Monday, February 24, 2014

One of Those Days

I'm having one of those days where I have to purposefully look for the blessing and joy of our circumstances.

My honey works out of town a lot as I have mentioned before on this blog.  I miss his presence.  I miss everything that is him...well, probably not the little trails of messes he leaves around, but everything else :)

This week, he didn't get back in town until late afternoon on Saturday.  We had a dinner after church yesterday, so that took up a bulk of our day.  He came home and fixed computers and put things in order so the boys and I could keep moving along with schoolwork.  He also had to unpack, wash clothes, and repack.

By the time we got to bed last night, I could barely hold me eyes open.  He was up and gone before I ever awoke this morning.

Weeks like this really wear on me and the kids, and I can only assume they wear on Tom as well.

We both have so many responsibilities to keep up with and though we try to be good about saying no and setting boundaries and keeping the most important things top priority, it is hard!

I got up and exercised this morning, trying to be diligent to take the best care of myself since I deal with some chronic illness.  I showered and met with the Lord and then started cleaning up the house.  Dishes, laundry, vacuuming, making the bed... 

The vacuum stopped working correctly.  Cabinet doors are falling off hinges.  The carpet needs stretched because I am tripping over portions of it that are lifting.  Every cabinet and drawer really needs cleaned out, wiped down, and organized again.  I sweep.  I mop.  I drop something and then see the floor closer.  GROSS.

I start to get agitated, feeling like I live in a pig sty, while logically telling myself to chill out because I have a very nice home, clean, running water, working vehicles, a sound income...

Do you ever feel that war in yourself?  Agitated and frustrated, yet knowing you should be walking in utter thanksgiving and your problems are really no big deal on the scale of life?!!!

And really...like I want to ask my husband to do one more thing after he has driven hundreds of miles in a week and worked for hours!

It's one of those days when I battle inside being so thankful for all we have and all my husband is willing to do and just wanting him to be around more.

Help me be thankful today Father.

Friday, February 21, 2014

Where Intimacy Begins

Laying down one's life for others is often not easy or enjoyable.

I spoke in the last post about how my husband does this for me on a regular basis by pushing aside what he wants in order to help me.  He works hard at trouble-shooting problems in blood analyzers in hospital labs.  He also drives for long hours in between accounts.  Meanwhile, I homeschool our three sons, get them to all their appointments, and keep the house going.  

By Friday, we are both tired.  We both just want to chill and rest.  But, we also have these boys full of energy and desires to be with friends and do things with their parents together.

It's tricky to make all this run smoothly some weeks.  I want to stop being the disciplinarian when dad comes in and the last thing dad wants to do is bring down the hammer on the kids he loves and hardly sees.

Things like this that arise in a marriage require good, intentional, consistent communication.

It would be very easy for me to get bitter and have a chip on my shoulder about Tom's work schedule (and I have before).  I could even become demanding or give ultimatums about him finding another job.  The thing is that I know Tom loves what he does.

I have watched so many people over the years just hate what they have to do each day to put food on the table, and I just don't ever want to see my husband endure that.  I think that may lead him to become bitter toward me for staying home and not working.

Tom and I prevent these things from creeping in our relationship by committing to one another to share what we are feeling and to try our best to understand even if it isn't a big deal to us individually.

Sometimes just being able to voice your stresses and concerns and have the person you love and trust the most listen, care and validate your feelings can make things better.

I know so many wives that live in fear of telling their husband things. They fear his reaction to them...that they will be yelled at, told they are stupid, asked, "Well, what do you expect me to do?" in a spiteful and nasty tone.  

I know husbands that fear their wife screaming and throwing things or belittling them.

This isn't God's plan for marriage and never has been.

In the book of James, we are told that the basis of all quarrels is selfishness.  Anytime there is a fight, you can trace it back to a root of someone (or many times, all parties involved) being selfish.

When I feel myself getting irritated, I try so hard to stop and get away by myself for a few minutes and ask God to show me my heart...to reveal the selfishness that I know must be lurking in me.

Tom is just naturally better at not being selfish than I am...or at least not acting out on it maybe.  My desire is to truly be a helper to my spouse and to treat him with the utmost respect.  He could tell you I fail at it much of the time, but I know he appreciates that I strive to honor him.

It is these intentional thoughts, purposeful time-outs with God, and determined times of sharing ourselves with one another that makes our marriage thrive, not merely survive.

To have intentional communication, you can't just be determined to share what you feel.  You have to be determined to listen well, make eye contact, gesture, empathize, show care and concern.

I know there must be so many times that Tom has listened to the same concerns about whether I am messing up the boys homeschooling them or my health issues, etc... but he is so sweet and faithful just to be quiet, let me get it out, and then reassure me that we will get through it with God.

That is where intimacy starts in a marriage.  It's not the bedroom.  It's the couch, the phone, the kitchen...

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Thanks for Trying!

You know what I love most about my husband's last post?  That he WANTS to fix it even if he can't...that he even CARES about how I feel and acknowledges there is something wrong instead of ignoring me!

Sadly, I know many women who don't have husbands that care. Their husbands are quite content living in their box of self-centered mirrors, not paying attention to much of what their wife is going through or battling.  I know some husbands that deal with wives like that as well.  It's definitely not one-sided.


I appreciate so much that Tom makes the effort to show he cares and even thinks about me and my junk and how he might lend a hand...an ear...a shoulder.  It shows me that he cherishes me and doesn't see me as a burden he has to tolerate, but rather a friend he wants to help.


Not every woman is emotional or sensitive, but I happen to be both.  :) I cry at the silliest commercials and movies.  I feel deeply.  I love passionately.  I used to LOATHE myself for that.  Seriously, I really hated that about myself when I was younger.  One day, as I was praying for my beautiful niece, who happens to share those traits, the Lord whispered gently to me, "I made her this way.  I made you this way. I have a purpose for your sensitivity.  Tell her that the depth to which she hurts is the depth to which she also loves."  


The longer I sat there in prayer, I realized that we indeed have a gift.  No, it doesn't always feel like a gift when you are young and still ignorant of some things.  However, as I have gained maturity, I have come to realize that most people aren't as compassionate and as empathetic as I am either.  Most people don't see things from many points of view, to discern how a situation may affect/hurt others.  I can easily see that most of the time.


I feel so blessed to have a husband that stood by me and loved me through that growth process!  I feel sad for him, for all he has walked with me through.  I know it wasn't easy, and he kind-of got a double whammy because I have an anxiety disorder too.  If you husbands out there think a "normal" wife's emotions are a lot to live with, you should see one who battles fears that make no sense!  But Tom has been such a rock for me...so patient and kind and long-suffering.  He has shown me a tangible example of true grace right before my eyes.  It has helped me grow in my love and trust of Jesus.  It has taught me how Jesus cares for every detail of my life...that He accepts me just as I am and cheers me on, believing that through His power, I will overcome!


I love this portion of Scripture.  It holds so many deep truths for a successful and joy-filled marriage, but the sad part is that it takes TWO willing parties.  


Instructions for Christian Households


21 Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ.
22 Wives, submit yourselves to your own husbands as you do to the Lord. 23 For the husband is the head of the wife as Christ is the head of the church, his body, of which he is the Savior. 24 Now as the church submits to Christ, so also wives should submit to their husbands in everything.
25 Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her26 to make her holy, cleansing[b] her by the washing with water through the word, 27 and to present her to himself as a radiant church, without stain or wrinkle or any other blemish, but holy and blameless. 28 In this same way, husbands ought to love their wives as their own bodies. He who loves his wife loves himself. 29 After all, no one ever hated their own body, but they feed and care for their body, just as Christ does the church— 30 for we are members of his body. 31 “For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh.”[c] 32 This is a profound mystery—but I am talking about Christ and the church. 33 However, each one of you also must love his wife as he loves himself, and the wife must respect her husband.

I highlighted the parts above, not to point out to the husbands what they need to do, but to say that my husband has already CHOSEN to take these words to heart and DO THEM.  Like Tom says, "It is easy to take a bullet for my wife.  It is hard to walk in after a long day of work and do the dishes."


He would rather love himself more...lay down on the couch and veg out, but he CHOOSES to love me as if I am him and do things to be a blessing to me. THAT is true love and submitting to one another like that in our marriage is what has made our marriage a great one!  We didn't always do this.  We hurt each other in the past, but we searched out wisdom for a better way.  Now we reap the rewards of consistent true love.

Tom and I have not done anything that others can't do as well. Neither of us were taught these things.  

We searched, we learned, and we applied.

And now we enjoy.

God gave us the wisdom.  Many sadly ignore it.

So to my adorable husband who gets frustrated that he can't always fix it, I say, "Thanks for trying!  I treasure you."

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Why Can't I Fix It?

I like to fix things.  I am, by trade, a repair man, a Field Service Engineer.  When something is broken I get paid to go fix it.  If you give me a manual, some tools, and a general explanation of how something works there is a very good chance that I can figure out a way to make it work again.  Except when it comes to my wife, not "her" per-say, but struggles or issues she may be going through.  Maybe that's because I wasn't given a manual when I got married.  Hey, that's a good idea, someone should write the manual "How To Fix All Her Problems In Seven Easy Steps!"

As a husband and a "fixer" I want to be able to fix it when she comes to me with an issue.  It truly pains me to see her upset!  No, I didn't say she was a pain.  It hurts me when she hurts.  Early in our marriage, those times when she came to me and she was obviously hurting, I wanted her to tell me what I could do to fix it.  It took a while, and a few times of her telling me, for me to realize that she just wanted to be heard, to have someone there by her side, to hold her, and comfort her.  She knew that there was nothing I could really do to make it better right then, but hearing me say that I understood and wanted to help her, that I would be there with her through whatever she was going through, was exactly what she needed.  So I had to learn that the fixer can't always fix it.