| Legend
says that Valentine was imprisoned, where he fell in love with the
jailer’s daughter. Just before his execution he wrote her
a love letter and signed it, “From your Valentine.”
The English popularized
Valentine’s Day in the 1700s. Americans picked up on this
and began exchanging handmade valentines. Printed Valentines first
appeared in America around 1840. Valentine’s Day is the 2nd
largest day for greeting cards (after Christmas), and women purchase
85% of all valentine cards (www.historychannel.com, retrieved December
10, 2003).
Valentine’s Day
is a day for lovers. My mom and dad were married on Valentine’s
Day. My wife and I were married on the Saturday closest to Valentine’s
Day. Valentine’s Day presents a perfect opportunity to invest
in your marriage. Here’s a plan to make Valentine’s
Day special for you and your wife. First, though, let’s review
some reasons why it’s worth investing the effort….
A
DIFFERENT WAY TO THINK ABOUT MARRIAGE
Family systems thinker Edwin Friedman wrote how successful a marriage
can be. He said, “In reality, no human marriage gets a rating
of more than 70%” (Friedman, Generation to Generation, 1985,
p. 69).
In other words, even
the most successful marriage will only be symptom-free about 70%
of the time. Patsy, my wife, and I both think we have a great marriage.
We talked this 70% thing over, and it makes sense to us. You could
think, “Is that as good as it gets?” But a better thought
would be, “Wow, maybe my marriage is better than I thought!”
If you will dwell on this 70% number, I think in time you will be
encouraged by it.
Why just 70%? It’s
the flesh. We see each other through the veil of our sinful natures.
It takes grace to make a marriage work. No person is ideal. Our
wives can be controlling, neglectful, strong-willed, pouters, unexpressive,
unappreciative, and on and on. So can we. That’s why Valentine’s
Day can be such a helpful, healing time…a time to raise the
stakes for your marriage and help it become what God has called
it to be.
THE BIG PICTURE ON MARRIAGE
Here are some remarks adapted from the Introduction of my book for
wives, Understanding Your Man in the Mirror….
1. Marriage is a good
thing. Marriage blesses. Marriage is that mysterious, spiritual
fusion of two lives headed in two directions into one flesh.
2. All relationships
are difficult, especially marriage. Florence Littauer has said,
“We are attracted to marry each other’s strengths, and
then go home to live with each other’s weaknesses.”
Two people rubbing against each other are bound to create some friction.
Love is the glue that holds us together, and the oil that keeps
us from rubbing each other the wrong way.
3. Virtually all men
believe that they are, or have been, a difficult husband to live
with. Most likely, many regrets haunt your husband. He knows he
has been difficult. Yet, he wants to make up the years he robbed
from you.
4. Most men have it
in their hearts to do the right thing. Based on hundreds of surveys
and thousands of interviews I would say the overwhelming conclusion
is this: Most men really do want to do the right thing. Men deeply
love their wives. Along the way they have bought into a few ideas
that knocked them off balance, but their hearts are good.
WHERE
ARE YOU TODAY?
Take this self-test about where your marriage stands today…
I believe marriage is
a good thing.
[ ] Completely [ ] Mostly [ ] Somewhat Disagree
My marriage is difficult.
[ ] Completely [ ] Mostly [ ] Somewhat Disagree
My marriage is difficult
because I have been difficult to live with.
[ ] Completely [ ] Mostly [ ] Somewhat Disagree
I want to do better
and make my marriage right.
[ ] Completely [ ] Mostly [ ] Somewhat Disagree
I’m encouraged
that “no human marriage gets a rating of more than 70%.”
[ ] Completely [ ] Mostly [ ] Somewhat Disagree
My marriage needs my
immediate attention.
[ ] Completely [ ] Mostly [ ] Somewhat Disagree
I need to be the one
to take responsibility for investing in my marriage.
[ ] Completely [ ] Mostly [ ] Somewhat Disagree
THE EMOTIONAL BANK ACCOUNT
The most powerful marriage concept I’ve run across is “The
Emotional Bank Account.” Every wife has an Emotional Bank
Account into which we make deposits and from which we make withdrawals.
Basically, every time we interact with our wives, whether verbal
or non-verbal, we are either making a deposit or a withdrawal.
For example, you’ve
had a rough day. Come home, slam door, expel loud grunt simulating
a large zoo animal, plop down in chair, turn on TV, bury nose in
paper…. Is this a deposit or a withdrawal from your wife’s
Emotional Bank Account? Okay, you get the picture.
Now let’s say the
following morning you feel terrible for being such a bum the night
before, so you take your wife coffee in bed. That would be a deposit,
right? So you see how this works.
One more example. Non-verbal communication counts. Say your child
had a spat with another child in the neighborhood. Your wife has
been working the situation all afternoon. After dinner she wants
to talk. You cross your arms, frown, and stare out the window. See
how this works?
Here’s the big
idea: After a few years, a lot of wives end up empty. Their Emotional
Bank Accounts have been depleted. Why? Too many withdrawals, not
enough deposits. This is not merely a “cute idea,” but
is the Continental Divide between those marriages that make it and
those that don’t. Remember above I mentioned that wives and
husbands can be “controlling, neglectful, strong-willed, pouters,
unexpressive, or unappreciative.” Withdrawals like that, without
a plan to make deposits, will eventually destroy a marriage.
Valentine’s Day
presents an opportunity to a) make a mega-deposit and b) renew yourself
to be a “depositer” into her account.
THE
7 STEP MEGA DEPOSIT
Here’s a 7 step suggestion to make this Valentine’s
Day a Mega Deposit into your wife’s Emotional Bank Account.
Step 1: The Ask. At least
10 days before Valentine’s Day, ask your wife for a Valentine’s
date. It’s important to ask well in advance so it doesn’t
seem “last minute” to her. Make it special: write a
handwritten note, make a poster, hire a skywriter, get a banner
made, a note in a bottle, use your imagination!
Step 2: The List. At
least 7 days before Valentine’s Day, start a list of all the
things you appreciate about your wife. Be creative!
Step 3: The Note. At
least 3 days before the big date, send your wife a handwritten note
telling her how much you are looking forward to your special date.
Step 4: The Flowers.
On the big day, send her flowers with a mushy note.
Step 5: The Date. Pick
a romantic restaurant (be sure to make a reservation in advance).
Go up a notch on your normal price range. After dinner pull out
your “List” of things you appreciate and tell her each
item, slowly, with embellishment. Give her a Valentine’s Card
you make or purchase.
Step 6: The Gift. Chocolate
is a traditional favorite, but keep your antenna up for hints. Maybe
your wife would like some Starbucks coffee, a gift certificate to
her favorite bookstore, or some warm pajamas.
Step 7: The Follow Up.
The day after your date, write your wife another handwritten note
telling how much you enjoyed your date and why.
MINISTRY
LEADER IDEAS AND APPLICATION…
Give a copy of “A Man’s Guide To Valentine’s Day”
to all the men in your church
If you are a pastor, incorporate ideas from this article into a
worship service and sermon.
Urge members of your small group to make Valentine’s Day special.
Share ideas and hold one another accountable.
Consider a Bible study
focused on “love.” Compare the characteristics you find
to the reality of your marriage. What steps might you take?
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