
Home > Marriage > The Early Years
 Marriage Partnership, Winter 1999
Watch Your
Mouth
Are you gossiping when you share a marital frustration with a friend?
The answer might surprise you
by Les and Leslie Parrott
"You told Rich what!?" Leslie exclaimed.
"Oh, he doesn't care if you lost 50 dollars," I said defensively. "If
you didn't want me to tell him, you should have told me it was private."
"Excuse me," Leslie retorted. "But can't you just assume I don't
want everyone to know my stupid mistakes?"
Good point. All of us talk with friends about our marriageswhether we tell
our best friend everything or simply throw into conversation an occasional
"I know what you meanTim does that too." But what you don't
tell your friends about your marriage is just as important as what you
do tell them.
Protecting your spouse's confidence is critical to building a relationship
of trust. Unfortunately, some couples become contaminated by gossip. Not
shop gossip. Not party gossip. But gossip behind a partner's back about
the state of your relationship.
Marital gossip has to do with talking to friends or relatives about your
partner's flaws and foibles. A wife may, for example, confidentially
spill the details of last night's fight to her friend who "promises"
to keep it a secret. Or a husband might secretly tell his father about how
his wife ran up a huge credit card bill. Although such disclosures may seem
harmless at the time, they can hurt a marriage.
Why do some couples leak secrets and blab private information without a second
thought?
For one, they see gossip as a means to connect with others. Being able to
give someone the inside scoop can bring two people closer together. The gossipers
believe the person receiving the information will feel privileged. Another
reason for their blabbing is more destructive: gossip can be used to get
back at a mate. For example, if a husband has confessed a struggle with
pornography to his wife, and the wife feels betrayed and wounded as a result,
she may tell her friends about it as a way of getting back at her husband.
Whatever the reasons, gossip is evil. The apostle Paul warns about the
destructive power of gossip and the condemnation that comes to "gossips and
busybodies" who say "things they ought not to" (1 Tim. 5:13). But this
doesn't stop gossipers. Often, they don't even realize the damage
they are doing to themselves, their mate and their marriage.
The Anatomy of a Marital
Gossip
Most people have a stereotypical idea about gossip and gossipers. Many probably
envision housewives gabbing over the back fence about a neighbor's drinking
problem. Or you may think of teenage girls exchanging malicious remarks about
a classmate over the telephone. These perceptions, however, are not only
sexist, they are wrong. Woman are no more likely to gossip then men. Both
husbands and wives who are prone to gossip carry some of these common gossip
traits.
Talkative. Some spouses talk incessantly but do little else. During
their nonstop chatter, they may cover the same ground again and again.
Pseudo-secretive. Gossips start a lot of sentences with: "You have
to promise you won't tell, but
" It sounds very confidential.
But then why are they telling the secret? You see, gossips appear to be keeping
a secret but aren't.
Negative. We were recently in a beautiful home that had an embroidered
pillow on the sofa that read: "If you haven't got anything good to say
about anyone, come and sit by me." Gossips love negative news about
anyonesometimes even their partner. They move like a magnet toward the
latest personal problem and focus on that.
Intrusive. They say that hell for gossips is a place where people
are forced to mind their own business. In an almost compulsive fashion, gossips
wheedle their way into private places trying to discover the secrets that
aren't ready to be told. They might push their partner to reveal fleeting
feelings and then read messages into them that simply don't exist.
Self-righteous. That tart-tongued gossips get upset at the prospect
of others gossiping about them illustrates the evil nature of gossip. You
may feel fine about sharing details of your husband's job worries with
your friend, but heaven forbid you hear him telling his buddy that you had
to buy a whole new wardrobe because you "outgrew" your old clothes.
Curbing Marriage
Gossip
When you become a telltale spouse, you lose loyalty. You fracture any confidence
your spouse has in you. So are we saying never talk to others about your
marriage or your partner? Absolutely not. But watch what you say. For example,
it can be healthy to talk with a trusted and supportive friend about marital
struggles as long as you are not disclosing information that would embarrass
your spouse. If he doesn't want others to know he locked himself out
of the car again and that was the source of a marital blow-up, keep that
information to yourself. But if you are feeling frustrated in not knowing
how to respond to these kinds of situations, you might express this to a
friend to gain some objectivity. In doing so, you are not unduly embarrassing
your partner and you are not complaining about his behavior.
When you focus on your feelings to others, not your complaints, you are more
likely to stay clear of the danger zone. "I feel so helpless when he gets
upset at himself," carries a very different tone than "I can't believe
how stupid he can be sometimes." It may seem like a fine line, but the messages
are different. The first message conveys a desire to process your thoughts
and feelings while the latter conveys a desire to gossip and whine.
It comes down to knowing the difference
between seeking support and venting your feelings.
It comes down to knowing the difference between seeking support and help
from somebody outside the relationship and venting your feelings. Venting
is almost always unhealthy for your marriage and damaging to your sense of
loyalty to each other. If you find yourself wanting to vent, that's
a pretty clear sign that you should only be talking to your spouse about
it. If you abide by this rule, your loyalty toward one another will stay
intact and even grow.
Here's another thought that may help you curb marital gossip. Think
of the remarkable energy that would be restored to a marriage if a spouse
"gossiped" about good things instead of bad. If, for example, a wife confided
in a friend how sweet her husband was to clean up the dirty kitchen. Or if
a husband told his friend how generous his wife was in giving to the needy.
This is another way of saying that if you want to curb marital gossip, you
can't go wrong by becoming your partner's publicist. So if you
are ever snared by the grip of gossip in our own marriage, consider gabbing
about the good. Leave the secrets at home.
Leslie Parrott, Ed.D., and Les Parrott, Ph.D., are co-directors of the
Center for Relationship Development at Seattle Pacific University and the
authors of Saving Your Marriage Before It Starts, Becoming Soul Mates
and Relationships. Visit Les and Leslie at
www.RealRelationships.com.
Copyright © 1999 by the author or Christianity Today International/Marriage
Partnership magazine. Click here
for reprint information on Marriage Partnership.
Winter 1999, Vol. 16, No. 4, Page 18
Marriage Partnership
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