by Dr. Greg Smalley I once heard a story about a retired - TopicsExpress



          

by Dr. Greg Smalley I once heard a story about a retired business executive and his wife. One evening, the wife called friends to ask what they were doing. Oh, said the other wife, were just talking and drinking tea. The executives wife hung up the phone. Theyre drinking tea and talking, she told her husband. Why dont we ever do that? The executive said, So, make us some tea. Soon they sat with their freshly brewed tea, stirring the tea and staring at each other. And stirring. And staring. Call them back, the executive barked, and find out what theyre talking about! Many husbands and wives may find that this older couples dilemma sounds far too familiar. Good communication is the lifeblood of a successful marriage, so when spouses stop talking at a deep level, their marriages slowly begin to die. After all, a marriage will only be as good as a couples communication. One of the more sinister reasons husbands and wives quit communicating is that they administrate marriage almost to death. Theyre often caught in a destructive pattern where they spend their limited time together talking about work, the budget, children, chores and so on. The conversations become transactional. Certainly theres a need to discuss household management, but couples cannot allow business meetings to dominate their conversations. Administration meetings often lead to arguments, and couples become trained to think that talking will lead to conflict and disconnection. The problem is that husbands and wives unintentionally condition each other to feel that its neither fun nor safe to engage in conversation. So they stop talking. The key to positive communication is found in knowing and being known. This means that youre interested in and curious about this person you married. Listen when your spouse talks. Ask open-ended questions. Your spouse desperately wants to be known. The other side of that coin is to let your spouse know whats going on in your life. Volunteer information about your deepest thoughts, beliefs, feelings, hopes and desires. Good communication requires an active effort, but you can build a strong marriage if you offer to both know and be known. Dr. Greg Smalley is vice president of Family Ministry at Focus on the Family. This article appeared in the March/April 2014 issue of Thriving Family magazine. Copyright © 2014 Focus on the Family. thrivingfamily/Family/Life/For%20Him/2014/why-couples-stop-talking.aspx?utm_source=nl_focusenews&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=200901&refcd=200901
Posted on: Sat, 15 Mar 2014 08:12:53 +0000

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