Friday, October 27, 2017

Continuing To Dance

              As I have read and contemplated on turning towards this week. I have thought about the many things we turn towards or turn away from. We are meant to turn towards the Lord and turn away from sin. We turn our hearts towards our ancestors and turn away from worldly distractions.  As we seek to turn towards the good and away from the negative influences our lives become more meaningful and more purposeful. This week as I have worked with the intention to turn towards my husband I have realized how much I miss opportunities by either intentionally or unintentionally turning away. In the hustle and bustle of everyday life, seeking to meet the demands and responsibility of raising a family we allow ourselves to become separated by our individual roles. I liked the imagery of marriage being like a dance. Life pulls us apart and yet as we turn towards each other we find the familiar pull that brings us closer together, always finding a way to stay connected as the dance moves along.  
            Turning towards each other requires deliberate attention, actions, thoughtfulness, and the turning away from one’s own self-interest to meet the needs of the other. As I have focused and strived to noticed my husband’s bids and my responses, I have realized how many I miss an opportunity to turn towards him due to distraction. Learning to put aside or to notice the little things takes effort, but that effort produces far greater rewards and a far more beautiful dance.

References
Gottman, J. M., & Silver, N. (2015). The Seven Principles for Making Marriage  Work: A Practical Guide from the Country's Foremost Relationship Expert. New York: Harmony Books.

Thursday, October 19, 2017

Dusting Off Our Love Map

What are love maps? To me they are little notes you take for yourself as you navigate life with your spouse. Little notes and lists like, he doesn’t like pepper in his food, he needs time to unwind after work, he has an important meeting today so I will prepare his favorite breakfast and pray specifically about his meeting. As I have learned about what love maps are and how they can help a marriage I have found a greater desire to dust off and create a larger more detailed love map. I feel that after a while you get into a routine and you don’t pay as much attention to the little things that are important to your spouse. This week I have enjoyed taking the time to think of all the little things that make my husband unique and special to me. Something that I really haven't done in a while. We tend to allow too much of the “Natural Man” into our hearts and lives. We forget what really matters and what is really important. Since focusing on the little things that I love and enjoy about my husband I have had a lot less time to think and fester on the differences that irritate me. 
I have also been thinking about other maps. Specifically, the Marauders Map in Harry Potter. Harry can find the information he is looking for and keep track of the people in his life by looking at the map. The key phrase to Harry Potters map is “mischief managed”. How coincidental that it is that phrase. If we keep and maintain our love maps we can better manage the mischief that comes our way. We are better prepared to meet the needs and changes of our spouse as we come to know and understand them better.

References

Gottman, J. M., & Silver, N. (2015). The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work: A 
Practical Guide from the Country's Foremost Relationship Expert. New York: Harmony Books.

Friday, October 13, 2017

First Comes Friendship Then Comes Marriage.


            Marriage and friendship go hand in hand. Marriage is a lot easier to keep if friendship is strong. Once that friendship begins to fade it becomes harder to keep marriage afloat. I have found within my own marriage that when our friendship is strong and we are striving to maintain that bond of not only common curtesy, but also transparent honesty things are so much happier. We flirt more, we talk more, we address conflicts right away before they can turn into frustration and resentment. We don’t change the things we disagree over we just fail to be disagreeable to one another. We strive for an agree to disagree, but still care enough about each other to respect our differences.  I think sometimes we work harder to maintain our friendships than we do trying to maintain our marriage. When marriage is viewed as simply a contract until one of us gets bored or dies it loses the greatest aspect of marriage, true and abiding friendship. One of the greatest blessings of marriage is the constant love that comes along with a strong friendship. Someone to go through all the ups and downs of life. I can’t imagine having fun riding a roller coaster alone. The hills and valleys are so much more thrilling and enjoyable with someone to laugh and screech together with. Life is no different having a true friend by our side makes the ride so much more worth the cost.
            In his book Gottman states, “If you can accommodate each other’s “crazy” side and handle it with caring, affection and respect, your Marriage can thrive (Gottman, 2015 p. 16). I have found that the best of friends are just that, people who can see your specific kind of “crazy” and love you anyways. Marriage is no different if you have a deep friendship you can embrace each other’s quirks and uniqueness and almost find it down right adorable. When that friendship isn’t as strong or foundational those same quirks and uniqueness can become annoying and irritating. I am no expert on marriage or friendship, but I do know that my marriage is happier when I am being a good friend to my husband and striving to put each others happiness as a top priority like any good friend would.

References
Gottman, J. M., & Silver, N. (2015). The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work: A

Practical Guide from the Country's Foremost Relationship Expert. New York: Harmony Books.

Saturday, October 7, 2017

Blessings of the Temple


            These week’s topic has been on Marriage as a covenant not just a contract. As I read about the covenants we make in the temple it hit home to me just how binding those covenants are. Not only do they bind us to the Lord, but the bind us together as husbands and wives, parents and children, brothers and sisters. I reflected on these things while in the temple and felt an overwhelming gratitude for the gift of temples. In reading President Ezra Taft Bensons remarks on the blessings of the temple he stated,

“• You will receive the spirit of Elijah, which will turn your hearts to your spouse, to your children, and to your forebears.
• You will love your family with a deeper love than you have loved before.
• Your hearts will be turned to your fathers and theirs to you.
• You will be endowed with power from on high as the Lord has promised.
• You will receive the key of the knowledge of God. (See D&C 84:19.) You will learn how you can be like Him. Even the power of godliness will be manifest to you. (See D&C 84:20.)
• You will be doing a great service to those who have passed to the other side of the veil in order that they might be “judged according to men in the flesh, but live according to God in the spirit.” (D&C 138:34.) “ (Benson 1986)

I really appreciated the wording here. These are not “you can” statements. They are “you will” statements. If we go to the temple worthily and keep our covenants we will receive these blessings. These blessings are not just limited to ourselves, but also to our loved ones. How wonderful it is that we have temples in our midst to invoke the blessings of heaven to pour down on us.


References

Benson, E. T. (1986). What I Hope You Would Teach Your Children about the Temple.