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Saving Your Marriage Before It Starts Workbook for Women
By Les Parrott, Leslie Parrott ZONDERVAN
Copyright © 2015 Les and Leslie Parrott
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-310-87547-5
CHAPTER 1
Exercise One
YOUR PERSONAL TEN COMMANDMENTS
This exercise is designed to help you uncover some of your unspoken rules. It will take about fifteen to twenty minutes.
Try to articulate some of the unspoken rules you grew up with. Take your time to think it over. These unspoken rules are generally so ingrained that we are rarely aware of them. If you're not married yet, by the way, you may have discovered some of your "rules" with a previous roommate.
We've provided you with sections to stimulate your thinking. The best way to come up with your own commandments is to think of what "unspoken rules" you grew up with in your family.
RULES ABOUT FINANCES
Example: "Credit cards are to be used only in an emergency."
1. ________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
2. ________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
RULES ABOUT MEALTIME
Example: "Dinner should be served at the same time every night."
3. ________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
4. ________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
RULES ABOUT CHORES
Example: "The towels from the laundry should be folded in thirds (not in half)."
5. ________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
6. ________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
RULES ABOUT OTHER TRADITIONS AND HOLIDAYS
Example: "You should open presents on Christmas Eve (not Christmas morning)."
7. ________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
8. ________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
RULES ABOUT QUIRKY THINGS
Example: "Never put a bottle of ketchup on the table (put it in a dish)."
9. ________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
10. ________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
Once both of you have written your "personal ten commandments," share them with each other.
As a woman, think about how your dad modeled certain behaviors in each of these areas and consider how this may shape your expectations as a wife.
What surprises you about your partner's rules and why? Do some of his rules cause you to immediately push back?
Are there any specific rules you would like to change (on your side or his)?
The more you talk about your unspoken rules, the less likely they are to affect your marriage in a negative way.
In addition, here's a helpful tip. Any time you have a fight or disagreement, ask yourself, "Is this fight a result of one of us breaking an unspoken rule?" If so, add that rule to your list and discuss how you will handle that situation in the future.
CHAPTER 2
Exercise Two
MAKING YOUR ROLES CONSCIOUS
If you have taken the SYMBIS Assessment (SYMBISassessment.com), this particular exercise will look familiar. The SYMBIS Assessment Report presents the content in a far more personalized format. If you're not using the SYMBIS Assessment, you will still benefit greatly from this workbook version of the exercise.
Following is a list of chores or life tasks that will need to be handled by you or your fiancé (husband). To make your unconscious understanding of roles conscious, first indicate how your parents handled these tasks. If they shared the task, check both boxes. Then write down how you would like to divide the tasks, according to your understanding of your own and your partner's interests, time, and abilities. If you expect to share the task, check both boxes. Finally, compare your list with your partner's list and discuss the results. Put your joint decision of who will do what in the last column, and be prepared to renegotiate when your circumstances change. This exercise will take about twenty to thirty minutes.
Once you have both filled out this list, compare notes and answer these three questions together:
1. What role behaviors do you tend to agree upon?
2. What role behaviors do you tend to see quite differently?
3. How are you going to adjust your expectations on the role behaviors where you are currently not in sync?
CHAPTER 3
Exercise Three
FROM IDEALIZING TO REALIZING YOUR PARTNER
This exercise is designed to help you relinquish unrealistic ideals you might hold about your partner and to discover his true character. It will take about twenty to thirty minutes.
Begin by rating on a 1 to 7 scale (1 being lowest and 7 being highest) how much the following traits describe you and your partner. Complete the first two columns ("Your Rating of You" and then "Your Rating of Your Husband"). Don't worry about the other two columns just yet.
Once you have rated the first two columns, share your rating with each other and write them on your own page. Then subtract your partner's actual rating of himself from your rating of him. Note any significant differences and discuss them.
Our three biggest differences in this exercise are:
1. ________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
2. ________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
3. ________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
One of the central tasks of the early marriage years is to move from "idealizing" your husband to "realizing" your husband. How accurate is your image of who your husband is compared to who he really is? The more accurately you can present yourselves to each other, the easier your first years of marriage will be.
CHAPTER 4
Exercise Four
EXPLORING UNFINISHED BUSINESS
Marriage is not a quick fix for avoiding your own personal problems. In fact, marriage may even intensify those problems. This exercise is designed to help you honestly face the psychological and spiritual work you need to do as a person so that you do not look to your husband to fulfill needs that he cannot. It will take about twenty to thirty minutes.
Everyone has yearnings that were seldom, if ever, fulfilled in their relationship with their parents. Take a moment to reflect, and then write down some of the needs and desires you felt that were never really fulfilled by your parents. We've provided you with a few headings to stimulate your thinking, but don't let that limit you to just these categories.
UNFULFILLED NEEDS FOR ENCOURAGEMENT
Example: "My parents never really encouraged my dreams or goals."
_______________________________________
_______________________________________
_______________________________________
UNFULFILLED NEEDS FOR PRAISE
Example: "My parents never really celebrated my successes."
_______________________________________
_______________________________________
_______________________________________
UNFULFILLED NEEDS FOR LISTENING
Example: "My parents never really understood me for who I am."
_______________________________________
_______________________________________
_______________________________________
UNFULFILLED NEEDS FOR FUN
Example: "My parents often thought I wasn't serious enough and wanted me to be more 'goal oriented.'"
_______________________________________
_______________________________________
_______________________________________
OTHER UNFULFILLED NEEDS THAT SHAPE MY EXPECTATIONS
Example: "I've never had anyone in my life who appreciates my creativity."
_______________________________________
_______________________________________
_______________________________________
When we marry, we long to recreate the love, closeness, and nurturance that we experienced or wished we had experienced in our relationship with our parents. But marriage is not always the place for those yearnings to be fulfilled. No human can meet another person's every need; deep relational longings are ultimately met only in a relationship with God.
If you are willing, share your writing with your partner and discuss the baggage you are both bringing into your marriage — and how your expectations of him as your husband might be shaped by your "unfinished business."
CHAPTER 5
Exercise Five
ASSESSING YOUR SELF-IMAGE
This exercise is designed to help you measure your self-image and construct an interdependent relationship with your husband. It will take about twenty to thirty minutes.
"You cannot love another person unless you love yourself." Most of us have heard that statement so often we tend to dismiss it as just another catchphrase in the lexicon of pop psychology. But a solid sense of self-esteem is a vital element in building the capacity to love.
The following self-test can give you a quick evaluation of your self-esteem. Answer each with "yes," "usually," "seldom," or "no."
1. Do you believe strongly in certain values and principles, enough that you are willing to defend them?
Yes
Usually
Seldom
No
2. Do you act on your own best judgment, without regretting your actions if others disapprove?
Yes
Usually
Seldom
No
3. Do you avoid worrying about what is coming tomorrow or fussing over yesterday's or today's mistakes?
Yes
Usually
Seldom
No
4. Do you have confidence in your general ability to deal with problems, even in the face of failures and setbacks?
Yes
Usually
Seldom
No
5. Do you feel generally equal — neither inferior nor superior — to others?
Yes
Usually
Seldom
No
6. Do you take it more or less for granted that other people are interested in you and value you?
Yes
Usually
Seldom
No
7. Do you accept praise without pretense or false modesty, and accept compliments without feeling guilty?
Yes
Usually
Seldom
No
8. Do you resist the efforts of others to dominate you, especially your peers?
Yes
Usually
Seldom
No
9. Do you accept the idea — and admit to others — that you are capable of feeling a wide range of impulses and desires, ranging from anger to love, sadness to happiness, resentment to acceptance? (It does not follow, however, that you will act on all these feelings and desires.)
Yes
Usually
Seldom
No
10. Do you genuinely enjoy yourself in a wide range of activities, including work, play, creative self-expression, companionship, and just plain loafing?
Yes
Usually
Seldom
No
11. Do you sense and consider the needs of others?
Yes
Usually
Seldom
No
If your answer to most of the questions is "yes" or "usually," it's an indication that you have a sturdy sense of self-esteem. If most of your answers are "no" or "seldom," you may likely suffer from a low self-image and will need to strengthen it to build the best marriage. Research indicates that self-esteem has a lot to do with the way you will respond to your husband. People with a healthy self-image are more apt to express their opinions, are less sensitive to criticism, and are generally less preoccupied with themselves.
The point of this little self-test is not to accurately pinpoint your self-esteem. It's to generate a helpful discussion between the two of you. So, if you are willing, discuss your answers with each other and talk about how in reality you cannot make each other whole (though you can certainly help each other on the pathway to wholeness).
CHAPTER 6
Exercise Six
DEFINING LOVE
If you are using the SYMBIS Assessment, a portion of a page of your fifteen-page report personalizes the results of this particular workbook exercise, so you may want to refer to that page now. Either way, this exercise will help you define love in your own terms and compare your definition with your partner's. It will take ten to fifteen minutes.
Researcher Beverly Fehr asked more than 170 people to rate the central features of love. The twelve most important attributes they identified are listed below. Take a moment to prioritize this list for yourself by checkmarking the three qualities that are most important to you.
_ Acceptance _ Interest in the other
_ Caring _ Loyalty
_ Commitment _ Respect
_ Concern for the other's _ Supportiveness
well-being _ Trust
_ Friendship _ Wanting to be with
_ Honesty the other
Next, write a brief definition of love that incorporates these qualities.
Love is ... _______________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________
Now, compare your priorities and your definition with your partner's to see what differences, if any, you might have when it comes to defining love.
Finally, complete these sentences to get a better feel for the application of your definition of love:
I feel most loved when you ...
____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
Though you may or may not know it, I'm showing you my love when I ...
____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
(Continues...)
Excerpted from Saving Your Marriage Before It Starts Workbook for Women by Les Parrott, Leslie Parrott. Copyright © 2015 Les and Leslie Parrott. Excerpted by permission of ZONDERVAN.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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