Marriage isn’t for you – it’s for the other person

Filed in Relationships by on November 14, 2013 2 Comments

Thought-provoking thoughts about marriage and love from Seth Adam Smith:

Having been married only a year and a half, I’ve recently come to the conclusion that marriage isn’t for me.

Now before you start making assumptions, keep reading.

I met my wife in high school when we were 15 years old. We were friends for ten years until…until we decided no longer wanted to be just friends. :) I strongly recommend that best friends fall in love. Good times will be had by all.

Nevertheless, falling in love with my best friend did not prevent me from having certain fears and anxieties about getting married. The nearer Kim and I approached the decision to marry, the more I was filled with a paralyzing fear. Was I ready? Was I making the right choice? Was Kim the right person to marry? Would she make me happy?

Then, one fateful night, I shared these thoughts and concerns with my dad.

Perhaps each of us have moments in our lives when it feels like time slows down or the air becomes still and everything around us seems to draw in, marking that moment as one we will never forget.

My dad giving his response to my concerns was such a moment for me. With a knowing smile he said, “Seth, you’re being totally selfish. So I’m going to make this really simple: marriage isn’t for you. You don’t marry to make yourself happy, you marry to make someone else happy. More than that, your marriage isn’t for yourself, you’re marrying for a family. Not just for the in-laws and all of that nonsense, but for your future children. Who do you want to help you raisethem? Who do you want to influence them? Marriage isn’t for you. It’s not about you. Marriage is about the person you married.”

It was in that very moment that I knew that Kim was the right person to marry. I realized that I wanted to make her happy; to see her smile every day, to make her laugh every day. I wanted to be a part of her family, and my family wanted her to be a part of ours. And thinking back on all the times I had seen her play with my nieces, I knew that she was the one with whom I wanted to build our own family.

My father’s advice was both shocking and revelatory. It went against the grain of today’s “Walmart philosophy”, which is if it doesn’t make you happy, you can take it back and get a new one.

No, a true marriage (and true love) is never about you. It’s about the person you love—their wants, their needs, their hopes, and their dreams. Selfishness demands, “What’s in it for me?”, while Love asks, “What can I give?”

You can read the full article here.

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These unsigned articles are prepared by different members of the Jericho Tree team

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  1. Tonia says:

    I take a more selfish approach to marriage. I think the secret is to find someone who has qualities you admire but don’t possess yourself and stick with them. Eventually something has to rub off! In a good marriage you each start to take on the better qualities of the other person, in a bad one, you each start to take on the other’s faults.

  2. caged sky says:

    i can’t use my real name, but my email address is safe. Suppose you marry because you are in love/lust. You do everything you can to make that person happy. (Even though it later turns out you never knew what would make them happy.) And they trample on you.After many years of trying to please them, you turn to priests, doctors, psychiatrists and the Samaritans for help. You never know when the spouse you had once been in love with is going to shout at you, interrogate you, tell you how they suffer because of your sins, how you have turned them against the faith because you are such a sinful example of one who believes. You know you are very much a sinner, and the Samaritans get you through. Confession gets you through even more – when you can escape to Confession. Your spouse allows you to work, but that is all.

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