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Marriage Is for Keeps

By:   •  Research Paper  •  1,710 Words  •  December 19, 2009  •  904 Views

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Essay title: Marriage Is for Keeps

If you are getting married, Catholic or not, you need to read Marriage is For Keeps. Each chapter lays out a different topic about how to focus your marriage on the three of you husband, wife and God in the center. Each section contains thought provoking questions for you and your mate and lets you ponder how you are going to grow as a person in your marriage. There are tough spots in this book. A must read, whether you are about to be married or already married and wanting to find that something missing. Especially interesting and tough is the chapter on the roles in the marriage. Kippley presents the notion of wives deferring to their husbands very thoughtfully, but also notes that it is counter cultural in the US of A. He remarks that men need to be worthy of the spiritual leadership of their family if they are truly going to lead.

How often have you heard "when the children come, the marriage ends" New parents are routinely warned how once a baby enters the picture nothing will ever be the same. The budding parents are unnerved because the naysayers are seasoned parents who know what they are talking about. These veterans prophesize doom and gloom in with the baby, and out with fun. Gone will be sleep, leisure-pastimes, nights out, friends, laziness, sex and then ultimately the marriage dissolves. We hold this belief that children are detrimental to marriage because to give to a child takes us away from devoting time to keeping up our image. We are supposed to look like vibrant, vital, beautiful people. Achieving the image is hard work, and requires substantial time to beauty maintenance, clothes shopping, exercising, and socializing. When we are out doing such activities, we receive admiration and applause from peers.

Raising children offers no such external rewards. There are no medals, paychecks, or fame attached to the role of childcare giver. And in our present society, that renders this position insignificant. When there is no value in nurturing, there can be no value in being a child. Don't ever make the mistake of thinking the child does not know this. Children know they are looked upon as troublesome and annoying. They see their parents giving their time to what they value; jobs, social events, hobbies, and other external means in which they get validated. Instead of nuisances, children, in fact, should be regarded as a celebration of the marriage. But they aren't, and frequently they are perceived as hindrances that divide a husband and wife.If the demands of parenting are causing you and your husband to drift apart, analyze why. Do you and your spouse share the same agenda? If you both shared the priority of nurturing and enjoying your child, then there should be no problem. But, if either or both of you have control issues which manifest as power struggles, then disputes will most certainly arise. In many marriages, women grow resentful of their husbands when they are expected to do it all: work, clean, care for the children, shop, cook, do laundry, and then make love. They silently resent their husbands for not allowing them to fully nurture their child. Mothers feel the heavy burden of expectation from their spouses to juggle too many other commitments. They lose the bond of intimacy toward their mate and therefore lose the desire for sex. Women have to have their emotional housekeeping in order before they desire sex. When husbands turn into the enemy, every approach is repelled. Overly controlling husbands want to fully posses their wives and are not interested in changing their original routine. They don't want to share a bed, breasts, time, affection, or have anything else change. But, when a child arrives everything must change. Problems begin when couples do not allow for a transition to occur within themselves and within the household. They don't want to budge because, as we have said, they don't want to feel the emotions that spring forth when a baby enters the picture. In addition to overbusying themselves to escape recalling the memories of their own childhood experiences, they blame the other spouse when circumstances at home change. A lot of name-calling and unmet expectations can happen at this time. Partners get stressed and pushed to the limit. In the case of wives, many resent that they have to go to work, saying that they would be happy with less. But they don't verbalize anything for fear of being belittled. Unthinking and domineering husbands ridicule such women as being brainless, lazy, and lacking ambition.

Wives married to domineering husbands must not become victims of their state of affairs -- they co-created their circumstances. Women have been raised to serve and to please, and if you were raised by authoritative/domineering parents, then you entered into your relationship to fulfill the abusive pattern. The domineering husband merely supplants the domination of the parents.

When a mother

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