The primary reason I've done this series of post on marriages is to discuss
this point. Until one understands the biological, Biblical, and cultural basis
for marriage, one won't understand why alternate forms of marriage violate the
marital bond. Without understanding that, one won't grasp what it means for a marriage
to break down. Without knowing that, one will not be able to heal a marriage
effectively.
There is no way in one blog post that I can hope to address this issue in
any comprehensive fashion. Many books have been written on the topic from
various perspectives. But I have been through a difficult time in my own
marriage and written a book on it, which has enriched my perspective on this
topic. More on that further down, but I did want to give a broad overview on
the subject leading up to my own personal story.
To some degree or another, every marriage is broken. Because none of us are
perfect. There is always room for improvement in any relationship, no matter
how in love a couple may feel, no matter how great the relationship, no matter
how many years they've been married. However, it is not the dysfunctional parts
of a marriage that are the main problem. Rather, it is the inability of either
or both spouses to address those issues that results in truly broken marriages.
Couples ignore the problems, considering them not important, thinking
nothing can be done, it is "just the way it is" mentality, all
marriages have rough times so just accept it. Over time, what starts as small
deviations are magnified into major marriage-busting violations because no
course corrections are ever made. Like any straight line, a slight deviation
from it at the start will be hardly noticeable, but the further down the line
you go, the more it shows up until the path can be miles away from the line.
These neglected issues aren't frequently marital, but personal, and
therefore affect the marriage. Someone struggling with violent tendencies, if
not addressed, can lead to spouse abuse. A spouse dealing with attention needs
and/or codependency can lead to inappropriate relationships outside the
marriage. Someone addicted to porn can allow it to grow into an addiction to
adultery. The examples are endless.
Our lives and relationships, especially marital ones, require constant
course corrections and improvements if we are to reach our destination. The big
lie we've been led to believe is that love naturally happens and becomes a
static reality. No, infatuation, one small element of love, happens seemingly
"naturally" with no effort.
Love is like a fire. Infatuation is like lighter fluid. You throw a match on
it, it flares up into a roaring fire. If there is no wood, however, it dies off
quickly. If there is wood, eventually it burns up. To keep the fire going
requires more wood. But if left to itself, the fire grows smaller and smaller,
until what remains are glowing embers, occasionally brightened by a little
attention here and there. Even that may eventually wither to nothing.
Then two paths are left for such a couple if they fail to actively make
course corrections on a regular basis. One, remain in a sub-standard marriage,
bereft of a strong sense of love, intimacy, and trust that characterize a
vibrant relationship. Two, a new person arrives, covered in lighter fluid, and
ignites infatuation. Enthralled by that addictive new fire that looks bright
and exciting next to the dying embers of their marriage, thinking it is the fullness
of love, they'll conclude they don't love their spouse, and they give their
loving attention to the new flame only to repeat the cycle.
It is our refusal and laziness that allows our personality flaws to sabotage
our relationships. We don't like change, especially significant change. We like
to assume after 20, 30, or more years of marriage, we've got this relationship
thing down pat, can ignore it, and focus on the projects that excite us,
whatever that may be. It is only when temptation hits that these shortcomings,
magnified over years of unfettered growth, can severely damage our existing
relationships, and ensure future ones suffer the same fate.
In short, the solution to healing a broken marriage is for each spouse to
heal themselves. When I say, "each spouse," I mean both have to
participate, no matter whose "fault" it may appear to be. You cannot
change the other person. You can only change yourself, and pray that God will
help the other person to make the changes they need to make. By continually
focusing on improving ourselves as persons, through God's grace, our
relationships will be restored as well.
This is why God says to repent, humble yourself, turn from your wicked ways,
then He can forgive and heal your relationship with Him. This is why Jesus said
we are to love our neighbor as ourselves. If we don't love ourselves enough to
keep improving in all ways, spiritually, emotionally, physically, and mentally,
then our love for one another will suffer as well. Focusing on identifying our
weaknesses and regularly working to fix them will keep our relationships of
love alive: God, spouse, family, friends, everyone.
The route most people tend to take to fix a broken marriage is to identify
what is wrong with the other spouse and demand he change. This isn't to suggest
that the other person doesn't have areas he needs to address. However, fixing
him is not your responsibility! Enabling him through your support to fix
himself is your responsibility. The primary way you enable him is by ensuring
you are cleaning up your own act. Because if he fixes his issues but you don't,
the relationship will still suffer.
How do I know this? I've lived it. Just over two years ago, on May 11, 2011,
I made a discovery which shattered my world. I discovered that my wife of 29
years was having an affair. If statistics are true, almost half of my readers
have an idea of what that is like. For the other half, I pray you never find
out.
I can't minimize the pain and utter shock of such a discovery, but something
amazing happened through those horrible events. God used it to shake both me
and my wife up enough that we stopped coasting in our relationship and made
significant changes to ourselves. Through that process, we healed the broken
marriage. Just over two years later, I can report our marriage is better than
its ever been. We know we can't stop working on ourselves and our marriage if
we expect the fires of love to keep burning. So the journey continues.
Unfortunately, our experience in a support group verifies that our outcome
isn't in the majority. To many either end up in divorce court or exist in a
loveless, dysfunctional marriage for years. Often, those that do heal take
years because the above principle isn't followed by one or both spouses until
months or years have passed. Or a couple thinks it has been fixed, healed, so
they return to coasting and the cycle repeats a few years later.
To that end, my wife and I jointly decided to risk
telling our story and what we've learned by writing a book. It is our attempt
to help others in our situation see what a healthy rebuilding looks like that
results in a vibrant marriage. Click on the cover to see the book info and links
to where it can be purchased. If you are dealing with infidelity, consider our
book to help you find your footing. If you know someone who is going through
this experience, this book would make a good gift. If you deal with counseling
couples in such situations, you may want to check out our book to use or
recommend to your clients.
There are a lot of good books on infidelity. We give our suggested reading
list of books that helped us the most in our book. Our motto is never stop
reading and improving. Unlike most books on the subject, however, we are not
counselors or PhDs. Our credential lie in that we've gone through the
devastation of infidelity and successfully rebuilt to a vibrant relationship.
Sometimes examining this issue, not through the lens of case studies, but from
someone who has "been there, done that, got the scars" can give you
the perspective and hope to successfully find your own way as well.
I want to offer a huge thank you to my wife, Lenita Copple. First, for being
committed enough to change. You proved your love for me by facing your demons
and fighting them rather than hiding from them like most do. Second, for
bravely risking your reputation by willingly going public with this story. I'm
sure you'll find in the end, it will be stronger. For our reputation with God
matters more than with people. You know you have my respect and love.
Our scar is a big one. But there are plenty of traumas we all go through in
this life. Your marriage doesn't have to be one of them, if you focus on healing
your wounds through God's grace for the rest of your life. May God use our
story and journey to heal the devastation of infidelity in other marriages, so
that they too can discover a vibrant future together.
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