In my many years of counseling couples, I have
seen my share of dysfunctional marriages. After I have heard the story of what
is wrong with the marriage from the husband and wife—I try to chart a course
toward healing. Every couple that comes to counseling comes with hurt, and from
that hurt they have built up resentment toward each other. They have stopped
forgiving and reaching out in love and have chosen to live in a critical
environment of contempt. Instead of
living in an atmosphere of love and forgiveness, they survive in the barren
wasteland of resentment and bitterness.
This bitter cycle of dysfunction compels them
to be stingy with their love and drag those grudges around every day. They tear
each other down in constant strife and discord. They both are sick to death of
each other and do not enjoy living together. Their children are being exposed
to dangerous elements of conflict that are setting the tone for their future.
Marriage was meant to be two people living
together in harmony. They know they are both flawed, so they are willing to
forgive each other. They show kindness in little ways that bring happiness to
both of them. When one suffers—the other shares that suffering. When one
experiences joy, the other shares that pleasure; they both find ways to build
each other up and encourage each other. When one is wrong, he or she does not
keep track of the wrong but continues to hope for the best for the other. When
a marriage works, it is the most significant relationship on the face of the earth.
It produces mutual satisfaction and companionship. When it doesn’t work, it is
a sad place to be. The work and effort to turn a broken marriage around is
difficult, and most of all, it requires work and effort. Each person has to be
willing to look at himself or herself and see what they need to change. Each
has to be ready to listen to the other and see past their agenda. God is more
than willing to help couples find happiness in marriage, but they have to ask
for his help and then persevere in the quest to change from bad to better. The
journey from a bad marriage to a good marriage is worth the journey!
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