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 Marriage Partnership, Spring 1997
Why You Need a Double Standard
Expecting more of yourself and less of your mate can do wonders for
your marriage
-by Gary Thomas
"You brought them home hungry?" Lisa asked.
I stared at my wife, dumbfounded.
"It's 7:45, and you brought them home hungry?" she asked again.
I tried to come up with a good excuse. "Well, I, uh, you see .
" I gave
up. "Yeah, I guess I did."
I thought I had done Lisa a favor. I took the kids for the evening so she
could have a night off. I wanted her to eat dinner while reading a magazine
and rediscover that, in some corners of the world, there still remains a
phenomenon called "silence."
Now I was back home, and all the self-righteous defenses came rushing to
my mind. "Here I try to give you an evening off, and you get upset just because
the kids want a little snack! You know our kidsthey need to eat every seven
minutes!"
Instead of voicing that, however, I took a walk and did some praying. "Okay,
God, what are we going to talk about tonight?"
A clear thought came into my mind: How can you love your wife better? God
was pushing me to come up with ways I could make Lisa's life easier. And
it wasn't anything as simple as buying another piece of lingerie ("Gary,
this is for her, not for you"). Instead, they were eminently practical changes:
I could make the kids' lunches. I could take them out one evening a week
and bring them home with full stomachs. I could get them ready for bed at
least three nights a week.
I felt the Lord teaching me that the happiest husband is the one who lives
with a double standardhe's tough on himself and easy on his wife.
Meeting the Standard
I spent the first few days of our marriage adding up the pluses and minuses
of our various personality traits. The problem was, I spent too much time
on my pluses and Lisa's minuses. Then I read a passage written by John Owen,
one of the great Puritan scholars: "The person who understands the evil in
his own heart is the only person who is useful, fruitful and solid in his
beliefs and obedience. Others only delude themselves and thus upset families,
churches and all other relationships. In their self-pride and judgment of
others, they show great inconsistency."
I realized I was deluded by my sense of self-righteousness. Rather than focusing
on what Lisa could improve, I should have been on my knees, begging God to
change me. This thought was magnified one morning when I was praying through
Scripture. All of a sudden, a question startled me: "Does Lisa see Jesus
in me?"
Scripture reminds us, again and again, that our goal as Christians is to
become more like Christ. In Ephesians 5:1 we read, "Be imitators of God."
Elsewhere, Paul wrote, "For those God foreknew he also predestined to be
conformed to the likeness of his Son" (Rom. 8:29). As I grow in relationship
to Christ, my wife should be able to notice at least some family resemblance.
God was showing me that I had fallen short of improving myself for my wife's
sake.
"But wait!" the selfish me wanted to cry out. "What about her? " But
then I remembered a passage written by William Law, an eighteenth-century
Anglican: "No one is of the Spirit of Christ but he that has the utmost
compassion for sinners. Nor is there any greater sign of your own perfection
than you find yourself all love and compassion toward them that are very
weak and defective. And on the other hand, you have never less reason to
be pleased with yourself than when you find yourself most angry and offended
at the behavior of others."
That was the holy double standard I needed. As I become more unyielding and
aggressive in attacking my own sins and weaknesses, I must extend more and
more grace and gentleness toward others in theirs.
Back at the Home Office
When I became self-employed and decided to work out of our home, the double
standard turned into more than just a good idea. We live, with our three
children, in a townhousewhich meant our bedroom would have to double as
my office. When people find out what we're doing, they're amazed. "And you
still like each other?" they ask.
In fact, working at home has done wonders for our marriage. For the first
time, I could see what it was like to spend an entire day being Lisa. Oh,
I used to watch her in action every weekend. But what makes her life difficult
isn't an occasional 48-hour stretch. It's the day-in and day-out responsibility
of raising three kids. It's the pressure of getting the homeschooling lessons
done, while lunches need to be made and clothes need to be washed and kids
need to be chauffeured to ballet and soccer practice.
At the same time, Lisa saw what it was like for me to sit for hours in front
of a computer, writing articles and speeches, and keeping up with all the
paperwork involved in my business. Some days I was tired or sick. Sometimes
the weather outside was beautiful, but always I stayed in my chair. She saw
my determination and the pressure of meeting deadlines and taking on assignments
I wasn't sure I could handle, but I was really sure we needed the paycheck.
Lisa and I began to develop an empathy for each other, and it improved our
exercise of the double standard. As I understand the challenges Lisa faces,
I'm more likely to "go easy" on her. I'm learning to make excuses for my
wife the way I so easily make them for myself: "Look, I just finished a really
intense assignment; I need to veg out." Now I prod myself: "She's had a tough
day, Gary. Get the kids out of the house and give her some time to herself."
Looking Out for Number Two
Here's what I found out: Applying a double standard often leads to
receiving a double standard. As I have become more generous toward
Lisa, I've noticed that she has become more generous toward me. I recently
returned from a trip feeling as if I'd walked every one of the 400 miles
I had just driven. I had spoken six times in four days and driven through
four states. I pulled into our driveway thinking, "I'm so tired. All I want
to do is watch a late football game."
But as I came through the door, I knew Lisa was thinking, "Good, he's home.
I've had the kids to myself all weekend and they're driving me crazy." This
is the stuff colossal marriage fights are made of.
But then I discovered Lisa and I had both changed. I pulled out the flavored
popcorn I'd brought home for the kids, and we talked at the kitchen table
as they ate. I noticed Lisa was being incredibly sensitive toward me.
"You've got to be exhausted," she said. "Let me take care of the kids tonight."
But hearing her say that made me want to care for the kids. She was
being hard on herself and easy on me, which made me want to be hard on myself
and easy on her. That's when I realized: "This double standard business really
does build stronger marriages."
If each of us assumes our spouse has it the hardest and that we miss the
mark most frequentlyand act accordinglywe'll find a mix that's just about
right. When we adopt this double standard, we find that encouragement replaces
accusation, appreciation replaces resentfulness and understanding replaces
judgment. And isn't that the type of marriage we're all looking for?
Gary Thomas is a writer and speaker. He and Lisa and their three children
live in Manassas, Virginia.
Copyright © 1997 by Christianity Today International/Marriage Partnership
Magazine.
Spring 1997, Vol. 14, No. 1, Page 8
Marriage Partnership
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