4 Things You’re Missing While Trying to be Right in Your Marriage
No one wants to move close to someone that they must always defend themselves against.
No one wants to move close to someone that they must always defend themselves against.
When marriage is hard, it’s also a great time to control your focus. Whatever you focus on, you magnify.
When you can get a glimpse into how your husband might be feeling, you can enter in with empathy.
Despite the research and despite what scripture tells us about the power and benefits of prayer, it can still be hard to do.
By default, your children are learning key things about life just from watching you and how you and your spouse interact.
When you learn that your marriage can handle hard things it removes a lot of fear of the future.
God’s plan will always be the best one, way better than anything you could ever manifest yourself.
Life is busy, chaotic, and at times overwhelming, you don’t need your room to be.
Change is unavoidable, so whether you love it or hate it, you must learn how to deal with it because it’s surely coming!
Decide to do something, because ignoring the issues won’t lead to change.
Keep in mind that you may not be able to control what the new year brings, but you can always decide how you’re going to handle it.
Set aside the desire to have those Instagrammable perfect pictures.
Remember getting in God’s Word together is a gift, not a chore.
Sometimes it truly is the simple things in life that connect us the most.
Whatever you do this fall, do it with the intention of staying connected. Date nights are so important for your marriage.
If you are not emotionally, spiritually, and mentally connected as a couple, odds are that you won’t be doing much physical connecting either.
You want to focus on creating a safe space for them to share.
He may not be sharing because he’s overly concerned about upsetting you.
The little things we often complain about as wives are often symptoms of an unmet need or desire we have.
If you haven’t noticed by now, stress is not your friend, and although some seasons it’s unavoidable, many it’s not.
We assign a definition to conflict based upon our own experience of it.
Even when dads struggle to openly express their emotions, we can still learn to see and receive love in different forms.
If you have done something wrong, your spouse has the right to feel about it however they feel about it.
Never run from your struggles, instead, allow God to use them to shape you.