How to Successfully Love Your Husband
When He Feels Like a Failure
Maybe “failure” isn't much of an
issue in your marriage. Maybe your husband breezes through life with
a smile on his face. He was born under a lucky star. That's
awesome. You've just saved yourself about 10 minutes! You don't
have to read this! Congratulations! Go hug your husband!
However, if your husband sometimes
struggles with feelings of failure or inferiority, then keep reading.
You're not alone. Just so you know, I have permission from my sweet
husband to share this stuff. You're not intruding on something
private that I should have kept close to the vest. We're good.
Several years ago, Bobby owned and ran
a store. It was a beautiful, wonderful store that actually helped
people and Bobby loved working there. It was his dream come true.
Long story short, it closed. Bobby describes that time as a period
of mourning. Though he jumped right into looking for another job, it
was hard and not much happened. He worked a couple of jobs where he
was “under-employed”, but he didn't find a good fit until a
friend (a dear, wonderful man who we will remain indebted to
forever!) connected Bobby to another man who hired Bobby for a job
that was 671 miles from our home in Alabama.
Bobby jumped on it. He loves his work,
for which we're thankful even though it involves the adventure of
occasionally moving across the country.
My husband works hard and provides
abundantly for our family. I'm incredibly thankful. But, during the
dark time when Bobby was still looking for a job, I wasn't. Though I
had moments of loving him really well, I was often frustrated and
angry. I could be snarky and impatient because of my fear. What if
he never found another job he loved? What if he never found another
job?
I could have loved him so much better.
I'm convinced every guy out there feels
like a failure at some point. Maybe job issues aren't his concern.
But, maybe he doesn't feel a strong connection to his children, or
his relationship with his parents isn't the best. Maybe he doesn't
read as much as he thinks he should, or doesn't make it to the gym 3
times a week. Whatever the issue, the result is the same: feelings
of failure, of feeling “less than” he thinks he should be.
I have some ideas on how I can love my
husband better during those hard times and I want to share them with
you.
Believe, and help him believe, that
this plan isn't only for him. God chose this path for you and your
children too. My whole attitude changed when God reminded me of
this. God's plan for your husband may be to walk through a
disagreement with a co-worker, or to be told by the doctor that he
has diabetes and MUST lose 50 lbs. God's plan for you is to be the
helpmeet to the husband who has to walk through that.
No one suffers alone, but no one
celebrates alone either. When you said “I do”, you made a
commitment for better or worse, remember? This is just the “for
worse” part. Believe that “for better” is right around the
corner.
1993, All Young and Naive |
Pray. This can't be overstated. It's
imperative, vital that you pray for your husband. Pray fervently and
often. Pray when you wake up and when you're making breakfast. Pray
in the shower and when you're walking around the block. Pray at stop
lights and before he comes home. Just pray and pray and pray.
In those prayers, make sure you're not
just rehashing what's wrong. You CAN do that. God can handle it.
But, thank God for what's going right too. List the things you love
about that man. Tell God how thankful you are that out of all the
men in all the world, God picked this one for you.
Show affection. Kiss your husband
before he goes to work. Make it a really good smooch on the lips.
Hug him when he gets home. Pinch his behind when he walks by you in
the kitchen and hold his hand when you're watching TV. Knowing that
you're attracted to him physically is a boon to a man's ego and
self-worth, 2 things he desperately needs when he's in the pits.
Take care of yourself. Workout, read
your Bible, use that face mask that's supposed to tighten the skin
around your eyes or take an afternoon nap. Whatever you need to do
to help get your game face on, so you're ready to love that man, do
it. Did you hear me? I said, whatever you need to do, DO IT.
Keep the house reasonably tidy. You'll
be able to think more clearly if things aren't falling down around
your ears. For me, this means having fresh flowers on the kitchen
table most of the time. I need to have clean clothes in the drawers
and for the couches to be tidied up before bed. In my world, the
rest of the house stuff is negotiable. I like making dinner from
scratch and having a freshly mopped floor but, that doesn't always
happen. We're talking Necessary stuff here, only what will make you
stark raving mad if it goes undone.
Ever wonder why so many actors often “fall
in love” while working together? They're ACTING like they're in
love so they start to BELIEVE it's real. If you're having a hard
time loving your husband, stop and think how Elizabeth would act with
Mr. Darcy or how Bella would support Edward or what Snow would say to
Charming. Then, DO it. ACT like you're in love. The feelings will
come back as you practice.
True Loves' Kiss (abc.go.com) |
Okay, if you're not married, or a grown
up, you might want to skip to the next paragraph. Sex helps! 50
million bonus points if you initiate. Have sex with your husband a
lot. A LOT. Plan ahead to make it a great night. Do you need a
nap, a bubble bath, to shave your legs, drink a glass of wine? Do
it. This is almost as important as praying for your husband. His
confidence and attitude and disposition will all be affected for the
better. Yours will be too.
Realize that you're doing eternally
important work. The job of loving your husband is huge. Loving your
husband well when he's down is overwhelming. Know and embrace that
this is a challenge. It's hard and time-consuming and exhausting.
But, you can do it! God and your husband wouldn't have chosen YOU
for this marriage if you couldn't.
“Keep a cheerful
disposition, pray often, and love your husband more than anyone else
on earth; you won’t need anything else.”
Feet of Clay by JJ
Webb
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