The title is a misnomer. It should read, “What Christian Boomer Workaholics Wish Their Wives Knew About Christian Boomer Workaholics.”
Twenty years later it slowly dawns on these men that they gave their best years to careers that promised what they couldn’t deliver.
I picked this up on a whim at a thrift store. I flipped through the pages, stopped at the following quote, and thought I had a winner:
If I could make only one observation about men today, it would be that men are tired—mentally, emotionally, physically, and spiritually tired. Weary of life.
Unfortunately, this turned out to be one of the few relatable entries.
We have created a culture that requires more energy than men have to give.
The Venn diagram of my experience as a man and the author’s experience as a man approaches two circles. At one point, he mentions manipulating his wife into letting him wear a solid gold Swiss watch.
For over a year I dreamed of those historic, Martha Washington-style Chippendale chairs adorning my office.
There’s a whole chapter on the “Golden Years”, which are defined by a husband’s newfound desire to discover who his wife really is. That’s right, ladies, you get to wait until your husband is retired before he takes an interest in you. No wonder the divorce rate is so high.
A typical husband wants his wife to look good, but he is not obsessed. However, he does consider his wife’s appearance a reflection on his judgment.
In the list of relationship books for men, this is just noise. I wanted to give Morley the benefit of the doubt - maybe he wrote it before good relationship books existed? But no, this was written 7 years after The Five Love Languages. This just feels like Morley checking something off the list of external success - as a “business leader” and “one of the pioneers of the Christian men’s movement”, of course he needed to write a book.
”If a man gets drunk on whiskey we put him out of the church. If a man gets drunk on mammon we make him a deacon.”
Funny, for a book ostensibly by a Christian man and for Christian men, it is strongly oriented toward external achievement. Which brings me full circle to the Christian Boomer workaholics - almost a contradiction in terms, but the cognitive dissonance is strong with that generation.
”If you don’t have enough time for your children you can be 100 percent certain that you are not following God’s will for your life.”
Ah, but maybe I’m being unfair. Perhaps the reason my generation doesn’t define itself by a job title is because we got to watch the vain, hollow, ultimately meaningless pursuit of fulfillment and identity through work that Morley’s generation perpetrated?
Men increasingly consider corporate loyalty a thing to be balanced against family needs.
A stopped clock is right twice a day, and Morley’s writing isn’t all junk. He occasionally strikes gold.
The velocity of today’s culture leaves many men drained of the spiritual energy needed to reflect on their temptations and the moral energy to resist them.
Not often enough for this to be worth reading, though.
If you are not content where you are, you will not be content where you want to go.
tl;dr just read For Women Only.