The passion and intimacy you wish you and your spouse could enjoy together isn’t just a pie-in-the-sky dream. That kind of marriage is within your reach. But it’s possible only if you both devote yourselves wholeheartedly to your relationship – fully engaging and giving 100 percent, without reservation.
Here’s how you can put your whole heart into your marriage:
Recognize where love comes from. Do you find yourself thinking that you’re not in love with your spouse anymore? Perhaps you feel like you just don’t connect with your spouse. Maybe you feel alone, even though the two of you are still living under the same roof. Have you chosen to settle, compromise, or go into survival mode in your marriage? Worse, have you given up and started looking for love somewhere else?
It doesn’t have to be that way. No matter how discouraged you may feel, it’s possible to experience love for your spouse again. That’s because love comes from God – who is always willing to give you a fresh supply of it – rather than from you. You don’t have the pressure of trying to generate love for your spouse when you don’t feel it. All you need to do is go to God in prayer each day and ask Him to fill your heart with His love.
When you open your heart to God daily, you’ll receive from Him all the love you need for both yourself and your spouse. The love in your heart will naturally overflow into your relationship with your spouse. So remember that God is the source of all love, and love is always available to you because it flows through you whenever you open your heart to God.
Open your heart. In your marriage, the issue isn’t love; it’s the state of your heart. Ask yourself daily: “Is my heart open or closed?” If your heart is closed, your marriage will start to shut down because you’re blocking the flow of God’s love into it. But if you open your heart to God and keep it open every day, you’ll be inviting God to pour out His love through you into your marriage.
Give your heart a voice. Become aware of the emotions you’re experiencing, and learn how to manage them in healthy ways. Keep in mind that God has designed your emotions to work together with your thoughts so you can make the best possible decisions. Your emotions give you valuable information that you can then process through your thoughts.
- Ask God to help you accurately identify what you’re feeling each day in various situations.
- Once you’ve figured out what you’re feeling and why you’re feeling it, start guiding your emotions toward what you want to feel in your marriage.
- Bring your negative emotions to God and ask Him to replace them with positive emotions in your life.
- Avoid unhealthy actions like ignoring, suppressing, judging, or minimizing your feelings; viewing your feelings as facts; impulsively acting on them; or spewing them on others.
Deal with a wounded heart. Life in this fallen world wounds you and your spouse’s hearts by attacking them with false messages (such as: “You’re not valuable”). The messages on your hearts affect how you see yourselves and how you interact with the world.
- Ask God to help you identify the false messages that have attacked your hearts and wounded them.
Then replace those lies with biblical truth.
- Search the Bible for specific verses that line up against the lies with which you’ve been struggling, and memorize those verses.
- Pray for the Holy Spirit to renew your mind so you can see yourself from God’s perspective and think right thoughts about yourself.
- Talk to some people you trust (such as friends, mentors, or a trained psychologist) for counsel and encouragement.
- Care for your heart by nurturing yourself (such as by maintaining a close prayer connection to God, nurturing healthy friendships, setting healthy boundaries in your life, journaling your feelings, eating whenever you’re hungry, and sleeping whenever you’re tired).
- Avoid behaviors that erode trust, like:
- Recognize your spouse’s value.
Deal with an exhausted heart. If you don’t intentionally plan regular time with your spouse and time to recharge yourself, the busyness of life will take over and your marriage will suffer.
- Slow down the pace of your lifestyle and simplify your schedule.
- Get rid of stuff that clutters your house and demands your time and energy to deal with it. Refuse to allow our culture’s standards to define your value by what you look like, what you do, or what you own.
- Find your true value in the fact that God has made you and redeemed you, and He loves you.
Fight for your spouse’s heart. Conflict is inevitable in marriage. But it doesn’t have to harm your relationship; it can actually strengthen it. If you and your spouse respond to conflict in a healthy way, conflict will become the doorway to intimacy between you because it will deepen your understanding of each other.
- Consider how both you and your spouse tend to react to conflict now.
- Instead of becoming your spouse’s adversary in conflict and causing your hearts to close to each other, open your hearts to God.
Care for your spouse’s heart. Your spouse has an amazingly valuable and incredibly vulnerable heart, just as you do.
- Keep the promise you made in your wedding vows to care for each other.
- Communicate to understand by agreeing on when it’s a good time to talk, agreeing on the goal of each conversation (connecting emotionally, or trying to fix something), and checking during the conversation to make sure you’re still both staying on track and understanding each other.
- Avoid communication pitfalls, such as trying to figure out: who is right or wrong, who is to blame or at fault, and what was said or what really happened.
- Avoid destructive behaviors like: criticism, contempt, defensiveness, and stonewalling. During difficult interactions, say to your spouse: “Help me understand” so he or she knows you truly care.
- Ask God to open the eyes of your heart toward your spouse and give you compassion for him or her.
- Respect how valuable and vulnerable your spouse’s heart is by treating it gently.
- Set aside your temptation to blame your spouse and focus on simply caring for him or her instead.
- Express empathy (“I feel what you’re feeling, and I want to share in your joy or pain.”) and validation (“What you’re feeling matters to me and you matter to me.”) toward your spouse.
- Honor, motivate, and call out your spouse’s spiritual gifts and natural talents.
- Find out what wounds and fear your spouse is struggling with, and what you can say to encourage your spouse to pursue healing.
- Consider people’s most common intimacy needs – acceptance, affection, appreciation, approval, attention, comfort, encouragement, respect, security, and support – and do what you can to help meet your spouse’s intimacy needs through your marriage.
- Understand people’s love languages – words of affirmation, quality time, receiving gifts, acts of service, and physical touch – and express your love for your spouse in ways that best speak his or her specific love language.
- As much as possible, do your everyday chores and errands together rather than separately.
- Pray with your spouse often. Share your dreams with each other regularly.
- Schedule dates whenever you can.
- Talk frequently about what God is doing in each of your lives.
- Learn something new together, such as through trying a new activity or taking a class.
- Serve others together by doing volunteer work side-by-side.
- Surprise your spouse by doing something unexpected every now and then (such as by playing a loving practical joke on him or her or planning a romantic getaway trip).
1 comment:
So true!!!! Have learned a lot from the article.
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