Thursday, August 4, 2011

A very good article

I've been writing a piece on the three types of love, and though this is perhaps much more classic that what I'm thinking, I believe it to be of great value.

What Really Keeps a Marriage Together?

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This is a guest post by John Marshall, LMFT. He is my own therapist and coach. He just started blogging, and his first post was so powerful, I asked for his permission to re-post it here as a guest post. You can read his follow-up post here. I think he has a great future as a blogger! If you want to guest post on this blog, check out the guidelines here.
For the last eight months I’ve been seeing a thirty-something male client who is a month away from his divorce being final. He is relieved that this painful experience is almost over, but he is also very sad. He’s grieving the marriage that he wanted to have—the one that he wishes they would have had together.
A Couple Holding Hands - Photo courtesy of ©iStockphoto.com/Bryngelzon, Image #6332570
Photo courtesy of ©iStockphoto.com/Bryngelzon
By the way, this tells me he is dealing with his divorce in a healthy manner. I never trust anyone if they tell me they have no sadness about their marriage ending and that they are simply glad that it is over. Marriages are investments and we are always sad when an investment goes belly up.
So he sits down a couple of weeks ago and right off the bat tells me that he has a question that he desperately needs answered. He tells me that his future depends on it, and that he is afraid because he isn’t able to answer this question.
He asks me what “type” of love keeps a marriage together since their kind obviously didn’t do the trick. I remember sitting for a couple of minutes before answering.
In that time I considered my own marriage of almost thirty-three years, the countless couples I have seen as a therapist, what messages the Church and my upbringing taught, and the dozens of books I’ve read on the subject over the years. I surprised myself by sharing with him the following ideas.
First, I told him that I used to think that agape was the most important kind of love for a marriage. But no longer. This Greek word suggests that a spiritual love is the number one priority—a love that is sacrificial and focused on commitment more than feelings or your own needs. After all, haven’t we all heard more sermons than we could count where this was the bottom line?
Don’t get me wrong, I told him, agape is very important in keeping a marriage together. But not the “most” important kind of love. Many couples have intact marriages but no relationship at all and are living under the stoic belief that happiness isn’t even a possibility.
Secondly, I said that eros is really wonderful but that it doesn’t “keep” a marriage together either. We all love passion. We all want there to be chemistry. We all dream about great sex that will keep us interested over the years.
Our culture is so sex-obsessed that we are easily convinced (especially early in a marriage) that the lucky ones can’t stay out of the bedroom. This is the secret to a long relationship.
Don’t get me wrong, “feeling” in love with your partner is very critical. Too many accept a relationship that is boring and no longer has any passion. Eros can be restored and must be worked at over the life of a marriage.
By this time he knew where I was going. I found myself telling him that based on my marriage and the successful ones I’ve seen over the years that philia was most important. Committment and chemistry are ingredients you don’t want to leave out of the recipe but without friendship you can’t bake the cake!
To be friends with your mate means:
  • You respect her.
  • You treat her like your equal when your upbringing and your own selfish ways try to convince you otherwise.
  • You talk about how you feel and think about the good and bad of your life together.
  • You even risk conflict by being more honest than you are comfortable with because it builds intimacy into your marriage.
  • You plan and dream together because life is too complicated to just wing it.
In other words, you treat your partner like your “best” friend.
Sadly, like so many people, what my client never had with his former wife was friendship. He said nobody ever told him it was the most important thing! In fact they even had the other two ingredients the majority of the time.
As our session continued, a big smile came over his face as we continued to talk about how exciting it could be to have a best friend in your wife. He said he was growing hopeful as he sat there thinking about this new possibility for the future.
I hope what I told him is realistic and not too pie in the sky. All I know is that next month I will have been married thirty-three years to my best friend. Thank God for friendship!
http://michaelhyatt.com/what-really-keeps-a-marriage-together.html


2 comments:

  1. When my children were teens and fearful that love would not find its way into their lives (and now with my grandchildren as well), I told them that friendships build into relationships and the relationship into marriage. Not to jump into the first relationship just to find out later that "that person" just really wasn't the right one. If you don't have communication between two people there is no friendship, and marriage does not last just on the good or bad sex that you are having ... and yes there are those two as well ... one has to find out what they have in common and what they don't have in common as well and ask the hard questions as to how they will handle it if the two do not agree on those points. I have lived with my best friend for 41 years now, we knew each other for 6 weeks when we jumped into the marriage bed ... it hasn't all been fun or easy ... and we have had "those times" in our life when I really doubted if the marriage would last. My religious back ground and his did a lot to keep us together, knowing as well that our families came from long lines of love. My grandparents were married 65 years when my grandmother passed away, grandpa lasted 10 months. My mom and dad were married 37 years when he died and mom has never re married. John's parents had been married for more than 39 years when Papa died ... and we could go farther back in time than just grandparents but it shows that there has to be friendship, love, relationship, and determination to keep a marriage together. We have worked together through many problems, prayer worked us through the toughest ones, and I do thank God that he has blessed me with the Love of my life.

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