Love Dare- Day 4
Love is thoughtful
How precious also are Your thoughts to me. . . .
How vast is the sum of them! If I should count them,
they would outnumber the sand. —Psalm 139:17–18
How vast is the sum of them! If I should count them,
they would outnumber the sand. —Psalm 139:17–18
Love
thinks. It’s not a mindless feeling that rides on waves of emotion and
falls asleep mentally. It keeps busy in thought, knowing that loving
thoughts precede loving actions.
When
you first fell in love, being thoughtful came quite naturally. You
spent hours dreaming of what your loved one looked like, wondering what
he or she was doing, rehearsing impressive things to say, then enjoying
sweet memories of the time you spent together. You honestly confessed,
“I can’t stop thinking about you.”
But
for most couples, things begin to change after marriage. The wife
finally has her man; the husband has his trophy. The hunt is over and
the pursuing done. Sparks of romance slowly burn into grey embers, and
the motivation for thoughtfulness cools. You drift into focusing on your
job, your friends, your problems, your personal desires, yourself.
After a while, you unintentionally begin to ignore the needs of your
mate.
But
the fact that marriage has added another person to your universe does
not change. Therefore, if your thinking doesn’t mature enough to
constantly include this person, you catch yourself being surprised
rather than being thoughtful.
“Today’s our anniversary?”
“Why didn’t you include me in that decision?”
“Don’t you ever think about anyone but yourself?”
If
you don’t learn to be thoughtful, you end up regretting missed
opportunities to demonstrate love. Thoughtlessness is a silent enemy to a
loving relationship.
Let’s
be honest. Men struggle with thoughtfulness more than women. A man can
focus like a laser on one thing and forget the rest of the world.
Whereas this can benefit him in that one arena, it can make him overlook
other things that need his attention.
A
woman, on the other hand, is more multi-conscious, able to maintain an
amazing awareness of many factors at once. She can talk on the phone,
cook, know where the kids are in the house, and wonder why her husband
isn’t helping . . . all simultaneously. Adding to this, a woman also
thinks relationally. When she works on something, she is cognizant of
all the people who are somehow connected to it.
Both
of these tendencies are examples of how God designed women to complete
their men. As God said at creation, “It is not good for the man to be
alone; I will make him a helper suitable for him” (Genesis 2:18). But
these differences also create opportunities for misunderstanding.
Men,
for example, tend to think in headlines and say exactly what they mean.
Not much is needed to understand the message. His words are more
literal and shouldn’t be overanalyzed. But women think and speak between
the lines. They tend to hint. A man often has to listen for what is
implied if he wants to get the full meaning.
If
a couple doesn’t understand this about one another, the fallout can
result in endless disagreements. He’s frustrated wondering why she
speaks in riddles and doesn’t just come out and say things. She’s
frustrated wondering why he’s so inconsiderate and doesn’t add two and
two together and just figure it out.
A
woman deeply longs for her husband to be thoughtful. It is a key to
helping her feel loved. When she speaks, a wise man will listen like a
detective to discover the unspoken needs and desires her words imply.
If, however, she always has to put the pieces together for him, it
steals the opportunity for him to demonstrate that he loves her.
This
also explains why women will get upset with their husbands without
telling them why. In her mind she’s thinking, “I shouldn’t have to spell
it out for him. He should be able to look at the situation and see
what’s going on here.” At the same time, he’s grieved because he can’t
read her mind and wonders why he’s being punished for a crime he didn’t
know he committed.
Love
requires thoughtfulness—on both sides—the kind that builds bridges
through the constructive combination of patience, kindness, and
selflessness. Love teaches you how to meet in the middle, to respect and
appreciate how your spouse uniquely thinks.
A
husband should listen to his wife and learn to be considerate of her
unspoken messages. A wife should learn to communicate truthfully and not
say one thing while meaning another.
But
too often you become angry and frustrated instead, following the
destructive pattern of “ready, shoot, aim.” You speak harshly now and
determine later if you should have said it. But the thoughtful nature of
love teaches you to engage your mind before engaging your lips. Love
thinks before speaking. It filters words through a grid of truth and
kindness.
When
was the last time you spent a few minutes thinking about how you could
better understand and demonstrate love to your spouse? What immediate
need can you meet? What’s the next event (anniversary, birthday,
holiday) you could be preparing for? Great marriages come from great
thinking.
Today’s Dare
Contact your spouse sometime during
the business of the day. Have no agenda
other than asking how he or she
is doing and if there is anything
you could do for them.
the business of the day. Have no agenda
other than asking how he or she
is doing and if there is anything
you could do for them.
No comments:
Post a Comment