This week my husband and I celebrated our 15th
wedding anniversary. Because I am a
numbers girl I had to do the math - fifteen years is about 35% of my life! No wonder I have been feeling like it is such
a big number, I’ve almost been married longer than I was in school. I know that there are plenty of other couples
out there that have our 15 years beat by a mile, but unfortunately these days,
we are not in the majority.
I often talk to new moms and while I expect
to talk about their babies and motherhood, many of their struggles are about
the changes they feel in their relationships.
When you are pregnant you focus a lot on how your life will change with
the baby in the house, but it’s rare to think about how your life as a couple
will also change. It’s hard enough
figuring out what all the baby stuff is about, add to that exhaustion and a
changing dynamic in your relationship…..it’s enough to turn your whole world
upside down, flip it around and back again.
So what’s our secret? Here are a couple of the biggest lessons we’ve
learned:
· Be willing to have an
open and honest discussion about how you are going to manage your money. We decided early on that we were going to
combine our accounts and have never looked back. That choice is certainly not for everyone,
but for us it worked. If you choose a
different arrangement, discuss what will happen if one of you lost their job, had
to take a pay cut or wanted to stay home with the kids. Talking about money is never easy and is always
an emotional discussion. It’s important
to keep an open mind and be able to talk honestly.
· Have a discussion and
divide up the household chores. Sure,
you naturally fall into different roles and each of you begins to do certain
things around the house but there are always those things that are no one’s
favorites. This really comes to light
when babies come into the mix. The
dishes start piling up, the laundry is never ending and even the vacuum starts
to gather dust. You must talk about who
is going to do what, when and how frequently.
If you don’t have the discussion, chances are the other doesn’t know
they are waiting for you to take care of something.
· Be open to change. My husband and I are not the same people that
we were when we got married. We didn’t
enter into this marriage expecting to change something about the other, it just
naturally happened. We are all constantly
having new experiences. From those experiences you learn new things and grow. You must be open to that evolution. Chances are in the early days of your
relationship you were willing to change to be a better person for the other,
that drive to keep improving should never stop.
· Don’t keep
score. Those of you who’ve been reading the
blog for a while know this is a big one for me.
You can’t say “You went out with your friends two nights this week, I
went for a mani-pedi which counts for half, so now I get 1.5 nights out.” If you keep score you make things infinitely
more difficult for yourself and your spouse.
If you want to plan a girl’s night out, then plan a girl’s night out. If you want to sleep in on Saturday, then
talk to each other about trading off weekend mornings that you get to sleep
in. We live in a busy time and days get
filled up quickly. If you need a break,
an afternoon or night out, ask for it.
Did you catch the common theme? It’s communication. Communication goes beyond just talking. In order to communicate, you often have to
take a really good look at yourself. Why
is this so important to me? Why do I
feel this way? Is there something more
that I’m not considering? In order to
communicate you have to listen. What are
they trying to say? Is it possible that
I could see it differently? In order to
communicate you have to set the emotion aside to truly get to the center of it
all. It’s not always easy. There’s no point when you get to set the
cruise control and everything just takes care of itself, unless maybe that
happens at 30 years? All I know today is
that I wouldn’t have it any other way.
Heart-FULLy Yours,
Kacey
p.s.
You may be thinking, the blog is great, but I could never do that! I disagree and am here to help! Let’s schedule a 30 minute consultation to
define what matters most to you right now and create a plan on how to
spend more of your time doing that.
Email me at balancedheartcoaching@gmail.com and we’ll work out the details.
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