5 Secrets About Marriage Your Mother Will (Probably) Never Tell You

If you’re like most women who are about to get married, you dream of having a perfect wedding followed by a perfect marriage that will last a lifetime. I know that was my dream almost 38 years ago when my boyfriend (now husband) proposed to me.

So why do about 50% of marriages end in divorce? Is there too much focus on the wedding and not enough on preparation for the marriage? Are there key things every bride should know that no one is talking about? Is it just a sign of our times – the “I have a right to be happy” syndrome?

Maybe we as parents aren’t preparing our children properly for marriage. I know my mother told me absolutely nothing about marriage and didn’t even have a good book to recommend to me. I felt lost in a vacuum of silence. I knew there would inevitably be issues that would come up that I would be totally unprepared for. I was right. Fortunately for us, relatively early on in our marriage we went to a marriage encounter weekend that gave us tools for communication that then enabled us to begin to truly understand each other.

How much better it would have been if we had had adequate premarital counseling or at least some minimal tools to equip us for the challenges of marriage.

To help those of you who might be interested, I have written a short e-mail series called, “5 Secrets About Marriage Your Mother Will Never Tell You.” I’d love to send it to you, completely free of charge and with no obligations. And I’d also love to have your feedback to make it even better. Please use the sign up box on this blog and the e-mails will come to you spaced out over the next 10 days. Hope you enjoy them and that you have lots of feedback for me.

 

Authored by Sharon Reece

 


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Home Team – The Power Of Unconditional Commitment

In this video, Dr. Gary and Barb Rosberg explain the importance of unconditional commitment in marriage, and inspire husbands and wives to cheer each other on to victory in the game of life. To find out more go to Marriage 101.

Duration : 0:1:18

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Marriage Tip #5 – Listen to One Another First

Step Three in resolving conflict in marriage is to listen to one another first. Connect emotionally, then solve the issue. Men – begin with sympathy, then move to solutions. Find out more about Marriage 101 Online.

Duration : 0:2:12

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The Deal Of A Lifetime – Investing In Your Marriage

Grace Products has been the leader in Christian pre marriage counseling for over 36 years. We are very proud of our newest release entitled Marriage 101: Back to the Basics. This video clip is called “Christian pre marriage Counseling — The Deal Of A Lifetime — Investing In Your Marriage”. Please call 800-527-4014 if you feel this resource may meet your needs for premarital counseling and/or marriage enrichment. Available on DVD and on demand at Marriage101 Online.

Duration : 0:2:7

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Marriage 101 Series Introduction

pre marriage and marriage counseling at its best!! In the office, counseling center, or in the privacy of your home. Marriage 101 equips couples to build a marriage that delights and endures for a lifetime. The producer, Greg Vaughn, explains the multiple resources available to couples preparing for marriage and how married couples can have a strong and healthy relationship.

Duration : 0:8:36

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Sailing the Seventh of the 7 C’s of Marriage

The seventh “C” that you will have to sail in your marriage is charity. That is an old fashioned word which we often translate “love” these days. I’m not talking about giving to charity or about charitable organizations. Obviously those kinds of actions are a result of love, compassion and  caring that comes from our hearts.

But in a marriage, charity is the equivalent of pure and simple LOVE. The Bible says that love bears all things and believes all things. Without love it is impossible to have an intimate relationship. It is the component that is the foundation and basis for trust that your partner truly has your best interest in mind and that kind of trust is fundamental for an intimate and fulfilling relationship.

It’s important to remember that charity (love) is a gift from God. Godly love is unconditional. It does not depend upon what the other partner does or doesn’t do. It is genuine. It goes “lightyears” beyond physical attraction. It is a spiritual commitment both to God and to your spouse.

If expressing “charity” toward your partner seems impossible, it is – that is, without God’s help. Only having His Holy Spirit inhabiting and transforming your inner being on a day by day basis will enable you to respond with charity when your partner is doling out something that is completely uncharitable.

Ephesians 5:28 through 31 says, “In this same way, husbands ought to love their wives as their own bodies. He who loves his wife loves himself. After all, no one ever hated his own body, but he feeds and cares for it, just as Christ does the church for we are members of his body. For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh.”

My suggestion is that you read 1 Corinthians chapter 13 together every night for the first month of your marriage until you begin to grasp the true meaning of what the Bible calls charity.

You can find more premarital advice by clicking on the highlighted link.

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Sailing the Sixth of the Seven

The sixth of the seven “C’s” of marriage is covenant. In order to understand covenant we must understand the difference between that and a contract. A contract is normally a legally binding document that is generally written in such a way as to provide for all the possible loopholes to get out of it – legally.

On the other hand, a covenant is very different. It is a unilateral commitment that is binding independent of what the other party does or does not do.

How different these two concepts are! And how far away we have gotten from the covenant model of marriage. Even though most marriage vows include the words, “Until death do us part,” the average bride and/or groom has in the back of their mind, the thought, “Until you do something for which I feel justified in leaving you.”

In a Christian marriage, the concept of covenant is fundamental. It is based on the Biblical concept of agape love…unconditional love modeled after the love God has for us. God’s love for each of us does not depend upon our love for Him. It never has and never will. And that is the model upon which covenant marriage is based. It is a love that mere humans are incapable of apart from the grace and enabling of the God who is “love.”

Our culture has taken us so far away from that model that most couples even if they are Christian, only give lip service to the idea of covenant. And when the going gets tough, as it inevitably will, all that our culture has taught us about having the right to be happy, etc, prevails over the fundamental principles of covenant. A covenant is a type of vow and it is something that God takes very, very seriously. Ecclesiastes 5:5 says, “It is better not to vow than to make a vow and not fulfill it.”

So as we go into marriage, if we are serious about covenant, we must be willing to weather all the storms that will come against us as a couple and we must be willing to stand together to defend each other and the covenant we make “until death do us part.” And let’s really mean it.

For information on premarital education you can do from your home check out the new Marriage 101 Online course.

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Sailing the Fifth of the 7 C’s of Christian Marriage

Comedy is the fifth of the 7 “C’s” of marriage. But is should especially characterize a Christian marriage. Joy is one of the fruits of the Spirit mentioned in Galatians 5:22 & 23. So let there be joy, laughter and lightness of heart. When something unexpected or undesirable happens and you are tempted to weep and wail, look for the funny side and laugh instead. Proverbs 15:13 says, “A merry heart makes a cheerful countenance, but by sorrow of the heart the spirit is broken.”

I had to learn how to laugh and how to make merry and I learned it primarily from my husband. My childhood was marked by disappointments and difficulties. I was altogether way too serious about myself, about life, about everything. But fortunately for me, I married a man who loved to joke, who laughs easily and who manages to see the bright and light side of almost any situation. He is also a story teller and can spin a yarn or sing a song that will turn anyone’s frown to a smile.

I remember one occasion that was frightening to me at the time it happened but was hilariously funny later. In fact, I was so dismayed by the situation that I made my husband promise never to tell anyone. Then after some time had passed, I began to tell people what had happened and thought it extremely funny!

Laughter truly is good medicine. It lightens any load and gets your physical body cooperating with you instead of working against you. So make sure you have plenty of it in your marriage. And never take yourself too seriously!

Click on premarital resources for more great advice and help for your marriage.

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Sailing the Second of the Seven

The second of the seven C’s of Christian marriage is compromise.

Does that surprise you? Maybe you think you are always right. That’s a dangerous position to take if you expect to have a marriage that is satisfying and has a minimum of conflict. When two people live together there must always be compromise. The process of give and take will sometimes require that you go 80% of the way and your partner goes 20%. On another issue it may be 50/50. The bottom line is that even though you may have always done something a certain way, it can always be done differently. That doesn’t mean you are wrong or that your partner is wrong. It simply means that you learned it differently or developed a different opinion. The more alike you were in your family backgrounds, education, religious upbringing, the easier these compromises
will be. Instead of having to go from 100 back to 20 or 30 on the scale, you will hover closer to the 50/50 point on alot of issues – probably on the ones that are most important to you. And it will be much easier to ompromise on the others.

Occasionally you will encounter a situation that triggers such a strong negative reaction in you that you will be surprised and shocked. When this happens, it is probably due to something in your past that evoked a strong emotional response from you. When your partner does or says something that reminds you of that situation in your past, that strong emotional response will take over. Honestly, I’m telling you – he/she didn’t do it on purpose. In our own relationship we have found that those kinds of responses are important and will be oorways to healing and strengthening of your relationship if you know how to take advantage of them. I don’t really have time to go into all the details about that at this time, but I would like to say that there are many resources available to enable you to deal with things like this.

Sometimes compromise will require that you decide not to have the last word. It may mean simply biting your tongue, closing your mouth and nodding your head. The book of Proverbs is filled with wisdom we need for successful relationships today. Proverbs 25:24 says, “It is better to dwell in a corner of a housetop than in a house shared with a contentious woman.” So keeping our mouths shut at times, may be the highest form of compromise – and wisdom.

Compromise may also mean that you agree to disagree. This is ok as long as its not a core value that you disagree upon. One very devisive issue that often requires compromise in a marriage is the issue of finances. If you are a spendthrift and your partner is an impulse buyer, you may be in for some head on conflict unless you learn to compromise in this area. One way to head off potential conflict is to establish even before marriage, a threshold of spending. In other words, you must agree upon any expenditure over a certain amount.

For a Christian, compromise is the ultimate way expressing love through serving and honoring each other. It requires being committed more to “us” than to “me.” It can make your marriage better than good!

To find out how to improve your chances of having a great marriage, check out our premarital counseling home study course and other premarital resources. Don’t go into your marriage unprepared.

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