Deborah DeArmond writes, from experience, about the ups and downs in relationships. In this Marriage UPGRADE, she reminds us to treat each other with exceptional grace.
“Marriage settles over the years. Kind of like the sugar in the bottom of the tea glass,” Deb says. “It's still there and just as sweet as it's always been. But unless we stir it up a bit, we lose some of the flavor.”
I (Dawn) love this picture of sugar in tea, especially as it applies to marriage. The Bible tells us to “stir up” each other to love and good works (Hebrews 10:24), and marriage is certainly a place where this is true. But it all begins with true fellowship and grace.
Deb continues . . .
My husband and I recently completed what may be the most significant collaboration of our marriage, with the exception of producing our sons. We’ve written a book together. Two heads, two hearts, but only one set of hands on the keyboards. It’s only practical.
The topic? Marital conflict. And I assure you we’ve personally tested every idea in the book. We did it while writing the book.
We’re incredibly qualified to author this work; we’ve been disagreeing for years. Forty-plus, to be exact. We’re both strongly opinioned, and not hesitant to share our thoughts—intensely, at times. But at least neither can say, “I didn’t know you felt that way.”
Those intense moments of fellowship, however, have not dimmed the intensity of our love. It’s as fierce as it’s ever been.
Recently, however, during one of those “he said, she said” conversations, I stopped to consider whether it was time to cut one another a break.
The issue was insignificant, a matter of principle. Or so I thought. The Lord encouraged me to examine which “principle” had placed me on my high horse. “Was it love?” His Spirit inquired. “Patience? Selflessness or humility?
Um. No. It was the I’m right, I know I’m right, so just admit it, principle. It’s not in the love chapter. Or the Beatitudes. Or anywhere biblical. I looked. Ugh.
Then God threw me a lifeline.
“Create a margin of error for one another.”
What does that mean? Isn’t it a financial term? Math is my third language, so I looked it up. Here’s the definition:
Margin for error:
An extra amount of something? Like humility, patience or love, perhaps? Or what about mercy?
"Blessed are the merciful, for they shall receive mercy" (Matthew 5:7)
In case of a change of circumstances? Isn’t that our address these days? At the corner of empty nest and why don’t you listen to me anymore?
So how do we fix it?
How do we inject kindness, patience, and mercy into our interactions?
Create a margin for error.
Some tips to create that margin.
1. Face-to-face communication. Ditch the drive by interaction with ten assorted and unrelated topics on your way out the door or while he’s watching football. Eye contact makes a difference.
2. Write it down. I’m a list maker. If it’s on the list, it gets done. Science confirms our recall is better if we use both head and hand. We get it.
Plus there’s a written record in the event you need evidence in court, “I’m sorry, your honor, I had to put him in time out. Dry cleaning was definitely on his list!”
3. Check for understanding. Confirm you both heard and understood the details in the same way.
“We’re leaving for the airport by 4:30 pm, right? You’re comfortable with that?”
4. Let. It. Go. It’s not my gift.
Ron once said to me, “It’s not enough that I eventually just agree with you. You want me to believe you are right!” Why is that a problem? I mean, I was right, right? So he should acknowledge it. Don’t you agree?
And then I hear the Holy Spirit, tapping His toe. I got it.
Another definition defines margin as a place of safety or something that makes a particular thing possible. Like loving one another, fiercely, all the days the good Lord gives us with fewer bumps and scrapes. Or scraps.
Which of the tips for creating margin would help your relationship today?
Deb DeArmond’s passion is family—not just her own, but the relationships within families in general. Her book, Related by Chance, Family by Choice: Transforming the Mother-in-Law and Daughter-in-Law Relationships explores tools and tips to building sound relationships between moms and the girls who marry their sons, and her new book, I Choose You Today, helps couples strengthen their marriages. Deb and her husband, Ron, live in the Fort Worth area. For more about Deb, visit her "Family Matters" site.