Five easy ways to ruin your marriage By
Joshua Rogers Published February 12, 2016.
At some point in my mid-thirties, it
started happening to young couples around me. Their relationships began
fracturing and falling apart, and it wasn't always the people you would expect.
These were good folks with good intentions who said every word of their marital
vows with conviction. But various circumstances and choices began pressing upon
them, and eventually, I saw them go through extreme stress, separation, and
sometimes, divorce. I don't think there's a magic formula for ruining your
marriage, but based on my observations over the last few years, there are a few
easy ways to turbocharge its demise. Here are five of them: 1. Intimate,
opposite-sex friendships. We recognize the danger of getting into a physical
relationship with someone else, but we often forget that it's just as dangerous
for us to become emotionally close with someone of the opposite sex. It usually
starts innocently enough - a friend at work asks you for advice, treats you to
lunch, or confides in you behind closed doors. Over time, those kinds of
interactions can be a gateway to emotional intimacy, and with the right
combination of stress, attraction, and marital frustration, that friendship can
easily turn into something more. 2. Constant criticism. We all deal with enough
guilt and shame to keep us feeling down. When the person who knows us best
reaffirms our shame with constant criticism, it can become too much to bear and
make us want to distance ourselves from him or her. 3. Hypersensitivity. Our
spouse is going to point out things about us that we don't want to hear. Joseph
Pulitzer once said that those who are startled by unflattering facts should
"blame the [person] before the mirror, not the mirror. A spouse who is
hypersensitive won't be able to listen the ways he or she needs to change, and
as a result, fixable problems will persist and create resentment in the
marriage. 4. Unrestrained in-laws. You may be used to dealing with your family,
but your spouse doesn't have nearly as much expertise. You've got to listen
when your spouse says your family has weird dynamics and take your spouse's
observations seriously. You've also got to step in and set good boundaries,
especially if your family turns their dysfunction on your spouse. When spouses
fail to do that, it introduces all kinds of unnecessary triangulation, tension,
and feelings of betrayal into the relationship. 5. Isolation. If your marriage
is struggling, you can doom it by keeping all the struggles behind closed doors
and refusing to reach out to a counselor who can help you work through your
issues. Married couples tell themselves they can fix it over time. But by the
time they realize how incapable they are at untangling all the knots of
dysfunction, it's usually too late. Anyone who has been married could add more
bullet points to this list. But just as important as the ways we can undermine
our marriages are the many other ways we can reinforce them. That involves
doing things like intentionally building friendship with our spouses; offering
regular praise and encouragement; acknowledging our spouses' criticisms and
choosing to change; keeping healthy boundaries with third parties; and, if
necessary, doing a martial checkup with a therapist or pastor every once in a
while. It takes a lot of work to keep our marriages healthy, for sure. But a
good marriage is the gift that keeps on giving, even if it's just building our
character, which is what makes all the hard work worth it.
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