Showing posts with label failed marriage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label failed marriage. Show all posts

Saturday, 2 July 2016

5 Unfailing Truths That Can Completely Save Your Marriage



There are countless homes and marriages experiencing one crisis or the other and it is as if, as a woman once asked me, “Can’t marriages ever be without problem?”

As strange as it may seem, the everyday couples we find today are seemingly in two categories – those in marital crisis; and those about to get into crisis. In fact marital struggles are everywhere and they are not unique to certain people.

But does it mean there can never be joy in marriage? Can marriages be immune from crisis or how can they be salvaged?

Here are five proven truths that save marriage:

1.         Your spouse does not have the capacity to meet all your emotional needs:
The surest way to court disaster in marriage is for a wife to expect her husband to be the all-in-all is a formula for disaster. 

A lot of women marry with the intent of shifting the burden of life and living onto their husbands. Your spouse is not an expect route to challenges of life.

Do your spouse a favor and look to God to be your "spiritual husband" and take some of that load of his shoulders. This will take a tremendous load of expectation off of him and it will help you be a confident, capable wife who can get through whatever life and marriage brings your way. 

2.         Marriage is not only about happiness:
I am sure you married because you believed your partner would make you happier than if you remained single. This is basic assumption many people enter into marriage with. 

But God's original intention for marriage is more about sacrifice than making you happy. Marriage is a place where daily practice dying to self. It is a theatre of sacrifice and compromise. It is a field in which we can practice love, even when we don't feel like it. 

Happiness is not a result of how someone else treats you. Your level of contentment is a choice that must be made by you or a heart condition that must be altered. 

Marriage is the training ground for sublime and total love and self-effacing character. And the best person to teach you how to love another unconditionally is the partner you are living with in very close quarters.

3.         Disappointment is inevitable because we're all incomplete and not perfect
This is one of the most realistic perspectives to marriage. Nobody can essentially make you complete or perfect. Only God can fix us. It is beyond a new life, a new wife or a new perspective; and not even a new you. 

Imperfections will always remain in us. We would keep hurting and disappointing one another in marriage because with all the new, there's still the same old broken you. 

Just as your spouse has disappointed you, you, too, have disappointed your spouse. It goes both ways. That's why grace is the glue that holds the two of you together. 

Once you realize you are just as much an imperfect fellow or sinner as your spouse, you will extend grace toward him or her more easily. 

4.         Divorce is not always a solution. The grass is NOT greener on the other side:
We tend to look at other situations that are less familiar to us and imagine the best. I am sure you too would have looked at your fiancĂ© years ago and imagined the best possible scenario with him. Then reality happened. 

Your spouse has flaws. So does the nice-looking man or woman across the street or the recently divorced woman in your office or the very capable single mom or dad you met in the school parking lot. 

Doesn't it make sense to continue to invest in the person you've invested years in than to start all over with someone else's issues, baggage, past, and problems?

5.         Integrity always pays off:
Are you a person of your word? Did you say "forever"? Did you promise commitment even in sickness and in health? Alzheimer’s and dementia are a sickness. So is addiction. 

So, even if your spouse doesn't remember you or isn't behaving the "same" as when you married, or is truly trying to stop a destructive behavior but can't, you still made a promise. 

Even if the two of you have grown apart, you still made a commitment. Even if your heart doesn't feel the same you still made a vow before God and witnesses to be in this "'till death do us part." (And that doesn't mean "death" of your feelings.) 

I'm so glad God doesn't drop us when we begin acting differently than when we first committed to him. Grace is undeserved favor. And God expects us to show it to others in the same degree it has been measured out to us.

Of course, there are certain behaviors that are absolutely unacceptable in marriage, such as abuse and sexual unfaithfulness. Some of the most powerful marital testimonies I've seen and heard have been those who started to walk away because of "irreconcilable differences" but then saw the God of reconciliation bring them back together....once they extended grace and love of another kind (and in many cases when counseling and a repentant heart helped reverse some destructive behavior).

Inasmuch as it depends on you, are you willing to forgive, extend grace, and do what is necessary for the marriage to work? God always honors the man or woman "who keeps his word whatever the cost". And I know, my friend; sometimes it hurts.

Marriage disappoints at times, just like any relationship. But God never disappoints. Put your hope in him - and his promises - and see what he can pull you through.

And if your marriage is one that couldn't be saved - or you are dealing with behaviors that are destructive to the marriage, or your spouse was not committed to making it work as you had hoped - God can still redeem the pieces of your life and turn your story into something beautiful.



Adapted from Cindi McMenamin 

Thursday, 3 December 2015

Ex-Wife Of Former Cowboys Player Recounts Ordeal: Says The Team Knew Of Her Domestic Abuse



Dorothy Newton
Revealing details some very disturbing, violent episodes in her marriage, Dorothy Newton, the ex-wife of former Dallas Cowboys offensive lineman Nate Newton, claimed in an interview with Sports Illustrated recently that the team allegedly knew that she was being domestically abused during the 1990s, but did not do anything about it.

Was she helpless? Indeed, why do women put up with abusive relationships get they can get out or get help? In Dorothy Newton’s case, was there no one to help?

In the interview with SI, Newton goes into detail about some of the incidents of domestic abuse she claims to have experienced while being married to Nate.

"In the beginning ... there was a lot of verbal abuse, and I didn't recognize it as abuse," Newton said. She said the verbal abuse shifted to physical violence after Nate's first Super Bowl victory while with the Cowboys.

According to Dorothy, one of her friends eventually told someone within the Dallas franchise about what was going on between her and Nate once the relationship got more violent. Afterward, Dorothy claimed, Nate shot at her and shoved a table into her stomach while she was pregnant.

Dallas has faced criticism over the team's decision to sign Greg Hardy earlier this year. Hardy was found guilty on two counts of domestic violence against his ex-girlfriend Nicole Holder in June 2014, but the case was eventually thrown out after being settled out of court.

The Cowboys did not respond to request for comment.



Sunday, 11 October 2015

Jessica Simpson Calls Marriage To Nick Lachey Her Biggest Financial Mistake




It’s been almost a decade since America’s favorite Newlyweds ended their relationship in divorce, and Jessica Simpson isn’t holding back as she reflects on her relationship with Nick Lachey. 

Last month (Sept. 10) on CNBC’s Closing Bell, Simpson told host Kelly Evans that her marriage to Lachey was one of her biggest financial mistakes.

"The biggest money mistakes? I don't know. For some reason I thought of my first marriage,” Simpson told Evans.

Simpson and Lachey’s romance was documented heavily in the press and on their MTV reality show Newlyweds: Nick and Jessica. Years after going their separate ways, the pair have moved on to new relationships and built families and businesses of their own.

But is marriage all about the money?