There are many days where I feel like I am slowly losing my
husband. The other day was one of those
days. For the first time, Josh has been
trying to be more open with his depression and what is bothering him, and I am
so glad he is finally letting me know where he is at, but at the same time it
shows me just how little I understand and many times how much I disagree with my
husband. It is so frustrating because
Josh is just coming to know himself for the first time, so there is no way to assess
where we stand as a couple when he doesn’t even know where he stands on his
own. This concept in and of itself is completely
foreign to me. How do you not know who
you are or what you stand for? How can
someone claim that they have never allowed anyone to know who they really are? These days that he decides to open up on all
this new self realization or hidden hope or belief are often days I feel my
husband is not the man I married. I hate
to admit it, but it makes me question all the time spent, hurt endured, and affection
given when there is still a possibility he might decide to leave me and his
family due to some choice he feels he has to make. It is not my place to share Josh’s thought
process and to be honest I don’t understand it enough myself to even put it
into words, which as I mentioned earlier, just fuels the frustration I feel.
We are entrapped in this confusing dance as I try and
support him and he tries to help out with the children and my comfort, but we
lack that connection that always defined our relationship. I brought up this issue with Josh one night
as I shared the disconnect I was feeling and how many days I felt he was more a
roommate than a husband. Josh agreed
that sometimes he felt the same way. I
asked him what made a woman a wife. He
listed things like taking care of the house and kids, supporting her husband,
etc. I pointed out that I met all the requirements
on his list, yet still we came up lacking.
So what is it that makes a man a husband or a woman a wife? Sadly, while writing this I feel I have answered
my own question and I think the answer varies from couple to couple. I know what is lacking from our relationship
at the moment: trust; something that takes a lot of time to create and restore.
The only way I came to find this answer
is to dig through all the other issue and they were all balanced on this
cornerstone, which makes me wonder how many cornerstones there are in a
relationship. Obviously, love is a cornerstone and I believe trust is one as
well: what are some of the other cornerstone? I would love to hear your input.
Faith, intimacy, loyalty? I follow a thought provoking blog with good posts and reader comments. You might like it also. Ill look it up and paste it hear for you.
ReplyDeletewww.tolovehonorandvacuum.com
DeleteLaura, do you mean faith in each other or faith in a higher being? and I agree that intimacy (in any and all its forms) is a cornerstone!
DeleteFaith in a higher being. Trust covers the other :)
Deleteis it possible then to have a healthy relationship if both parties don't agree on faith because this too has been a major issue of discomfort in our marriage?
DeleteI think it's possible to still have a healthy relationship if there is a compromise of some sort and a mutual respect. I think it goes without saying that having the same outlook is optimum, but not impossible if not. I think sincere prayer for a spouse can change anything though. :)
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