Archive for the ‘Marriage’ Category

My Love Story (Part 1)

Sunday, February 13th, 2011

love-storyOnce upon a time, I met a guy named Alan at a college retreat from my church in California. He made no impression on me. Another guy who was going to seminary was interested in me, and we walked along the beach. Several months later, the seminary guy said he loved me and asked me to marry him. He wanted to know if I loved him, and I said that he was cute, and that I wanted to love him. I told him I didn’t know him. He seemed frustrated. Later he ended up stealing from the church and landed in jail. He was my first boyfriend. I’m not making this up.

Meanwhile, Alan was my best friend. We bummed around together, zooming around in his sports car. We would park the car at the top of a hill overlooking the city, and we would talk for hours about God. Neither one of us was attracted to the other. He was in love with some other girl. Plus, Alan couldn’t hold down a job, so he lived out of his car sometimes. This didn’t bother me because his soul was gold. I knew we would be friends for life. I loved him. I loved his soul. I wasn’t attracted though.

Then he cleaned up and put on a black button down shirt, and grew a classy, trimmed beard. I was coming back from spending Christmas with my family in Guatemala, and there he was at the airport. It was a complete surprise. A woman was there to pick me up to take me home. I rented a room from her house while I went to college. Anyway, Alan was there, too, and he looked mighty fine. Later when we got home, he accidentally touched my hand, and I was totally frieked out because there was no question in my mind that I was attracted to this man. I was so scared. This had never happened before. Either I was attracted to a guy but never loved him, or I had guy friends that I actually cared about but wasn’t attracted to.

I brainwashed myself that I wasn’t attracted and pretended like everything was normal. We continued being best friends. Then I was accepted to go overseas to England for my senior year of college. My college friends said good-bye. The girl that Alan liked ran up to my car and told me to roll down the window. She asked me point blank, “Do you love Alan?” I looked at her with cloaked jealousy and said, “Yes.” She backed up as I drove off. My heart was pounding.

The year I was in England, Alan never wrote. My feelings were hurt. We were best friends. Never had a week gone by that we hadn’t talked with each other. I knew he was going out with this girl he liked. I closed the door on that chapter of my life. I went out with an American guy who was also an exchange student. He was a jerk. I never slept with any of these people. I believe in purity.

I flew back to California, only to find out that Alan’s girlfriend had stabbed him in the back, betrayed him, and poisoned everybody’s minds against him. She tried to poison my mind too, but I said that even if everything she said about him was true, I still loved him. Even if he started murdering people, I would bake him cookies and take them to him in jail and talk to him and try to figure out what went wrong. But what she was saying was nothing close to that. He was “irresponsible” mostly. He owed people money. So what? He could go get a job and pay them back. But, no. They had all turned against him, and his life was over. Out of desperation, he decided to join the Air Force.

Alan treasured the fact that I never turned on him. And knowing how much he was hurting, I threw caution to the wind and told him I loved him.

(Stay tuned for My Love Story: Part Two…)

Expectations Cause Disappointment

Monday, February 7th, 2011

expectations-cause-disappointmentOn Valentines Day, men are pressured to get flowers that wilt, chocolate that makes you fat, or diamonds that you can’t afford. Men are put in a stressful situation by their wives, who pressure their men to be romantic (read sappy and girly). Plus, they have to be creative and do something they’ve never done before, and they need to top what they did last year. What an unkind thing for women to do to their men. I say, let’s abolish Valentines Day, for the sake of our men.

Many unhappy married women that I know are deeply disappointed in their husbands. They think their husbands are lame because they don’t think like a girl, and they lack respect for their men. There is no way for the man to do anything right when they’re in this position. (By the way, you are not immune to your marriage being destroyed just because you’re a Christian and you homeschool. Far from it; Satan will attack you more, so you need to work harder on your marriage, not take it for granted. I feel so strongly about this because I have wept over destroyed marriages from dear friends of mine who never thought it would happen to them.)

Most women think they deserve gifts. Nobody deserves anything. Until women realize that they have a man who loves them, they should realize that they already have everything they ever wanted. Love. That’s it. If you have it, be done. Be content. Stop expecting things. If you expect too much from your husband, you will always be disappointed.

Let go of Valentines Day. Instead, be a help meet to your husband. Give him what he wants. Don’t think of yourself at all. This is the way to find true joy, and to have a man that actually cherishes you.

What I Love About My Husband

Thursday, January 13th, 2011

  1. what-I-love-about-my-husbandHe loves me! We’ve been through a lot together, and I know that he loves me no matter what.
  2. His love of Scripture is what first attracted me to him. He has a passion for the Truth, and he can eloquently defend the Word of God.
  3. I love his spiritual gift of discernment. He is able to see to the heart of an issue and pinpoint the core of a problem. He is so insightful. Years ago when he was talking to a friend of mine, he pointed out a core problem in their marriage that we were both blind to, and we knew that he was right. When I mention a sin issue of a friend or relative, he will mention what the real issue is and tell me to pray about that instead. My husband would be an outstanding counselor because of this unusual gift.
  4. If he sees a sin in me, he will let me know, and not in an attacking way. He pauses and thinks about how he’s going to say it. I don’t want to sin, so I love the fact that he shepherds me. He uses the Word of God to align my thoughts to Scripture rather than allowing my emotions to rule me. My husband is my compass.
  5. He shepherds my children in an outstanding manner. With the patience of Job, he will gently talk to our children about what they did wrong. He takes more time while disciplining, to make sure the child’s heart has changed. The way he interacts with our children is so phenomenal that someone from our church noticed it years ago. She called him “super dad.” Most people don’t see this side of him because it happens quietly at home.
  6. My husband is honest. He won’t lie no matter what. He is trustworthy and has never broken my confidence.
  7. He is faithful. Even though life has thrown a lot of pain in our direction, he has remained faithful from day one, and I know he is committed to me for the rest of his life. I don’t take this for granted. He could have walked away years ago because of all the emotional baggage I had.
  8. He is a great lover. He isn’t selfish. Making love to my husband is so much fun!
  9. He makes me laugh. Life is full of joy with him. He makes me happy.
  10. I love the fact that he’s deep and philosophical. We can talk for hours about God, the universe, and everything.