Why Relationships Fail

How have you found yourself in a place where you look at your relationship and wonder how you got to that place. None of us go into a relationship thinking of the end. While we don’t think of the end, a relationship can be like taking a road trip with someone. We both need to look for the upcoming signs along the way. There could be construction up ahead,  detours or pit stops gas or food. Similarly, in our relationships, we must stay alert on our journey so that a pit stop doesn’t become a dead end.

Our relationship could be headed for trouble but if we’re not paying attention to the signs, we can find ourselves in a place that we didn’t intend. Here are some signs that your relationship is headed for trouble.

 

  1. Criticism.

If you spend enough time with someone, there will always be something to criticize them about. It’s like a scolding mother or father wagging their finger, seeing only negative instead anything positive. Under such conditions, you begin to feel like a child and then act like a child. Nothing positive happens in this environment because both people end up walking on eggshells, withdrawing, or getting angry. The safety in the relationship goes away because you can’t trust that your partner is in your corner, and you feel that whatever you do isn’t good enough.

 

  1. Micromanagement.

This can feel like criticism at times, but more often micromanaging is about hovering and suffocation: “Here’s what I would suggest.”  “Why don’t you try this?” “ What I would say is this.”Micromanagement offers advice not asked for and suggestions not sought. You feel controlled, and maybe, again, like a child. (Men, in particular, have a difficult time with this.) This can make you distrust your spouse. The safety in the relationship goes away because you feel like you are not seen as a capable adult, that you are not heard, that anything you say only sets off another round of advice. 

 

  1. Lack of appreciation.

This is a close cousin to criticism, but the hard edge is replaced by absence. The fancy dinner you slaved over isn’t criticized so much as ignored. Your efforts go unnoticed or the quick feedback is limited to “not bad.” You do a lot but not much comes back to you in terms of compliments or gratitude. There is no safety in the relationship because you begin to feel invisible, or that what you do doesn’t matter—and over time, maybe you don’t matter. This is less about feeling afraid and more about a lack of meaningfulness; there is nothing to motivate you to give your best to the relationship.

 

Now that we have a couple of signs to look out for on our relationship road, how do we turn it around and head to a better relationship?

 

  1. Realize it’s not about You

Putting yourself in the other person’s shoes can help change the old story that you’ve undoubtedly been telling yourself. It allows you to move toward compassion rather than staying stuck in victimization or resentment. Empathy and compassion are about understanding someone. You don’t always have to agree, but you should be able to understand where the other person is coming from.

 

  1. Know your sensitivities.

Which one or two items on the list above are you most sensitive to? Realizing when your sensitivities are being triggered—and possibly leading to an overreaction—is valuable. So many times we don’t know ourselves. We don’t know our triggers or sensitivities. If you can catch it, you have the opportunity to step back, slow down, and try to put in the situation in a better perspective. The starting point is not what the other person does, but about you dealing with old wounds in a different way.

 

Big Actions vs Small Actions

Types of People

What type of person are you? Are you the one that likes to go all out on birthdays and anniversaries? Or are you the one that likes to do small things over consistently over time. I know that this may seem a like a weird question, but the point that I want to make is that we tend to be more into the first category. A lot of us men tend to only show our wives love on the major days. Her birthday, Valentine’s Day, and our anniversary are the major times each year where we know we’re supposed to get it right. While we think that this is a good thing, in reality it is just scratching the starting point and we should be the second type.

At the beginning of this year my wife and I set a goal that we were going to work even harder at our relationship. It’s not that we were having troubles, we just knew there was room to improve. We recognized that with  two small children and very busy schedules, life can be happening all around us and we want to make sure that we’re moving together. Things are good, but we want them to be better. So we decided to commit to make a love deposit each month.

Love grows over time, not in the number of likes or comments on social media Click To Tweet

Love Deposits

A love deposit is our way of saying that we want to do something for the other person that speaks their love language. If you haven’t I would read The 5 Love Languages, I would highly recommend it. They even have versions for children, singles and so many more.

Having this approach is better than hitting the major days that I talked about earlier. This is what it can do for you.

 

  1. Allows for relationship maintenance

Maintenance is always better than repair. You don’t want to reach the breaking point where everything needs to be fixed. Relationship maintenance is better than having an explosive fight. Doing something every month for your spouse makes this possible.

 

  1. Helps to make sure you don’t forget the Big Ones

If you’re doing something for your spouse every month, it will help you so you don’t forget the Big Days. If we’re doing something every month for our spouse then we’re training our minds to always think about them in a new way. Not in a nagging, or a irritated way, but in a way that is loving.

 

  1. Keeps you connected to your spouse

We’re people and we change over time. Making  small deposits every month, lets your spouse know how important they are to you and helps to keep you connected to what is going on with them as a person. There’s no worse feeling than planning something elaborate for your spouse only to have them respond with a lackluster response.  Sometimes the things we thought would make a huge deposit, don’t even make a dent because we’re not as connected to our spouse as we thought. It is naive of us to think that our spouse will be the same person as when we first started dating. We shouldn’t treat them the same way either.

 

This is “love month.” Don’t wait to show your spouse to care. Do something small that will make a deposit to their heart.

 

Discussion Question:

Has your love language changed over time?

 

Talk Like a King

The Measure of a King

What is the measure of a king? Does that king rule by  fear? In today’s world there aren’t many kings or kingdoms, instead there are countries with presidents. Don’t worry this isn’t a political post, not that at some point we won’t get  into politics, just not today.

So what is a king? As a man of God, I believe that we are the kings of our households. Not to rule with an iron fist. There is more to being a king than ordering others, more than scaring  your family into submission.

Deck of Cards

Think of yourself as the king in a deck of cards, your spouse,  the queen, the children are the jack and ace. Maybe you even have a joker in your clan too. The point that I’m trying to get across is that while you are the king, your family is there beside you. Not under you.

There is a saying that money won’t make you happy. Money only amplifies what is already on the inside of you. I think that the same can be said of a title. Being the president of a business won’t turn you into a different or a better person, it will just bring out more of what is already in you. The same is true of your family.

A True King

Having a wife or kids won’t make you a better person, it will just bring out more of who you are on the inside. Being a king, being a good king is more. What makes a good king? I think that it’s the same as what makes a good man.

  1. Puts others first. A good king, as well as a good man, as well as a good leader of his home puts others first. It’s all about the well being of others. Those that God has put under our protection.
  2. Speak life and not death. A lot of times we don’t realize the impact of our words. Or how they can affect those around us. The world is just coming to understand and realize something that Christians have known for years. That life and death are in the power of the tongue.

As a king, we should be speaking life into those that we are over. Speaking life means that we want to speak words that encourage our children. Sometimes it is hard to do that, I won’t say that it’s easy, but it can be done. Also speaking life doesn’t mean that we don’t ever correct our children. There is a balance that we have to strive for. Correct and encourage.

 

Discussion questions: What prayers/confessions do speak over your spouse or children?