
Home > Marriage > Viewpoint
 Marriage Partnership, Fall 1997
Put Your Money Where Your Spouse Is
Marriage may be your most profitable investment
by Louise A. Ferrebee
A while ago, a co-worker and I were discussing get-away weekends for couplesthe
kind every marriage expert says you must take. Our discussion naturally
segued into a close cousin of this prescription, the "date night." We both
sighed and admitted, "We never get around to either as often as we should."
I've noticed that conversations about these two intimidating, yet healthy,
practices tend to follow a predictable pattern. A sigh. A perplexed look.
And then some well-worn line like, "Can you believe how expensive babysitters
are!" or "Got any ideas for inexpensive dates?"
When looking for excuses to explain why we avoid what everyone agrees is
one of the best things we can do for our marriages, money, followed by a
lack of time, rises to the top. To be perfectly honest, though, I'm beginning
to wonder if money and time are really what put the kabosh on twosome-time.
I've read hundreds of tips on cheap dates and inexpensive get-aways. And
yet, we still aren't going out much. I don't see couples crowding into coffee
houses or strolling through parks at an alarming rate.
Going cheap doesn't necessarily lead to going out. These pages of inexpensive
date tips are given a cursory glance because, I'm convinced, few couples
view marriage as an assetan investment with the potential for incredible
growth. For many of us, we "bought" the asset (our marriage) on our wedding
day and then safely tucked it away in a steel safe where it can't even earn
interest. What would happen if instead we viewed marriage as a viable investment
that deserved regular deposits and a crack at a mutual fund for maximum growth?
Better yet, can you imagine what would happen if we treated our marriages
like we did our housesthat BIG investment bankers and real estate agents
love to see you make? Last week, as I sorted through years of receipts, I
was stunned to note how much we've spent on our home in the past decade.
We've done the necessary maintenance to keep the sinks draining, the furnace
blowing hot air and the roof from leaking. But beyond that, we've planted
dozens of flowers, added a deck, fertilized the grass and hung rolls of
wallpaper. What if every date night and weekend away was viewed with the
same value as new gutters or a room additiona way to improve on a capital
investment? Holding the receipts in my hand, I wished that the pile for dates
and dinners was as thick as the pile for window coverings and nails.
It's deceptively easy to fall into the cost/time argument. We've been there.
The hassle of hunting down a teenage babysitter who is that rare combination
of trustworthy and available. The cash outlay for the evening. (I now write
the babysitter a check rather than see such a wad of cash pass from my hand
to his.) Stopping the day short to get ready. You know the routine. And yet,
when we come home from an evening out, my husband and I realize how much
we needed, and enjoyed, the breather. The return on our investment was worth
the effort.
When asked what made their marriage so successful, a Portland, Oregon, couple
married 17 years said:
"Our marriage has survived losing a house, a church folding, a serious accident,
owning a business and having five children! Our secret is maintaining a strong
sense of togetherness. We do that by putting each other and our marriage
ahead of the kids, house and work. We do a lot of just-the-two-of-us activities:
getting away for an hour, a weekend or a week. We've probably 'invested'
more money in babysitters and airfare than in furniture or vehicles!"
There's that word againinvestment. It pays to go cheap when the item has
little lasting value. Paper towels. Orange juice. Kids' swimsuits. But why
should I want to, or hope to, get away cheap when it comes to one of the
greatest investments I'll ever makemy marriage? I'd much rather slap a
copy of the words from the Oregon couple on my refrigerator door than a list
of ten cheap date ideas. It's a good reminder of why we should spend some
cash and not feel bad when we do. We're investing in a future, in each other,
in something God-created. We're not buying paper towels.
Copyright © 1997 by the author or Christianity Today International/Marriage
Partnership magazine. For reprint information call 630-260-6200 or e-mail
mp@marriagepartnership.com.
Fall 1997, Vol. 14, No. 3, Page 67
Marriage Partnership
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