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Friday, October 26, 2012
Unloving or Unloved
9:32 PM | Posted by
Scott |
Edit Post
In my last
post, Do You Assume Love, I challenged
you to have full confidence in your wife’s or husband’s love for you. When
faced with your spouse’s disappointing or hurtful behavior, rather than responding with
insecurity or offense, simply assume love.
I received
some thoughtful comments on the post that prompted me to write this follow-up.
An Important Distinction
When your
husband or wife does something that to you that feels “unloving,” it does not necessarily
mean that you are “unloved” by him or her. That’s a critical distinction.
In fact, in
any marriage that has at least a nominal amount of good will between spouses,
the chances are that they do in fact love each other. Love is a reasonable assumption.
But assuming love does not mean that you assume
everything your spouse does is motivated by love. Some of the things they
do will be motivated by selfishness, pride, ignorance, anger, jealousy or a whole host of
other negative things. However, there is
a difference between being subjected to unloving behavior and being unloved.
Unfortunately it is easy, even tempting, to confuse the two.
Don’t Fake It
At the end of
my last post I meant to point you to the Assume Love blog, written by Patty
Newbold. There is lots of great stuff there about this topic, obviously, given the name of her blog. One post in particular, Don’t Pretend Love, points out another important distinction. She explains that assuming love is not the same as simply
pretending love. The difference, she explains, lies in what you really believe.
Assuming love means believing that
your spouse’s heart is good;
flawed, weak and immature maybe, but ultimately good. Pretending love means
faking it, even though you don’t really believe it.
Pretending love doesn’t
really help. The fruit of it isn’t going to be much better than just being
offended or insecure.
Believe Love
Assuming
love, even when your spouse does something that hurts you, does not mean you
don’t have valid feeling in response. Hurtful
behavior hurts. The question is, then, what you choose to do with those
feelings.
Assuming love
means acknowledging but not yielding to your emotions. That’s not easy,
especially if the hurt is deep. Still, if can truly believe that your husband
or wife loves you, if you can really know it in the depths of your soul, it can
help you not let emotions get the better of you. These emotions often will feed
us lies. “If he can do ___, then he doesn’t love me.” “She must not love me or she would have ___ “If
he loved me he would never ___” “If she
loved me she would ___”
Don’t buy the
lies. Don’t give them voice. Don’t give over your thought life to them. Instead feed
yourself on truth. Realize that unloving behavior does not equate to him or her
not loving you. Assume love. Believe love.
If you can
get a hold of your emotions and choose to believe love, then you can proceed
with fruitful conversation from a very different place. “I know you love me, so you would want to
know that what you did really caused me pain.”
“I know you didn’t mean to hurt me, but when you do _____, it’s really
hard for me.” Don’t accuse. Don’t blame.Calmly beckon forth the love you know is inside your spouse.
Your goal is not to be right, but to
preserve (and restore if necessary) the relationship - to have intimacy. Ask yourself this question, “What can
I do to help keep us close through this?”
Assuming love is not
living in some phony fantasy land or stuffing down very real pain. No, assuming
love is about believing in and calling forth the love you know that lies inside
your husband or wife.
Photo Credit: Julie Raven
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2 comments:
Great post. Really challenging to put into practice! Much easier to feel sorry for myself instead.
Thanks Katie. You are exactly right that it is easier to have a pity party than to assume love. But I'm sure you've learned that a pity party is not really much of a party. It's much better to celebrate what is good about your marriage.
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