussion, helped us feel closer than we ever have.”

‘A true friend loves regardless of the situation…’ Proverbs 17:7 (VOICE)

The Secret to Life Together Forever

Here’s the secret to making marriage work: maintaining friendship.

Making Time Work For My Marriage

In our Life Together Forever Weekends, we teach the concept of telling your time what to do. Everyone has 86,400 seconds every day. What you do with your time has to do with your world-view and your priorities.

‘Look carefully then how you walk, not as unwise but as wise, making the best use of the time…’ Ephesians 5:15 (ESV)

Who Makes Decisions In Your Relationship

How Who Makes Decisions Is An Indicator You Are Headed For Divorce.

How you make decisions in your marriage has huge implications for the success of your marriage. According to John Gottman’s three decades long study of over 3,000 marriages, 81% of marriages where one spouse makes most of the decisions end in divorce.

If one spouse has a “my way or the highway” approach to almost every decision in the marriage, from where to eat to how often there is physical intimacy, it makes it difficult for the other spouse to offer ideas. Eventually the other spouse becomes a “doormat” who feels oppressed. Over time the couple loses their emotional and physical connection until they are living different lives in the same house. Affairs and financial mistrusts occur and the dead relationship ends up in front of a divorce judge.

‘Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ.’ Ephesians 5:21

Who Makes The Decision?

How The Relationship Cycle Is Affecting Your Marriage

Where is your marriage in the cycle?

We change over time and so does our marriage relationship. Our relationships go through cycles of moving closer to each other and seemingly growing more distant.

The relationship cycle is normal. It is how God built us. Neuroscientists tell us that our brain experiences a dump of neurochemicals when we begin to fall in love. The next 18 to 24 months as our relationship continues, we experience that loving feeling that is due to the “chemical cocktail of love”. But at some point in the first two years of our relationship, our brains chemical system automatically resets.

“You have made my heart beat faster… with a single glance of your eyes…How beautiful is your love… How much better is your love than wine…’ Song of Solomon 4:9-10 edited (NASV)

How Strong Is Your Marriage Communication?

Communication is central to every relationship. How we send and receive communication with our spouse tears us apart or moves us closer together. Research from a number of fields is clear:   How we listen and how we communicate determines our success in relationships.

All marriages struggle with communication. Couples who do life together forever stay in their negative pattern of communication shorter periods of time and repair their relationship faster than those couples who fail to recognize their communication struggles and make amends.

How is your marriage’s communication?

This brief assessment is best when both of you do separately then compare notes. Take a few minutes and go through the following list and mark each question with who you believe does the question well: You, Your Spouse, Both of You, or Neither.

The Power of Non-Sexual Touch in a Relationship

Touch is the first of the senses to develop, and it remains perhaps the most emotionally central throughout out lives. Researchers have discovered that gentle, tender, non-sexual touch has powerful health benefits, including

  • Enhances growth in children.
  • Improves emotional, physical and cognitive functioning.
  • Lowers blood pressure and heart rate.
  • Reduces cortisol levels (Stress).
  • Stimulates memory.
  • Oxytocin levels go up, increasing uplifting emotions.
  • Boosts the immune system.

We are all familiar with how important touch is to us. When our spouse shares a tender touch, it not only has the above effects, but it also connects and bonds us in a way that words cannot. Sometimes we long for our spouse to touch us, but waiting for our spouse to initiate touch is self-defeating. According to the Touch Research Institute, the one initiating touch receives the same benefits of touch as the person on the receiving end. Reaching out and touching our spouse when we are wanting touch from them is helpful to us getting what we need.

‘Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.’ Luke 6:31 (NIV)

Sacrificing A Dream Career For My Marriage

Dana always wanted to be a nurse. During her freshman year of college she met and fell in love with Kraig who was a senior. Shortly after their marriage they were in a dilemma. Kraig had been accepted to a prestigious MBA program but in order for them to make it work financially, they would need to move and she would need to leave school and enter the workforce.

A few years later as Kraig was taking his first corporate job, they were blessed with their first baby. Dana spent the next sixteen years being a stay-at-home mom raising their three children. Kraig’s career continued to expand with more responsibilities and better pay. Kraig was living his dream, while Dana began to resent the fact that she had given hers up for the sake of the family.

We met them in a Marriage Intensive. During the day long session, Dana was able to communicate her desire to reach her dream of becoming a nurse. Kraig finally got it and together they developed a plan that made sense for family goals and Dana’s lifelong dream.

Go First To Create The Marriage You Really Want

Lance and Claire were stuck in the blame game. Both were waiting for the other to show them that they were loved. They were basically domestic partners and parents, living totally different lives while in the same house.

During the Marriage Saving Intensive, Claire told us about how Lance had never really shared what was going on in his heart. “After 18 years of marriage, I know more about how my dog feels about things than I know what Lance cares about.” She was miserable and blamed her husband for her unhappiness.

Lance felt like there was a bait and switch. He told us that their love life was wonderful as they began their relationship, but “she has a wall up in our love life. I have leaned to just get through, because I don’t have a wife who wants me in any way.”   He told us that unless she changes, he is not willing to make any changes.

“So don’t sit around on your hands! No more dragging your feet! Clear the path for long-distance runners so no one will trip and fall, so no one will step in a hole and sprain an ankle. Help each other out. And run for it! Work at getting along with each other and with God. Otherwise you’ll never get so much as a glimpse of God. Make sure no one gets left out of God’s generosity. Keep a sharp eye out for weeds of bitter discontent. A thistle or two gone to seed can ruin a whole garden in no time.” Hebrews 12-17 (MSG)