“If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it”…

Last updated on: Published by: Recognizing Potential Coaching 0

A long while back, I had a conversation with a lady and we were discussing marriage as a whole. At one point in the conversation she said, “well if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.” I’ve heard that expression so many times growing up in rural Kansas but never really thought about it much as it applied to marriage. 

But is that the way to approach something of value? 

As I’ve given this expression more and more thought over the months since the conversation was first had, I’m going to go with no.

This expression leads to another one- “the squeaky wheel gets the grease”. These are mindsets.

These mindsets lead to complacency in marriage. 

Marriage and parenting are the two places in life where complacency is literally the killer of happiness.

Complacency leads to one person having too much responsibility and therefore, resentment. It leads to one or both parties having unmet needs. Mostly, it leads to the breakdown of the marriage as a whole because a whole marriage is the sum of many small habits, thoughts, actions and intentions. 

Intentional, honest reflection combats complacency. How can I show up better for you? What did we do well this week? What wasn’t so great? How can we do better?

When you only look at what’s visibly broken or you bypass the things that are annoying but not yet a problem, you’re basically saying “our marriage isn’t valuable enough to maintain.”

Would you let your car tire go with a tiny hole in it “hoping” it doesn’t get to the point of a blowout on the highway or would you fix it right away? Your marriage is no different. 

The mindset for those with strong, fulfilling marriages is “this is our priority. We treat it with respect, honor and value. We fix things BEFORE they’re broken.”

What’s the mindset in your marriage?

Does Your Marriage Have What It Needs?

Last updated on: Published by: Recognizing Potential Coaching 2

“This is not a marriage! This is a freaking prison and I’m your slave! All I do is your laundry, pick up your crap, work all day and when I’m done and want to go do things for myself, I get excuses and reasons why I can’t or shouldn’t!” 

This scenario may or may not sound familiar. If so, you should first know that you’re not alone. To avoid this scenario though, three things must be present in a relationship for it to thrive. Three things that are not present in the scenario above. 

1. Love. 
Love is at the heart of marriage. Bound together by the care, companionship, need, values, and commonalities that can overpower immaturity, hurt, and selfishness to form something better than what we can produce on our own.  However, Love is like a plant. The plant itself is not enough to sustain on it’s own and it certainly doesn’t grow or thrive without other necessities. In the words of Patty Smyth and Don Henley “baby sometimes love just ain’t enough.”

2. Freedom
When two people are equally free to be who they are as individuals, free to disagree respectfully, free to have a healthy social life, and free to have space for their own “me” time, they are also free to love. When they do not have that freedom, they live in fear. 1 John 4:18 says that Perfect Love drives out Fear. As humans, our love will never be completely perfect but having freedom sure makes love grow and it gets pretty close, espcially when coupled with number 3. 

3. Responsibility
When both parties are responsible for your freedom within the marriage, in doing what’s best for the marriage as a whole, to each other but not for each other, and are able to maturely take responsibility for their own actions and reactions, love can grow immensely. 
When both parties cannot do that, one person ends up taking on too much responsibility and becomes resentful. Meanwhile, the party not taking responsibility for the aforementioned qualities becomes self-centered or even controlling. 

Freedom and Responsibility problems in a marriage will cause love to struggle. The love plant we talked about at the beginning of this email struggles to thrive and may wither and die because it doesn’t have the necessary nutrients. 

Think about your own relationship. Do you have love, freedom and do you take responsibility for what you need to? Ask your partner if they feel the same way. Do they feel like you have all 3? 

Your coach, 

Kameran