
Home > Marriage > Help & Healing
 Marriage Partnership, Summer 1998
Love's Time Line
How to make sure your marriage gets better with
age
by Gary J. Oliver
Mike considered himself a
good lover. That is until his wife, Tina, asked him to move out after nine
years of marriage. "It has become painfully clear that I don't know much
about what it means to love," he admitted. "I mean really love."
Why is love so difficult? Why do so many couples like Mike and Tina start
out with good intentions and then stumble? The answer is that many don't
really understand love. Over the years, I've counseled couples whose functional
definition of love could be summed up as "a feeling that you feel when you
feel that you're going to feel a feeling that you've never felt before."
Add to this confusion the expectation many couples have that love will never
changeand disappointment is guaranteed.
But just as each year has different seasons, there are also seasons to a
relationship. God designed each season to produce a different kind of love.
The First Season
Face-to-Face
Falling in love is the first, and sadly for some couples the only,
season of love. Often couples confuse infatuation with love. A husband might
see his wife as he would like her to bea warm, caring person who
always keeps his needs foremost in her mind. Who she truly isa woman who
can be angry and upset with him at timesis irrelevant.
Judith Voist, in her book Love & Guilt (Simon and Schuster), provides
a humorous, and yet truthful, distinction between love and infatuation.
"Infatuation is when you think he's as gorgeous as Robert Redford, as pure
as Solzhenitsyn, as funny as Woody Allen, as athletic as Jimmy Connors and
as smart as Albert Einstein. Love is when you realize that he's as gorgeous
as Woody Allen, as smart as Jimmy Connors, as funny as Solzhenitsyn, as athletic
as Albert Einstein and nothing like Robert Redford in any categorybut you'll
take him anyway."
Tina and Mike, in their nine years of marriage, had never moved beyond
infatuation. During their courtship, they experienced the electricity of
eros, or romantic love. It was new, exciting and intenseeverything
they assumed love would be.
When they were dating, Tina and Mike experienced an all-absorbing involvement
in one anotherseeing each other daily and talking by phone late into the
night. They yearned for physical closeness and held hands whenever possible.
"Our love felt so real," Tina says, "and I thought those feelings would last
forever."
Of course the feelings didn't last. Soon after their honeymoon, life got
in the way. Mike worked hard to establish himself as a top salesman in a
major communications company. His 60-hour work weeks didn't leave much time
for his wife. By their fifth anniversary, Tina was busy, too, keeping up
with three active preschoolers.
Looking back, they realized that since their wedding day, they had done little
to cultivate their relationship. In fact, with each passing year, they ran
their life more as "married singles" than as a married couple. What communication
they did have focused on housekeeping and childcare.
Like many couples, they were treating love as a commodity. But love isn't
like a piece of furniture that sits off in the corner, needing only an occasional
dusting. Love is more like a plant that requires careful, long-term attention.
For ten years I lived in Nebraska, where I learned about farming. The first
lesson was that planting a seed is only the beginning of the growth process.
Many long hours are spent cultivating, fertilizing and watering before the
seeds grow into mature plants. It's not always fun, but when the harvest
comes it's worth it. And so, in the romance stage of love, the seeds are
planted. But without constant care and attention, romance can't grow into
mature love.
Mike and Tina were relieved to learn that there were steps they could take
to turn their disillusionment into a deeper level of love. I encouraged them
to find three other couples who would pray for them and their marriage on
a daily basis for the next six months. Then I helped them shift the focus
away from the tension between them by having them concentrate on becoming
friends as well as lovers.
To help establish that friendship, I recommended that each day they read
a devotional from Quiet Times for Couples (Harvest House), by H. Norman
Wright. The devotionals are short and easy-to-read, and rather than focusing
on problems they focus on growth.
Finally, I encouraged Tina and Mike to go out on a date at least twice a
month. Often I encourage couples to see a movie, but with two stipulations.
First, the film must end early enough that they can go to a restaurant afterward
to discuss it. Whether they liked the movie or not is irrevelant. The point
is to share thoughts and feelings. And second, during their dates, they can't
bring up any conflictual issues. A date is a time to enjoy one another.
By nurturing their friendship, Tina and Mike were able to move beyond the
disillusionment of lost romance. This is a necessary step that bridges the
first and second seasons of love.
The Second Season
Shoulder-to-Shoulder
Many couples miss the rollercoaster highs and lows of early romantic love.
But as their love deepens, they will enjoy the beauty of phileothe
bond of friendship. Friendship love combines the intensity of romance with
the stability of knowing a spouse is committed to learning how to appreciate
you for who you are rather than what he or she thinks you should be.
In this second season of love, couples begin to understand that love is a
deliberate choicenot merely a feeling. To build on this deeper level of
love, I often encourage couples to choose a meaningful act they will perform
for each other. I ask them to write it down somewhere so they can keep track
of what they've done. Most of us tend to overestimate the loving things we
do for our partner, and underestimate the loving things they do for us.
The action can be something simple like taking out the trash. It might be
a phone call or a card. My wife, Carrie, and I have devotions together in
the morning. I always try to get her a cup of coffee before she asks. I like
to anticipate her need and go ahead and meet it.
The deeper sense of friendship that develops in the second season leads to
a different kind of communication. You're eager to learn how to read your
mate. What are his or her unique needs and desires? What shows that she's
hurt or discouraged? What indicates he's unhappy or anxious?
Several years ago, Carrie and I decided to read the book Prayer by
Richard Foster (HarperSanFransciso). We would read a chapter independently,
then talk about it and practice a particular approach to prayer. Often we
found out more about one another in meaningful, intercessory prayer than
we did in long conversations.

Most of us tend
to overestimate the
loving things we do
for our partner, and
underestimate the
loving things they
do for us.

While partners are learning more about one another, it's also a time to learn
what methods of communication are most effective. For Mike and Tina, their
pattern of communicatinga brief comment here, a short observation
therecreated what Paul Tournier calls "dialogues of the deaf." They were
talking but not being heard.
Carrie and I have experienced that in our marriage. I sometimes hear my wife
express concerns in prayer, things she has already expressed to me, but her
words didn't register before because we were communicating on the run.
An excellent tool to help spouses draw one another out is the workbook
Experiencing God (LifeWay) by Henry Blackaby and Claude King. I encouraged
Mike and Tina to set aside at least 30 minutes a week to share what God was
teaching them about their individual relationships with him and to ask some
open-ended questions of one another.
I reminded Mike that in conversation, men like to get to the bottom line.
But women aren't looking for a summary statement. For them, the bottom line
is the process of sharing together. What may seem like "small talk"
to Mike is probably "important talk" to Tina.
While romantic love is almost always a face-to-face relationship, friendship
love is often shoulder-to-shoulder. Spouses are working together on something
greater than both of them. They don't just find their oneness in each other,
but in shared interests and in working toward a mutual goal. Spiritual growth
was such a goal for Carrie and me when we worked through the Experiencing
God workbook and applied the truths to our marriage.
The Third Season
Soul-to-Soul
As Mike and Tina made progress in the friendship stage of love, they were
excited to learn that in the third season of marriage they would experience
more passion and intensity than ever before. Couples build on the foundation
of romantic love and the security of friendship love and then discover that
real love involves an unconditional commitment to an imperfect person. That's
when agape, or sacrifical love, begins to take root.
In Mere Christianity (MacMillian), C.S. Lewis observed that many people
have the mistaken idea that "if you have married the right person you may
expect to go on 'being in love' forever. As a result, when they find they
are not, they think this proves they have made a mistake and are entitled
to a changenot realizing that, when they have changed, the glamour will
presently go out of the new love just as it went out of the old one. In this
department of life, as in every other, thrills come at the beginning and
do not last.
Let the thrill golet it die awaygo on through that period
of death into the quieter interest and happiness that followand you will
find you are living in a world of new thrills all the time."
Couples in this season experience a sympathetic sensitivity that accepts
each other's weaknesses and shortcomings. This mutual acceptance comes largely
with time. When God makes a squash, he takes six months. When he makes an
oak tree, he takes 100 years. Couples who want a deep, sacrificial love know
that growing such a love, like growing a tree, takes time.
While acceptance is vital in this stage of love, author Leighton Ford adds
an important twist to it. He said, "God loves us just the way we are, but
he loves us too much to leave us that way." The third stage of love goes
beyond acceptance to growth. Because you love each other, you want to see
your mate become the person God designed him or her to be.
The seasons of love don't always follow a set sequence. Rather, the growth
of love is more circular. I've worked with couples who are experiencing all
three stages at the same time. Also, none of the stages has a prescribed
time limit. I know couples married less than ten years who were already enjoying
the harvest of love in season three, and others married for 35 years who
were still riding the roller coaster of the first season.
Most people don't have a clear understanding of the depth and breadth of
true biblical love. For that reason, I encourage couples to look up three
different versions of 1 Corinthians 13. I then have them write out their
own paraphrase, in 1998 language, of this chapter of Scripture. Couples have
told me it helped them personalize God's truth about love.
To make love practical, as well as personal, I challenge every spouse to
do one thing for his or her partner every day for the next month. Pick an
act of kindness, and practice it for 30 days without calling attention to
it. Observe the difference that comes when you work to build, encourage,
nourish and cherish the love you and your spouse share.
Gary J. Oliver, Ph.D., is a clinical psychologist and director of the
Center for Marriage and Family Studies and professor of psychology and practical
theology at John Brown University.
Copyright © 1998 by the author or Christianity Today International/Marriage
Partnership magazine. For reprint information call 630-260-6200 or e-mail
mp@marriagepartnership.com.
Summer 1998, Vol. 15, No. 2, Page 66
Marriage Partnership
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