Ted, what do you know about anger in
marriage?
You
begin by trying to figure out how much of the anger is rooted in the marriage.
What we’ve come to find is very little anger
begins in the marriage but
it’s
brought into the marriage.
For
example, we have a socially acceptable word in our culture for anger called
“stress” — and we even brag about this form of anger.
You know I’m stressed. I’ve got too much goin’ on at work. Oh, traffic
was crazy today, totally stressed out. I’ve got kids at home and I’m stressed. Because
you’re never going to hear anybody run around going,
I’m angry. I’m mad. What
happens is something we call “transference”. We bring anger or stress home from
work, home from traffic, our 401k — all of that causes great frustration.
Anger
has three sources: hurt, fear and frustration. Couples begin to transfer the
frustration, the hurt, or the fear — that isn’t even in the home —
into
the home because it’s the most comfortable environment. So we’ve got to start
asking the question: What am I really feeling? Anger is not a primary
emotion—it’s a secondary emotion—and where is the source of this anger? Where
did it start? If I’m bringing it out on the spouse or on my kids, I need to pinpoint
where this thing originated and begin dealing with it.
So, the cause of anger goes deep.
Yes.
Every couple brings a suitcase into the marriage full of past hurts, fears and
frustrations. If we’re not careful we'll begin to think that our spouse's issues are really my issues and that I did
something to cause that. We have to guard against this source and solution
problem where my spouse is the source of all of my problems.
That
puts me in a place of being stuck. There’s really nowhere for me to go. I can’t
blame my wife, accuse her, point the finger of accusation at her to say,
You’re the reason I’m feeling this way. It
could be something I brought into the marriage from childhood, from work or
from just listening to the news. How many couples are acting out on one another
because they’re watching too much depressing news?
How should a couple approach
forgiveness?
I’d
start with what’s been holding you back. There’s several reasons couples
withhold forgiveness.
We withhold forgiveness because we fear that we’ll be condoning the offense; we
fear that we’ll be invalidating or minimizing the hurt and pain that was felt.
A lot of times we’ll withhold forgiveness because we believe that we need to
hold on to our anger to coerce an apology.
It’s
like the marriage trump card. We hold on to that card thinking,
Hey, as long as I hold the trump card I have
the upper hand in the marriage.
We’re
not so much interested in the offense or what made us angry as we are with:
What are you going to do with your anger?
Are you going to resolve it? Or are you going to sit on it? Will it
escalate? Is the primary roadblock selfishness?
I don’t want to forgive you because I enjoy being the victim. I
know that sounds weird to say —
I enjoy being the victim — but when we
enjoy being the victim, what we’re really saying is: We like being in control
of this relationship and by forgiving you, I let you off the hook. I don’t
excuse behavior or make excuses for the offense that you brought on to me, but
ultimately I lose power—when just the opposite is true.
When
we learn to forgive and operate in a spirit of forgiveness, the Scripture says
that we are freeing ourselves, setting
ourselves free from prison. The bottom line is you and I are going to need
forgiveness in the future, so we better start learning how to forgive our
spouse in the present.
Ted, you have said, anger is a secondary emotion. What do you mean by that?
Most
men struggle with the fear of being controlled. We don’t want to be told what
to do. We don’t want to feel like a failure. We want to look successful.
For
most women, generally speaking, it’s the opposite. A woman’s primary emotion is the fear of being disconnected from.
They always want to feel connected to.
I
used to think my wife was trying to control me. What I’ve come to learn is,
it’s not about her telling me what to. She's trying to connect with me — that’s
a big difference. Let’s deal with things at the root level, at the primary
emotions, so we don’t get to the secondary emotion of anger.
What happens when anger escalates to
abuse?
The
victim of physical, emotional, even sexual abuse has to find a way to forgive
because it affects every other relationship. Anger is not a respecter of
persons and it will resurface in other relationships. People often push back
and say,
You gotta be kidding me. You’re
telling me I have to forgive that guy and go back into that? No,
I’m not saying you have to go back into that situation. What I’m telling you is
you have to find a way to forgive because you can’t close your heart off.
That’s
why the writer of Hebrews says, “Don’t allow any root of bitterness to grab
hold of your heart” because it comes out in every other relationship and
especially our relationship with God. Scripture says, “You and I do not generate
one ounce of love. God is love,” period.
And you and I love because He first loved us. When we’re closed off to
other people, we are unable to receive the love. I’m not asking you to give
your measly love or my measly love or your measly forgiveness and my measly
forgiveness to another person. I’m asking you to be filled so that you have
something to give to another person.
Ted, what we see frequently is couples
caught in this vicious cycle of argument and conflict and anger, and it's a tit
for tat—back and forth and back and forth. What would your advice be to a
couple that’s caught in that cycle?
Number
one, instead of giving the kids a timeout, start giving yourself a timeout.
We’re not capable of anything productive in the first five to 20 minutes after
an escalated argument.
It
takes about 20 minutes for our heart rate to come back down to a resting rate.
It’s in that time we need to own our emotions and take them before the Lord and
realize that it's my control issue. I don’t need to be her lord and master.
There’s nowhere in Scripture that says it’s my job to be my wife’s lord. I need
to get off my mate’s case and quit trying to change her.
My
apologies for the first several years of marriage were ridiculous. I used to
say things to my wife like,
I’m sorry if
I offended you. You know what we’re basically saying is,
You shouldn't have been feeling that way. Or,
you shouldn't have been offended. I
also said things to her like,
I’m sorry
that you feel that way—basically taking no personal responsibility for my
own words and actions.
The
quickest way out of the cycle is to take 100% personal responsibility for what
you are feeling, what you are thinking, what you are saying, and what you are
doing and get off your mate’s case. Scripture says, “God opposes the proud but
gives grace to the humble.” That word “opposes” means God literally stands
against the proud. I see that playing out in marriage every day. They drag their spouse to a marriage seminar
to get fixed. They hand their spouse a book to read to get fixed. They preach
to their husband or to their wife to get fixed.
Scripture
says God stands against that type of behavior. He is not going to step in and
do anything so long as you and I think we’re in charge and we’re the ones
running the show. My challenge to every spouse is to back off your mate and let
God do what God does — and that is change people.
Copyright © 2009 by Growthtrac
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