
Home > Marriage > Communication
 Marriage Partnership, Spring 2000
alone
together
If you're married but still feel single, follow these tips to
reconnect with your spouse
by Tim Gardner
Open
your morning newspaper and you'll find columns of personal ads expressing
sentiments such as these: Lose loneliness with lavish Latin lover. DPF, 30ish,
petite, brunette, seeks SPM, 30s-40s, for laughter and a lifetime of love.
No smokers, no drugs. Everything else is OK.
Others placing ads seek everything from a bowling partner to a sex partner,
but they all risk rejection and pain in pursuit of the same goal: eliminating
loneliness. The prospect of going through life alone is so unappealing that
the search for companionship becomes a driving force. Ask anyone why they
got married and, once they get past "because we were in love" (which I'm
not knocking), they will talk about marriage as the antidote to loneliness.
Even if they didn't read that in the Bible first, they're onto
something. God proclaimed that it was "not good" for Adam to be alone (Gen.
2:18), and it's not good for us either. Most of us expect marriage to
banish loneliness by providing lifelong companionship. But look around and
you'll find large numbers of couples who are married and still lonely.
How does the one stated goal of marriage, God's desire to alleviate
a person's aloneness, fail to come true for so many husbands and wives?
the loneliness
lie
Couples feel lonely for various reasons, but the primary cause is our belief
that marriage by itself will put an end to loneliness. It's a little
like the man whose greatest desire in life was to enjoy barbecue hot off
the backyard grill. His longing for barbecue was so intense that he felt
incomplete without it.
This man saved enough money to purchase a beautiful gas grillthe one he
had wanted for years. He took it out of the box, assembled it, hooked up
the propane tank and rolled the grill out onto the deck. Then he went back
inside to wait for his barbecue.
This was cause for celebration. He finally had the grill of his dreams. But
soon he began to wonder: "Why am I still so hungry for barbecue? That grill
might look classy, but it's not helping at all."
In a few weeks he noticed the grill was being used for other things. His
wife used it as a plant stand; his kids found it to be a handy diving platform
for their action men. The man concluded that he must have brought home the
wrong grill, otherwise he wouldn't still be so hungry for barbecue.
Ludicrous? Of course. After rolling a new grill out onto the deck, there
is still a lot of work involved in creating a barbecued feast. If you don't
make the effort to use the grill as it was designed to work, you'll
spend the rest of your life hungry for barbecue.
Likewise, the act of getting married won't put an end to your loneliness.
To achieve that goal, you have to follow your initial commitment with appropriate
action. When couples come to me for counseling, we often discuss the need
for a "married mindset." It sounds obvious, but the truth is married couples
often continue to think like single people. They agree to be places and do
things without considering their partner's scheduleor even his or
her preferences. They are married, but their actions don't reflect it.
That's what leads to loneliness.
I have yet to meet the couple who say, "You know, we think about each other
constantly. We never commit to a weekend or evening activity until we discuss
it. We're always calling each other during the day to touch base. But
you know what? I just wish this loneliness would end."
God proclaimed that it was 'not good' for Adam
to be alone, and it's not good for us either.
When couples are guided by a married mindset they don't struggle with
loneliness. Considering one another's needs, wants and preferences shows
that they are committed to loving each other, to nurturing and caring for
one another, to treating each other with respect. They solve their own loneliness
by working to obliterate their mate's loneliness. Sounds odd, maybe,
but that's how it works.
Spouses become lonely because one or both partners focus most of their energy
on something other than their mate. Their communication dwindles to "what's
for supper?" "where's the mail?" and "here's what I'm doing
this weekend." Without communication, there can be no emotional connection.
And without a strong emotional connection, there can be no relationship.
four
solutions
Being married but feeling alone is no way to live, so what should you do?
First, admit that you're lonely. It does no good to deny that
you feel emotionally disconnected. But you also need to realize that any
apparent quick curefrom playing golf to working longer hours to having
an affairwill only lead to more pain. So once you admit that you're
lonely, decide to take positive steps to change things.
Next, take stock of what is missing in your relationship. How would
your marriage need to change to restore emotional closeness? Do you long
to share relaxed time together like you did when you were dating? Do you
wish you could still take walks at night to look at the stars? Has the "business"
of keeping your family running smoothly crowded out the tenderness that used
to come so naturally? What are the specific patterns that need to change?
Third, ask yourself an even tougher question: what are you doing (or
neglecting) that makes your spouse feel lonely? Just as it takes two
to get married, it nearly always takes two to let a marriage drift. So identify
your own contributions to the problem. Is your schedule so crowded with outside
commitments that you're seldom home? Have you neglected hobbies or other
activities that used to draw you and your mate closer? Have you started taking
your spouse for granted failing to express thanks, neglecting to extend
common courtesies? Are you too preoccupied with work, the kids or family
finances to listen to your spouse? After asking yourself the hard questions,
commit to making the personal changes necessary to reverse the emotional
drift.
Finally, after much prayer, reflection and planning, talk to your mate.
Tell him or her what you believe is missing, and confess the ways your own
actions have contributed to the problem. Without accusing or condemning,
communicate how much you want to feel close to your spouse and describe the
changes you're willing to make. When your spouse sees your willingness
to change, chances are good that he or she will gladly join you on the journey
from loneliness back to the closeness you both desire.
Dr. Tim A. Gardner is author of Sacred Sex (WaterBrook) and Director of The Marriage Education and Policy Center at the Indiana Family Institute (an affiliate of Focus on the Family).
Copyright © 2000 by the author or Christianity Today International/Marriage
Partnership magazine. Click here
for reprint information on Marriage Partnership.
Spring 2000, Vol. 17, No. 1, Page 48
Marriage Partnership
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