This might have been helpful for me a year ago, had I been receptive to it, but I still found a lot of benefit in reading it now. I see things I could have handled better if I had more clarity, courage/maturity, and knowledge/understanding of these issues she teaches about. I found some comfort that despite my failures, much of what I did still ended up aligning with what she outlines. Going through this book helped me reflect on my past marriage - start to end - and gave me chances to feel compassion for both my ex and myself as flawed humans. I will take this extra knowledge and perspective and use it to help in my grieving/forgiveness as well as for bettering myself for a potential future marriage.
Main points:
• Signs of a disappointing marriage vs a destructive marriage, the differences between the two and how too much in the “disappointment” category is actually destructive.
• Essential ingredients in thriving relationships (mutuality, reciprocity and freedom).
• Patterns that destroy relationships and damage people (reactive abuse, controlling abuse, deceit, dependence and indifference).
• Damage of sin on relationships and people.
• How one person can work towards change:
•• Self-awareness of own strengths, weaknesses, self-worth, core values, and their relationship with God and belief in His plan for their life/love for them.
•• Taking responsibility for own part in marital dysfunction (not playing victim, recognizing unhealthy behaviors, acknowledging bitterness/resentment)
•• Self-reflection (really knowing yourself/values/feelings/goals, pondering in quiet about what deeply want/don’t want, journaling)
•• Self-examination (ask self “why” questions, use our emotions to inform us not to rule us, see how really affected by the person you live with, see how lack of boundaries has cost you yourself and affected others, can’t change what we don’t see/won’t admit)
•• Putting your marriage in its proper place (has your desire for a good marriage become too important/an idol, center yourself in God not spouse)
• Sometimes trying harder becomes destructive to you and the marriage. (Like when your efforts do not engender a reciprocal response, but have the opposite effect of feeding the spouse’s entitlement and selfishness - solidifying their self-deception that it is indeed all about them).
• Strengthen your CORE. C: committed to truth and reality. O: open to growth, instruction, and feedback. R: responsible for myself, and Respectful towards others, without dishonoring myself. E: empathetic and compassionate toward others, without enabling people to continue to abuse and disrespect me.
• Tips for standing strong against the destruction, not falling prey to manipulative distraction, allowing/enforcing consequences, recognizing when there is no real behavior/attitude change.
• Changes that indicate reconciliation may happen: change of heart (demonstrated by accepting responsibility, making amends/accepting consequences, and a willingness to be taught/to do the work/be humble) and change of habit.
• 5 C’s of change: clarity (sees issue and doesn’t want it to continue, commitment (willing to be accountable and teachable in order to grow and become the person he wants to become), community (listens to what others say about her behaviors/attitudes), confession (owning wrongdoing instead of blaming, minimizing or rationalizing it), accepts Consequences and makes restitution.
• Indicators of progress (or lack thereof) on healing journey: safety, sanity, stability, and security.
• “If you choose to stay, stay well.” (“A difficult part of staying well with a destructive person is that if you’re not careful, their toxic gas will poison your heart. You start to become just as hard hearted and foolish, or in your attempts to protect yourself you distance yourself with walls of resentment and bitterness.”) Staying in a destructive marriage, but remaining bitter/angry/spiteful/depressed/resentful doesn’t bring peace, joy, or hope in your countenance, or with your decision. Staying in that way is a terrible choice and it does not bring any pleasure to God.
• “If you choose to leave, leave well.” Make sure that living with the consequences of divorce is less damaging to you and your children than continuing to live in a destructive marriage. Expose all wrong and try earnestly. But if the necessary change doesn’t come, refuse to stay at any cost including your own physical, emotional, mental or spiritual health.
Quotes:
“When a woman starts to wake up from her dream of a loving marriage and realizes that she’s trapped in a nightmare, she feels desperate. She often slides into a dark depression. But sooner or later, little by little, she must start to fight and claw her way free from her husband’s oppressive control if she is going to survive. She now understands she’s been restricted like a child or buried alive and she must fight for her physical, emotional, mental and spiritual health. Once a woman starts to fight back, her rage and hurt, often get expressed in sinful and destructive ways. She may appear irrational, ungodly, unstable, controlling, mean, and even a little crazy to those who don’t know the whole story of what she’s been through, and what she lives with.”
“God designed marriage to be a safe haven, a place where husband and wife can be naked together and unashamed. A place where we can be at our most vulnerable and know we will be loved excepted and respected without fear that we will be intentionally harmed by the ones closest to us.”
“Grief is painful, but the good news is that there is always new life after death. Spring always follows winter. Even after a horrific fire has ravaged the forest and everything looks black and bleak, before too long tiny bluebells poke their heads out of the loamy soil and feather in green shoots. A fern appears where it had not been before. Now that sunlight is able to reach the forest floor, new growth blossoms. That new growth was not possible when the thick foliage of the trees shaded the forest bottom. In a similar way, your marriage relationship has burned down to the ground but that doesn’t mean that your life is over and that there isn’t something new that God wants to blossom in you out of the ashes of your broken marriage.”
“Do not hide your darkness, expose it. Do not sympathetically make excuses for it, confess it. Hate it. Renounce it. For as long as darkness remains in darkness it rules you. But when you bring darkness out into the light, it becomes light. When you take your secret sins and boldly come unto the throne of God’s grace, and confess them, he cleanses you from all unrighteousness. -Francis Frangipane”
“Either he’s not willing to respect your boundaries or he’s not capable of doing it, but either way you are not safe until he learns to do this. Stick up for yourself. Before you can work on the marriage, your husband needs to respect your right to say no to him, demonstrate that he can control himself when he’s upset with you, and honor your boundaries. If he won’t do this much, you cannot go any further to repair your relationship.”
“When a physical separation is in place, there needs to be concrete evidence demonstrating safety and sanity before a couple can move back in together. The last thing you want is to start repeating the same old patterns of abuse and destruction that caused the split in the first place. You can’t build new history together when the old history keeps repeating itself.”
“Marriage counseling can be helpful in this stage to help the couple learn healthy communication skills and develop godly ways to resolve conflict and talk through old hurts in a constructive way. When there is no safety, and no sanity, joint counseling is ineffective and often dangerous. If she can’t see her part or take responsibility for her own wrong thinking, beliefs or attitudes, everything ends up being blamed on you. Old history keeps repeating itself even in the counselors office.”
“Sanity, for you, requires you to give up your fantasy of what you wished your marriage was like and face what it is really like. Sanity requires you to stop trying harder to do the same things that haven’t worked. You need to learn how to execute godly thinking and live from your CORE so that you won’t retaliate in anger and become abusive yourself. Sanity keeps you centered in God and not in having a good marriage or loving husband.”
“Sanity means he must learn to take responsibility for his own thoughts and his own behaviors without blaming others. He must also learn to handle his emotions, such as disappointment, frustration, anger, and hurt in new ways that don’t damage people, things or relationships. He understands he needs to take responsibility for his part and do the work to make that happen.”
“Sometimes destructive individuals expect amnesty once they say they’re sorry for what they’ve done. They believe that sorry means no more consequences, no extra effort and that we shouldn’t have to talk about it anymore. They believe their words of repentance automatically restore trust and repair relationship wounds. But words are not enough. Words can be deceptive. A heart that is changed shows it.”