And you don’t have any idea how this situation could ever work out for your good.
You’ve run out of advice for God, which has been thinly disguised as fervent prayer.
You are desperate for change.
But your mind is muddled & tired.
Then you remember Who God is.
He binds up the brokenhearted.
He resurrects your lost dreams.
He specializes in the impossible.
He is your Hope.
You have no idea how He works. All you have are His promises. They are in your personal spiritual bank. And you don’t know how that works either. So you just give up & let Him handle it.
Sonya asked me, “What do you do when your husband takes you for granted?” She felt unappreciated. Overworked. Like she couldn’t please him to save her life. She was working hard to be the best homemaker in their empty nest, just as she had always done. Trying to anticipate what he needed and wanted from her. But she was missing an important ingredient in her formula for a great marriage.
In truth, her husband just needs to know that she …
likes who he is,
wants to be with him, and
isn’t taking him for granted.
If she could find a way to communicate that to him, she could solve 95% of her challenge.
And he would make her feel so much more appreciated.
And valued.
Here is just one example for your consideration.
What to do when your husband takes you for granted.
I recorded my answer during a live Q&A on Zoom. Here’s the transcript. The video is posted below.
Watch the clip from the live Q&A.
I’m here to help, so let’s continue the dialogue. Feel free to post in the comments box below. If you have a more personal question & would like my response, contact me.
[Begin transcript.]
You know, I think actually women are more likely to take men for granted than the other way around. I actually do. Men just kind of figure out,
“This is the way it’s going to be.”
And they give up. So what may look like he’s taking his wife for granted is he’s just trying not to rock the boat. So he doesn’t ask for anything.
Well, you know we talked about that before. About how men don’t like to bring up something that they’re not happy about. Because it could either
hurt his wife’s feelings or
it could make her angry.
One or both of those things.
So he keeps it inside of him, and he just really learns to settle. If makes sense …
and because he’s not complaining, and because he shows up every day, and he’s doing all the things that a woman wants him to. You know, except maybe helping around the house a little bit more, feeling more connected. And he really doesn’t know what that means.
He doesn’t know what being “more connected” is.
But he just learns to settle. He just comes home and does his thing. And the common conversations among men are
Just try not to get in trouble with the wife.
You know that saying: “If mama ain’t happy, ain’t nobody happy.” So you try to keep mama happy.
Which oftentimes means that you don’t ask for anything. You see her flittering to do all of these things, and she seems to be filled with all kinds of anxiety about kids and the house and getting everything done.
And there’s really no room for the husband to even mention his needs.
Who’s taking whom for granted?
I watched a video yesterday the title of it was Self-Made and it was on Amazon. [Correction: It was on Netflix.] I’m not sure if you’ve seen that, but Octavia Spencer did a really good job of portraying the first female self-made millionaire in the United States. She’s African American, so you have all of these cultural issues that are part of the video. … I think it starts in 1908, so we’re talking more than a hundred years ago. A long time ago.
She’s married to an abusive man in the beginning, and her self-esteem is just in the pits. She takes in laundry … all these things are going on. And then she ends up marrying this really nice guy.
She finds out … I don’t want to spoil the whole story for you … but she she finds this haircare product for African American women, and she wants to sell it. But the woman doesn’t want anything to do with her, so she develops it on her own. And it takes off.
The reason why this comes to my mind is that at one point this really loving husband that she had … makes suggestions for her … about how to get the rich men to invest in the factory she wants to open.
But she dismisses him. She totally pushes him [her husband] aside, and she says,
“No, this is my company.”
She just keeps referring to it as “my company.” And she ended up pushing this perfectly loving man to the side … basically tell him, “I don’t need you. I don’t need your input.”
Well, she does find a way. … Obviously the story is that she’s a self-made millionaire. She does find a way to get the backing, and she goes through the women.
But in the process, she totally disrespects her husband. He even says,
“What good am I?”
She’s got him doing women’s hair, and the things that he’s capable of doing. … I believe it was advertising, that he had a specialty in advertising. And she wouldn’t even listen to his input. He ends up having an affair, and they divorce.
They both still love each other, but they didn’t handle that very well.
I don’t think that women should submit to all men. I am right up there with: “We’ve got rights. We’ve got brains. We should do things.”
But if we’ve got a partner, we need to learn how to work together. Nothing in the marriage is ever mine and yours. It’s ours. Something we do together.
That’s part of where I think the the whole shift – and I know I’m going on a different topic than you originally asked, but it’s on my mind. This whole shift from the way that men, in their vulnerability, used to suppress women to help themselves feel better. Now we flipped it around.
Instead of making things better where we cooperate more, we’ve actually made it worse. Because now, in finding our voice, we’ve told men to “shut up.”
So across the board – unless a man wants to be a real jerk and do some of the things that you know have come up recently – you know about men taking advantage of women, which that’s a whole other topic.
But women really take advantage of men and just run over them. I don’t think that’s what we’re supposed to be doing with gaining our rights.
So that’s kind of a sidebar in in your question. But I think it’s really important.
So men just learned to settle.
It’s just the way it’s gonna be. They’ve lost their voice, and everything revolves around the woman now.
I think it’s a product of us being really really misinformed about what the marital relationship is supposed to look like.
Honest couple communication – especially between husband & wife – is essential for creating connection and lasting joy. But should you be able to say whatever you want to your mate?
I’ve always tried to be careful what I say to My Beloved. But many folks – mostly women, it seems; but some men, too – believe you should be able to say whatever you want to your mate. They call it “just being honest.”
On the other hand, some are too careful about what they say because they’re trying to get a particular response from their partner. Actually, that’s manipulation, and I’ve never seen it work to create true connection in any relationship.
The saddest thing about those who’d like better couple communication is that most don’t even realize what they’re actually doing!
So here are my 5 Reasons for being careful what you say.
1. Words can hurt.
Think before you speak: Could what you are about to say be experienced as attacking, blaming, or criticizing? Just because your feelings are hurt does not give you the right to hurt someone in return.
Two “wrongs” never make a “right.”
A counterattack will not get you the response you’re hoping for when you are hurt, but will instead elicit a defensive response from the one who hurt you. Consider these two options and you would respond to each:
What you just said really hurt.
versus …
You’re such a jerk!
2. Words can heal.
Be kind and gracious toward one another. You may have heard that “hurt people hurt people.” Consider what might be behind the other person’s behavior. Chances are he is acting defensively by being offensive … like I just warned you against doing (see above).
If you’re partnered with someone you love, it’s probably because you really like the person he normally is. So if he is behaving in a way that is “out of character,” it makes more sense to assume he has a good reason for that. Not an excuse, but a reason. Why not find out what it could be?
You seem really tense today. What’s happening?
If you don’t get an answer that makes sense, you can follow up with …
Ok. I’m sorry I burned the toast, but it seems like it’s more than that. I care about you, and I’m here if you want to talk about whatever else seems to be going on.
Then stop talking. Go on about whatever you would be doing under less stressful circumstances, remaining open to hear what’s troubling him when he’s ready to talk about it. (See also When You Love a Broken Man.)
NOTE: Please know that I am not talking here about anyone who is in an abusive relationship, which requires a different strategy. Here is a quick way to evaluate your situation, and if you are in an abusive relationship, please seek the help of a local mental health professional or Christian Care Connect for additional types of care providers.
3. Words can curse.
Assuming the worst about your mate and saying it aloud is essentially the same as pronouncing a curse upon him. Trust me. You don’t want to speak out that kind of potentially self-fulfilling prophecy! (James 3:10)
You know you’re cursing if you begin with “you always …” or “you never …”
It’s also wise to be aware that saying those things to your friends or relatives – with earshot of your spouse or when he’s not around – still register as curses.
The wise woman builds her house, But with her own hands the foolish one tears hers down. (Proverbs 14:1)
4. Words can bless.
Paul’s admonition to “speak the truth in love” (Ephesians 4:5) does not give you permission to tell your mate everything you think is wrong with him.
I believe what Paul means is that you should speak the Truth about how God him: as His Dearly Beloved Child.
The most important thing you can do for your mate is to learn to see him as God sees him. Jesus loves him as the man he is, as well as the man he is becoming. Let’s partner with that!
“I have loved you with an everlasting love; I have drawn you with unfailing kindness.” Jeremiah 31:3
5. Words can create.
What we think – and especially what we say – impacts the world around us. And that includes the people you love – as well as the people you don’t.
We all believe the world is in more trouble than it’s ever been. So use the creative power of your words to make the world a better place.
For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him. John 3:16-17
Here are a few more words from the Word about words … and reasons to be careful what you say.
And God said, “Let there be light,” and there was light. (Genesis 1:3)
I will proclaim the name of the Lord. Oh, praise the greatness of our God! (Deuteronomy 32:3)
As the rain and the snow come down from heaven, and do not return to it without watering the earth and making it bud and flourish, so that it yields seed for the sower and bread for the eater, so is my word that goes out from my mouth: It will not return to me empty, but will accomplish what I desire and achieve the purpose for which I sent it.(Isaiah 55:10-11)
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.He was with God in the beginning.Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made.In him was life, and that life was the light of all mankind.The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it. (John 1:1-5)
Then the angel said to me, “Write this: Blessed are those who are invited to the wedding supper of the Lamb!” And he added, “These are the true words of God.” (Revelation 19:9)