Three Obstacles To Success
1. PERSONALITY
I know we were all created differently and each person has his or
her own personality. If you love your personality too much, though, you
can't be successful in marriage. In giving us our personalities, God
didn't want us to worship ourselves but to utilize our personalities to
worship Him—and to express His personality through us.
People who like their own personalities too much constantly want
their spouses to become more like them instead of more like Christ. The
basic message is, "Until you become just like me, you're not measuring
up."
If you wanted to marry someone just like you, it would have been
much cheaper to marry yourself! You know—you'd have no conflicts,
changes, or growth being enhanced by close contact with another
personality.
People who like themselves too much have a mantra they use every
time they are asked to do something they do not want to do: "That's not
my personality." This can keep a person from benefiting from the Ten-
Minute Marriage Principle. To be successful, you have to do things
whether they are your "personality" or not. This is true in health,
wealth, and relationships as well.
Early in my marriage to Lisa, I had a personal fitness trainer. You
know, those big muscley guys at the gym whom you pay to work you out
hard enough to reach your fitness goals.
One of my trainers was a Mr. Bodybuilder of some state. He was huge.
If he told me to go on the leg press and do three sets of ten, you
could imagine his face if I told him, "Matt, it's not my personality to
do a leg press." He would laugh himself silly. "What does your
personality have to do with pushing a weight? You push the weight, you
get results, and if you don't push the weights, you won't get the
results you are paying for."
Or say I go to a financial advisor. I tell him it's no longer "my
personality" to save money for retirement. He, too, would laugh and say
something like, "What does your personality have to do with it? You
save now, you have wealth later. If not, you're broke at age
sixty-five."
I know this sounds silly, but sometimes during a counseling session
I recommend a certain exercise to a couple to get the change in
relationship they're seeking and whammo, I get, "It's not my
personality."
If you like your personality too much, you can limit your success in
life. When I am speaking at marriage conferences I explain it like
this: God made our personalities, but after the Fall, He, through the
Holy Spirit, had one mission—to restore us to our original
personalities, which are totally in His image. You see, God may like
your personality, but He is committed to kill any part of you that
doesn't look quite like Him.
So as I tell my clients and myself: don't hold on to you too
tightly. What God has in mind is better than what our personalities try
to limit us to.
Here's what I suggest as you go though this book: stay open-minded
and openhearted and try the exercises I suggest. Forget whether they're
consistent with your personality or not. Do them as directed and then
you will be able to measure your results.
2. "FEELINGS FIRST" DECISION MAKING
Here is another culprit that can keep you from benefiting from the
Ten-Minute Marriage Principle. I call it "Feelings First" Decision
Making.
What I am talking about here is relying upon your feelings instead
of your mind when you make decisions. If feelings rule what you decide
to do, you won't be successful in marriage or in life long-term.
Here's what I mean. If you exercise only when you feel like it, you
will never benefit from exercise. If you pay your mortgage or credit
card bills only when it's convenient, you will experience monetary
difficulty that limits your future financial success.
I know it may sound silly, but some couples will do marriage
enhancement exercises only when they "feel like it." Those couples will
never enjoy sustained intimacy; rather they will go through ups and
downs. When they are down, they will do marriage exercises. When they
are up, they see no need to.
The fact is, many of us have moved from doing the right thing to
doing what we feel like doing. Americans in general operate with their
feelings first in decision making instead of by principle.
Every athlete hits a wall—the point where he doesn't feel like
training anymore. The ones who obey their feelings and stop practicing
find themselves thrown off the team. The ones who train because it's
right, not because it feels good, over a sustained period of time are
successful.
Again, if you do only what you feel like doing, you cannot maintain
the benefits of the Ten-Minute Marriage Principle. If, however,
regardless of how you feel, and even if you and your spouse don't like
each other at the moment, you still decide to do the Ten- Minute
Marriage Principle Exercises, you will experience a strengthening of
your marriage that gives you the endurance to run a good race—all the
way "till death do us part."
So don't succumb to your feelings. Do what you know is right, not what you feel is right.
3. WAITING FOR DESIRE
Kate and Ty were an attractive couple who were married for about ten
years. They were professionals and had one small child. They came to me
when a rift appeared in their relationship. We sat down together,
trying to get to the root of their problem. After rejecting several of
the ideas I offered, Kate blurted out, "I just don't desire to be
married anymore."
I asked Kate if she was having an affair, and she assured me that
this was not the case. Then I asked questions about her sleep, weight
loss or gain, and energy level to see if maybe she was depressed. I
also asked if anyone close to her had died or any other major life
changes had occurred. She said, "No. I simply don't have a desire
anymore for marriage."
As a counselor, I have heard this time and time again and usually
from good people. Kate wasn't depressed, having an affair, or grieving,
so what was making her want to leave her marriage? Kate, like so many
Americans, has a paradigm problem when it comes to desire. This
paradigm problem comes when you believe something that is not true.
I once had a seminary professor tell the class, "If you believe
something is true, the results are real, whether it's actually true or
not." For instance, if you believe someone at work or a neighbor
doesn't like you, whether he does or not is irrelevant. You are going
to behave as if he doesn't like you.
Kate believed that desire just happens: you either have desire or
you don't. She thought that desire comes and goes and when it goes,
well, it's gone. Obviously this paradigm problem can create a massive
roadblock in a marriage!
Good news: I have found the secret to creating desire! You see,
desire doesn't come first—desire comes second. Desire is the direct
result of a consistent discipline. Take soda, coffee, or alcoholic
beverages, for example. Many people drink one or all of these on a
regular basis. They consistently have a desire for their beverages of
choice because they have consistently consumed them—usually at the same
time of day or in the same circumstances each time.
To create a desire, you simply have to create a discipline. Take,
for example, carrot juice. If you drink carrot juice two to three times
a day for a few weeks, you will actually begin to like and desire
carrot juice without anyone's coaxing you into drinking it. The same is
true of exercise. If you start running or going to the gym at 5:00 AM
several times a week, in the beginning it will be tough, but once you
surpass that the desire begins to grow. In a couple of months, your
body wakes up for that five o'clock workout.
Desire is always second. What does all this talk about desire have to do with the Ten-Minute Marriage Principle? Everything!
If a husband and wife read the next chapter, choose three exercises
for practicing the Ten-Minute Marriage Principle, and then don't
discipline themselves, they will not build a strong desire to keep
doing these exercises. They will flounder because the momentum of
desire will not kick in for them.
This is like the person who buys a gym membership, goes three times,
then misses a month. That person will never develop a desire to work
out and will not be able to retain any level of fitness. Waiting for
desire is an obstacle to success in the Ten-Minute Marriage Principle.
If you can keep your commitment to ten minutes a day, then the desire
for a great marriage will grow.
Those who push through from discipline to desire get the momentum
they need to enjoy sustained marital happiness. It's as if the wind
comes under your wings and it's not hard at all to do the Ten-Minute
Marriage Principle Exercises you chose. Remember, Lisa and I have been
doing these exercises for decades. There's no effort to it at all now.
We just do them each day.
Kate agreed to do the Ten-Minute Marriage Principle. Even though she
didn't enjoy marriage, she didn't want a divorce—so she was willing to
work. She accepted the fact that changing her feelings would take daily
work and time. Kate began working toward giving up ten minutes of her
day, and so did Ty. They were faithful and sometimes Ty doubled up for
what he called "extra results."
Now Kate has a new and consistent love for Ty, and he has a revived
level of love for Kate as well. The friction and fussing have decreased
so much they can now laugh about where they were even just a few months
later. It's people like Kate and Ty who inspired me to write this book,
so everyone can have the joy of laughing at the past as they are
enjoying their present.
Copyright
© 2007 by Douglas Weiss
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