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Forever Beloved

Faith, Love & Truth

December 11, 2020

Cultivating a Good Marriage

Cultivating a Good MarriageFor years, I’ve felt God calling me to help restore marriages.  I remember telling my husband how I felt God was giving me a heart for marriage, especially ones in crisis.  But I wasn’t sure what that call meant or how I would help them.  I have since settled into the fact that, for now, my blog is my answer.

With social media our private lives are more public than they’ve ever been.  And because of that many couples focus more on preparing a picture-perfect wedding day than they do their future marriage.  The thought of online friends ogling over our wedding pictures is more important than having a future financial plan or knowing how we will face disagreements.

But cultivating a good marriage requires work and intention. 

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We are no strangers to storybook romance.  Marrying at 20 and 22, we are blessed to be familiar with this form of love – love as a falling and a pursuit and a passion.  We were introduced for the first time on a cold February evening, bundled up as we stood outside while snow gently fell around us.  We stood there with our cherry-red noses, enamored with each other.

One month later we were engaged.

Three months later we were married, with vows breathed in the little country church I was born into.

We haven’t been together over half of our lives by chance.  We have put the work needed in to get to where we are today.  And by work I mean overcoming some really hard, in the trenches times.

Recently, we’ve looked back on our nearly 25 years of marriage and discussed not only why but how we got to where we are.  And how we could help others get there as well.

Through those conversations we’ve made a list of things God has taught us throughout the ridiculously blessed, hard years we’ve been married.  I pray they help you cultivate a marriage that not only rejoices in the good seasons, but also perseveres when things feel out of control.

  • Keep God at the center of your marriage.  This is a lesson we learned the hard way. Marriage is difficult. Actually, difficult is an understatement.  Let’s be real here, there are going to be days you hope he chokes on his cereal.  The hardness of marriage is obvious when you see how many couples end in divorce. It’s two imperfect people living together, failing daily. The only way to make your marriage truly work is to center it on Christ. You have to rely on God for wisdom, power, love and strength for your marriage.  And forgiveness, for that one time you hoped he would choke.
  • Allow him to lead without stepping in the way.  This was a hard lesson for this stubborn, independent girl to learn.  Um, hello…I took the words honor and obey out of my marriage vows. I know, not my most shining moment.  I would tell him I wanted him to lead but in the next breath tell him he wasn’t doing it right.  Sure as the sun rises and sets, I’d step in and take over.  I wish I could say it was easy for me to stop doing this, but I’m stubborn.  And it took lots (read this as an abnormal amount) of life lessons from God and probably the toughest heart work He’s ever done.
  • Don’t bad mouth your husband in front of your children or anyone else.  So help me, do not talk bad about him to others ever!  Build that man up.  Let him know that he is adequate, enough and that he has your respect.  The world will be cruel enough. Make sure he knows he always has a friend in you.  Not long ago my husband came home and simply said “thank you”.  He had spent time listening to others complain about their spouse, and he was grateful that he is able to trust I wouldn’t do that.
  • Don’t put your kids first.  Hear me out on this one. Don’t allow your mothering to take precedence over your marriage. Is being a Mama important? Well, absolutely! Pour your heart into those littles, but don’t neglect your man. I’ve watched marriages suffer because the kids were made top priority. The kids grow up, move out of the house and the parents look at each other like strangers. You have to nourish your marriage!
  • Never stop trying to improve your marriage.  We’ve been married for nearly 25 gloriously hard years, and we are still looking for ways to improve.  Keep reading, keep learning, keep improving and don’t ever get comfortable and let your guard down.  If one thing doesn’t work, try something else.  The best advice I’ve heard is to run your marriage like a business.  Successful businesses are successful because of the amazing foundation they’re built on.  I also think business meetings for your marriage are a great idea!  I purchased The Marriage Journal written by Jeremy and Audrey Roloff, and I would highly recommend it as a tool for weekly meetings with your spouse!  The journal has 6 questions that you will ask each other, and record your answers to, once a week. Each week also includes a devotional to help foster good conversation.  There is a week long calendar page for you and your spouse to communicate about events, appointments, social gatherings, and big to-do’s in the upcoming week.  You can purchase the journal HERE.
  • Let others know he is yours.  I don’t mean buy him one of those “I love my wife” shirts and making him wear it every other day.  Although once upon a time I may have bought my husband that exact shirt.  I am one of those Facebook posters that loudly proclaims my love for my husband.  Even though it’s possibly obnoxious I just can’t help it, I love that sweet man and I want everyone to know it.  And I want my husband to know that I am so proud to say he is mine.
  • Sex is important. No, it’s not everything…but it’s one notch below.  God designed sex and marriage to go hand in hand.  God intended sex to create a oneness within our marriage.  We don’t want to feel deprived and neither do our spouses.  I read a book a few years ago that was a sex game changer and I highly recommend it to all married couples.  It was Intimacy Ignited by Dr. Joseph and Linda Dillow and Dr. Peter and Lorraine Pintus.  Also, The Passion Principles by Shannon Ethridge.  You can also check out my posts from my Ignite Intimacy series here.  Sex is one of the ways a man and a woman are bound together by God in a covenant relationship for life.  The Bible is clear that God sees sex as holy and sacred.  God designed sex to be experienced within marriage so that it could be about intimacy, connection and truly knowing one another on a deeper level.
  • Never stop dating. We take every opportunity we can to sneak a date in.  Sometimes it’s just to get groceries and sometimes it’s a weekend away.  Date nights can keep you connected as a couple, which is especially good if you have kids.  When our kids were little most date nights looked like putting them to bed early, having some yummy snacks and snuggling in for a movie or two.  Dates don’t have to be expensive and over-the-top to be meaningful.
  • Most fights are over stupid things. Honestly, stupid things that don’t really even matter.  I once spent an entire day furious at my husband for buying me the wrong value meal from McDonald’s.  I mean, after this long he should know what I like…right?  I could fill this blog post and four others with the absolutely ridiculous, stupid things I’ve gotten mad over.  When I was younger (okay, and even sometimes now) I always wanted to prove my point and have the last word.  I’ve learned it’s more important to prove your love than your point. And what’s the best way to do that?  Not arguing over dumb things.  And eating that burger, even though it has onions on it, and you hate onions, and he should know that.
  • Thank him.  We all like to be appreciated and know that what we do doesn’t go unnoticed.  An attitude of gratitude creates a positive environment.  Some nights before we go to sleep, I simply thank him for loving me.
  • Never stop pursuing him. Write him love notes and tuck them in his lunchbox.  Send him a racy text (I highly suggest knowing the location of his phone before this one).  Tell him how much you appreciate him.  Buy the stinkin’ lingerie that he likes on you, even if you feel it’s a waste of money.  Kiss him and hold his hand, even if you’re in a horribly long checkout line at WalMart.  Pursue that mans heart daily.
  • Don’t be disrespectful.  Each one of you also must love his wife as he loves himself, and the wife must respect her husband. Ephesians 5:33  I have read this verse over and over again trying to find a loophole.  There isn’t one.  It doesn’t say respect your husband only when you feel he deserves it, it doesn’t say he has to GIVE respect to GET respect and it’s certainly not up to us to deem when he is worthy of it. God was pretty clear with this verse, the wife MUST respect her husband. And for the love of all, do not talk bad about him to others ever!  I know I already said this above but y’all, it’s important!  Not even to your Mama.
  • Have fun together! One thing I can say about my husband and I is we know how to have fun, and laugh while doing anything!  Some of it may be at inappropriate times and places but at least we’re laughing.  You need to make sure you have fun together too!  Fun is a key ingredient to a successful friendship and marriage.  No one wants to spend time with a Debbie Downer (or someone that gets super mad over onions on their burger).  Laugh.  And laugh.  And laugh some more.
  • Pray with him.  I have always loved slipping my hand into my husbands when the Pastor prays before the sermon.  It just feels special, intimate and right.  Praying together reminds you of your oneness. When you pray as a couple, you are communicating with God and each other. You can learn so much about one another by sharing prayer requests and listening to each other pray.
  • Don’t discuss divorce.  Never treat it as if it’s even an option.
  • Apologize and forgive.  When we were first married this girl had a hard time saying I’m sorry.  Even when I knew I was wrong those words would never cross my lips.  Through the years I’ve realized how important it is to apologize.  Not only that, but also to forgive.  God wants our love to be sweet, soft-hearted and lovely. And He wants it overflowing with forgiveness. By offering forgiveness, we are offering the grace that God has given us. Don’t cling to prior offenses, tucking them in your pocket to use later. Simply wipe the slate clean as soon as the offense happens. This will not only set your husband free, but you as well.

Remember, there are no perfect marriages.  Even if you see a couple on social media that seems to have it all together, they’ve undoubtedly spent time in the messy trenches of life too.

Love is strung together choices.  The feelings, undoubtedly, will rise and fall.  Eventually the toughness of life becomes a reality.  As life goes on we all change, we grow, we mature and life changes us.  But marriage is not meant to be a lifetime commitment to unrealistic social media love alone.  Marriage is designed to be a repetitive I do, a daily commitment of choosing us over me.  There is something so precious about struggling together and coming out on the other side hand-in-hand.

Dear friend, if your marriage is struggling and you would like me to pray for you, please email me and let’s chat!

Filed in: marriage • by Amy • Leave a Comment

December 8, 2020

When Christmas Hurts

Oh sweet friend, just writing this post makes my heart feel pangs of sadness and puts my stomach in knots.  Thinking about you makes tears run down my cheeks.  I understand all too well as just a few years ago I was you.  I was the girl who couldn’t find her Christmas, no matter where she looked.

I was the girl with an empty, aching heart.

If thoughts of the Holidays cause you to feel sad and make you want to sleep until mid-January when every single trace of Christmas is gone, you’re not alone.  I was right there with you.

A few years ago I walked into the holiday season with fresh wounds, and I was blindsided by how a season I once found comforting brought additional pain.  The holidays just felt so different.  I pushed it aside as much as I could, until the obvious was staring me straight in the face.

That calendar year had brought so much suffering: we had lost loved ones, I had lost a dear precious friend, our family didn’t get together anymore on Christmas Eve, I spent most days sick, my dog was aging and couldn’t walk some days, I didn’t have any close friends to do fun Christmas stuff with, and we were walking through a family crisis.  Sin, death, and brokenness seemed ever-present, and the raw grief prevented me from celebrating the holidays like I used to.

I put up my tree, made handmade decorations, shopped till I dropped, baked cookies, watched Rudolph, burnt yummy smelling candles…and still nothing.

I still couldn’t feel Christmas.  Why couldn’t I FEEL it?  I ran down the to-be-happy-at-Christmas checklist, put marks in all the boxes, and I still wasn’t happy.

The tears flowed freely.  Anger took place front and center most days.  I was distant.  I was heartbroken.  The times I was alone were the hardest.  In the quiet I would remember all I had lost, all the heartache, and I cried more than I care to admit.  Daily, I alternated between trying to talk myself out of it and justifying my feelings.

But underneath, I was carrying wounds ripped open by the reminders of relationships and situations that are no longer.  And it hurt.  And it was hard.  And I wasn’t sure what to do with it all.  My heart was just sad.

The holidays seem to bring out the pain like no other time can.

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Christians are not supposed to be like this, especially not at the time of year when we are celebrating the birth of Jesus!  We are meant to be shiny happy people radiating His love to all who pass us.  We are to be beacons of light, not sobbing over Christmas cookies.

We were celebrating Jesus entering the world just to die for us.  And I was still sad.  Which made me feel guilty.  That guilt then made me even sadder.

It’s just hard to navigate this stuff, especially when every store is blasting cheery tunes about the most wonderful time of the year!

It’s easy to be thankful while traveling through beautiful seasons of joy, but it was an ugly fight for gratitude when suffering had taken over that journey.  Looking back that holiday season is one of my favorites because I can see how suffering unveiled my eyes and enabled me to celebrate the holiday’s truest meaning.

I realized that year that the sad, lonely, empty spaces in my broken heart are exactly what that Baby born in a manger came to fill. 

The One who was born in a dirty, hidden manger is the God who is still filling our hidden, empty, rugged places today!  He is a savior for the sad.  A savior for the heartsick.  A savior for the lost.  A savior for the mourning.  A savior for us all.

I’m going to be honest.  I wish I could give you a magical cure, to offer words that would dry up your tears and heal your aching heart.  What I found was no matter how much I tried to talk myself out of it, it was just a valley I had to walk through.  And that was okay.

Sometimes the holidays make us happy, sometimes they make us sad, and it’s okay to feel both!

Friend, if you’re hurting this holiday season…It’s okay to hurt.

The holidays bring to light the reality of losses, financial pressures, broken relationships, shame, family brokenness or non-existedness, faith shifts, depression, trauma triggered by the holiday season and dreams that keep on not coming true.  Furthermore, this year we find ourselves with the added pressure of trying to boost our morale after dealing with months of quarantine, anxiety, loss and sacrifice.  And it’s hard, it’s all hard!

Maybe your heart is just too broken to talk about it to others.  Or maybe you’ve shared your heart and are told to just “get over it” and “move on”.  And maybe you feel like you should be over it, but you just don’t know how to be.  I want to tell you this…it’s okay.

If there is anything I’ve learned over the past few years, it’s this.  When God leads you through a valley, don’t close your eyes.  Keep them open as wide as you can.  Along the journey, even in the midst of the valley, there will be beautiful blessings that He has prepared just for you.

I promise you, some day you will find joy in the Holidays again.  God has joy planned for you!!  At first, it may come in a little smile here or there.  Or you find yourself actually singing along to a Christmas carol while walking through the grocery store.  Embrace it!  Smile.  Laugh.  Hug.  Eat.  Fellowship.  And when the tears come, embrace them too.  Cry over Christmas cookies if you need to.  Be honest and brave.

Healing will come.  Laughter will return.  Joy will emerge from this dark season.  A Holiday season will feel almost normal again.

And for now, in those empty spaces, make room for the Savior to dwell.

Filed in: christmas • by Amy • 4 Comments

December 4, 2020

Reignite Intimacy | High Drive Wives

If you found your way here, chances are you are a wife with a higher sex-drive than your husband.  And I want you to know one thing.

You are NOT a freak, nympho or an anomaly.

We’ve always been told men have a higher libido than women.  This is nothing more than a narrow, stereotypical category. With that being such a prominent belief in our culture, it makes women with high sex-drives feel like freaks of nature.  Y’all, you are not alone!

But the research on women who have high sex drives is still small. Instead, researchers focus on the complexities of women’s experiences or women who have problematically low sexual desire.

Sheila Gregoire from To Love, Honor and Vacuum surveyed several thousand women and about 1000 men, and she found that 24% of wives had higher sex drives than their husbands.  I can definitely say with plenty of certainty, that there are many wives out there with a higher sexual desire than their husbands.  Another post I read said this number is closer to 30%.

Many times this higher desire can often leave wives feeling unloved, unwanted and often unattractive.

While I don’t have a huge amount of research or statistics to point you to so that you can know just how often women have a higher sex-drive than their husband, I want to use this post to speak to the wife that would like to have sex more frequently.

Maybe the high libido wife is what God intended

Hear me out on this.  Though there have been few studies done, what studies have shown is wives in cultures that don’t have sexual shame or sexual guilt tend to have higher sex drives.  Shame, guilt and a lack of sexual education all play into women’s libidos.  With us knowing that, perhaps a high drive wife is what God intended.

We know God created sex, He made is enjoyable on BOTH sides and it was important to Him as a part of marriage.  He wants us to enjoy sex and yearn for it.  The fact that so many women don’t experience that it more a result of the fall, when sin entered the world.  Along with sin came shame and discord.  I don’t believe God intended women to have have trouble reaching orgasm and not desiring sex at all.

Think about which scenario looks more like Gods design: a wife who enjoys sex or one where she struggles?  I would think the first, right?  Even though it may be more frequent for women to struggle sexually doesn’t mean that is what was intended.  I think the high drive wife is closer to God’s design, so don’t feel like you’re a freak!

His low drive may not be a medical or unfaithfulness problem

Chances are you’ve done a Google search on why your husband doesn’t want to have sex as much as you do.  And you’ve gotten two recommendations: his testosterone is low or he’s having an affair.  At that moment your mind began reeling.  You thought back to that one time he seemed like he might have been hiding something on his phone and that one day he got home a little later than you thought he should have.

Now, if we’re being honest, those could be factors that would effect his drive.  But there are other factors that I would touch on before I jumped to those conclusions.

Sometimes he just needs to know you love him and you want him.  He needs to be encouraged that he’s good at it and makes you feel loved and wanted.

He might just need more rest.  Being too tired can wipe the desire right out of him and cause erection issues.  Maybe y’all just need to go to bed earlier.

Maybe he just needs to know you’d like to have sex more, and y’all need to have an open and honest conversation about it.

I’m not discrediting that he may have a testosterone issue, and he may benefit from having it tested.  But just know there could be other reasons for it.

Talk to God about your sex life

Somewhere someone just read this, rolled their eyes and scoffed.  Along the way we forgot that God created sex.  We believe it’s this super secretive never-to-be-spoken-of thing.  If God created sex to be good and enjoyable, why would He not want us to pray for help when we are experiences an issue?  We will pray for help in our finances, for doctors appointments, for heart issues, for our family and friends, for our children and for that stranger you saw on the street asking for money.  But yet we think it’s wrong to pray for our sex life with our spouse?

I truly believe that prayer works wonders in every single aspect of our lives.  And that includes marital intimacy.

Pray that God will give you direction on how to approach your husband in ways that he’ll be more receptive to your sexual advances.  Pray for the right words that will encourage him and not make him feel worse.  Thank God that he put that man in your life.  Thank Him that you are attracted to your husband and that He gave you sexual desire for him.  And then, pray that God will increase your husband’s desire for you.

And in your prayers, ask God to highlight any areas you might need to change.  If you have any actions or are saying any words causing your husband pain, ask God to point them out.

It’s normal to feel lonely and unloved when you ask your spouse for sex and they don’t seem interested

When your husband isn’t interested in sex, the first thing we do as women is think it’s because we’re unattractive.  You wonder why he doesn’t want you the way you expected any red-blooded male would dive into the opportunity to have sex.  Maybe it’s because I’ve gained 10 pounds.  Maybe it’s because I don’t wear makeup as often as I used to.  Maybe he hates my hair.  Maybe it’s because I’ve aged and have wrinkles and cellulite now.  Maybe I’m not his type anymore.  Maybe he wants a younger woman.  Maybe I’m just the weird one whose husband doesn’t want them sexually anymore.

Ladies, please stop doing this to yourselves.

I know it’s easy for those feelings of loneliness, unwanted, unloved and misunderstood to creep in.  I understand that’s our first response and the enemy LOVES that this is our go to.

Spend some time in prayer asking God to remove these lies from your heart.

Please don’t refer to him as the woman in the relationship

Can you even imagine how emasculating it would be to your husband to hear you refer to him as “the woman” in your marriage?

Your husband needs to feel manly and he needs you to encourage his masculinity.  His sex drive is not what makes him a man.

We need to change the way we express our thoughts about this.  Just state the facts “I have a higher sex drive than my husband.  And I really wish we could make love more often.”

When we say thoughtless things out of our pain it will cause more pain for our husband.  And we sure don’t want that.

It could actually be a medical issue

Sometimes a husband struggles to keep an erection, and some men particularly struggle with maintaining the erection for intercourse.  In order to maintain an erection, you need strong, healthy blood flow.  This is called erectile dysfunction. Some medical conditions, such as diabetes and heart disease, interfere with proper blood flow.

According to the National Institute of Health, chronic erectile dysfunction (ED) affects 4% of men in their 50s, 17% of men in their 60s, and 47% of men over 75. Temporary ED affects about 50% of men between 40 and 70.  About 70 percent of chronic ED has physical roots, while the rest has psychological and emotional roots.

Erectile dysfunction affects the man more than we will ever understand as women.  It’s embarrassing, emasculating and not something they will be anxious to talk about.  If he does open up to you about it, please choose your words so carefully.  You don’t want to pile shame on top of an already embarrassing issue.  Be understanding and let him know you’re partners in life and you’ll figure out a way together to work through this!

And don’t be afraid to encourage him to try Viagra. It doesn’t make him less of a man or make him a failure. Lots of us need to wear glasses because our eyes aren’t perfect.  If you need something to give you a boost because your body isn’t perfect, that’s totally okay.

You both matter

Both of you matter – his sex drive and yours.  Ideally you work together to find a level of physical intimacy that satisfies you both.  If the lower-drive spouse isn’t there yet, it doesn’t mean the higher-drive spouse should suppress their desire to be sexually intimate with them.  You may have a bigger hill to climb to get to where you want to go, but girl get your shoes on and start walking. Because your sex drive, and your sex life, matters.  It matters to you and to your marriage.  God cares about you both and He wants you to enjoy sexual intimacy in your marriage.  And that is a goal worth pursuing!

You will likely need patience, wisdom, and perseverance, but aren’t those qualities we always need when we’re stretched to grow in our lives?

Filed in: bible study, intimacy • by Amy • Leave a Comment

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Wife & Mama • Iced coffee seeker & curator of chaos • Collector of words & magic • Obsessed with laughter & bright lipstick • Dreaming & homesteading in the hills of PA

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