More Emotions
Hot…cold…hot…cold...hot…cold. I’m not just
referring to the nasty menopausal temperature swings I experience at night, but
also to the extreme changes that can unexpectedly occur in my emotional psyche
at the drop of a wrong word or wrong look from someone else.
I have tried to explain our emotional essence as
women, but it’s often too deep to comprehend and even more difficult to
control. So what do we do?? We pray - and pray. God certainly has the capability to free us
from this “curse”, but then we wouldn’t have to depend on Him in our marriage,
would we? He will help, but I believe He
allows a certain amount of our emotional handicap in order to keep us humbled
and seeking Him.
Besides, He has quite the sense of humor to put men
and women in the same household, together, to become one as man and wife. He knew we would need His help. That’s also why He tells us, “It is good not to marry.” Marriage is probably the most difficult
task we will ever undertake. And it’s
meant to be a lifetime sentence…err, commitment.
Below is my emotional chart: (Based on how many times in a
day my emotions fluctuate from happy to miserable – happy being the top point,
miserable being the bottom.)
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My husband’s emotional chart: (No variation)
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Rick has one emotion – “Let’s find the solution, and
if I do it just right, I can win in the process.”
How in the world do two people with such different
minds ever learn to communicate? Very
carefully and often times, very slowly.
It takes practice.
Of course we communicate very well in the beginning
stages. We’re both on the same
“emotional page.” We want to spend time together, get to know each other, and develop intimacy with each other. That’s all we think about.
“emotional page.” We want to spend time together, get to know each other, and develop intimacy with each other. That’s all we think about.
Once we’re married for a few years, though, it changes. We’ve had lots of time together, we know
everything about one another, and our ideas about intimacy deviate from those
original “can’t stand to be apart” feelings.
Women, especially, find the greatest changes in
their intimacy needs once they marry.
They mostly want to be loved, want someone who’ll share in taking care
of the home and children, and want time and attention from their spouse. These needs may have been superficially met
before marriage, but after marriage, intimacy goes to a much deeper level that
now includes actions. Words, gifts, and
a night out on the town no longer fully satisfy a woman’s intimacy needs.
These actions may vary from woman to woman in what satisfies her needs. What does your husband do for you that makes
you feel the closest to him? For me, it’s
sometimes as simple as Rick washing the dishes or doing the laundry. (He must
really love me if he’ll do that for me.) The little things a husband might do for his
wife can speak volumes of intimacy to a woman.
If a woman’s intimacy needs are not met, she will
shut down her communication or go to the other extreme and become a screaming, nagging
wife.
Intimacy needs for men, though, don’t generally
change. Sex was probably the main need
prior to marriage (except for those who chose to wait for marriage) and remains
that way for many years as a married man.
If a husband’s intimacy needs are not met (sex), he
will have no desire to communicate with you and won’t care about the emotional
day you had. Men do experience other
areas of intimacy needs, but they quickly get overrun by the need for sex.
Men have the difficult task here. They have a lot of ground to cover to make a
woman happy in a marriage and in learning how to communicate with her. The complications that women bring into their
marriages with their emotions and ideas about intimacy and love could make any
man think he is losing his mind in trying to understand her needs. Sex is the only way he knows to deal with all
this.
Women, you have the easy part. As long as a man is sexually satisfied, he
will listen to whatever you have to say.
(Again, there are always exceptions.)
When we learn to put our spouse’s needs ahead of our
own, we will discover the beginnings of healthy communication in a marriage.
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