Just another thought from my overactive mind. 
Maybe you, like me, have the 'sterotypical' male as a partner (be aware that I'm still in a leading-to-marriage dating relationship, not married, hence me saying 'partner'). By that I mean the following:
1) A fixer
2) Someone who would rather 'do' than 'let's talk about it'
3) An assumer (ie, the reason I feel this way is because... rather than actually ASKING me why I feel that way)
I hope you understand what I mean. Usually, women tend to be the better at communicating their needs, getting a conversation going on disagreements (rather than just fighting about it), and actually stopping to 'listen' rather than to 'fix'.
We've done a lot better at it lately. It required opening up and talking about things, but I still know that B would much rather 'get on with life' than stop and talk about how to get into healthier communication patterns, listening to me rather than assuming what the problem is and going out and fixing it immediately, etc etc. Don't get me wrong though - I love him for doing this out of love for me, and I think we've both seen the benefits - it's just he's a tad bit lazy when it comes to discussions, and would rather just go out and resolve things in 5 minutes flat (ie just apologise and move on) rather than have a discussion on how to NOT have the problem next time a similar issue crops up.
Do you married women still deal with someone who IS doing these things (but who you know is getting tired of it)? How do you 'stereotypical' men deal with it - all this talking, communicating, assessing feelings, etc etc? How do you break past the 'this is SO time consuming and boring!' into 'I can see this is healthy for our relationship'?
I am not being overly harsh on B about this. He has never said to me that he finds it boring, or pointless, but I just have this sense that he'd rather just 'fix' than talk about it. I know this is a 'male' trait, and I'm praying hard, but I'm just wondering...
Do men eventually get the hint that talking, assessing feelings, all of that is beneficial for the relationship, and start doing it FOR THEMSELVES, than just because their spouse feels it is a good way to handle things? I know B listens and talks about this stuff because he loves me, and knows it's important to me we do this (and I am grateful, and love him for this, and am determined to be happy that he is at least doing it, whether he wants to or not), but it doesn't stop me praying that one day he will do all of this out of his own free will!
So men - do you get into these conversations, and listen instead of fix, and do all these things that are defined as 'healthy communicating techniques' because you want to? Or are you just doing it to keep the peace?
Sometimes it's hard loving the stereotype!
Sasch
Maybe you, like me, have the 'sterotypical' male as a partner (be aware that I'm still in a leading-to-marriage dating relationship, not married, hence me saying 'partner'). By that I mean the following:
1) A fixer
2) Someone who would rather 'do' than 'let's talk about it'
3) An assumer (ie, the reason I feel this way is because... rather than actually ASKING me why I feel that way)
I hope you understand what I mean. Usually, women tend to be the better at communicating their needs, getting a conversation going on disagreements (rather than just fighting about it), and actually stopping to 'listen' rather than to 'fix'.
We've done a lot better at it lately. It required opening up and talking about things, but I still know that B would much rather 'get on with life' than stop and talk about how to get into healthier communication patterns, listening to me rather than assuming what the problem is and going out and fixing it immediately, etc etc. Don't get me wrong though - I love him for doing this out of love for me, and I think we've both seen the benefits - it's just he's a tad bit lazy when it comes to discussions, and would rather just go out and resolve things in 5 minutes flat (ie just apologise and move on) rather than have a discussion on how to NOT have the problem next time a similar issue crops up.
Do you married women still deal with someone who IS doing these things (but who you know is getting tired of it)? How do you 'stereotypical' men deal with it - all this talking, communicating, assessing feelings, etc etc? How do you break past the 'this is SO time consuming and boring!' into 'I can see this is healthy for our relationship'?
I am not being overly harsh on B about this. He has never said to me that he finds it boring, or pointless, but I just have this sense that he'd rather just 'fix' than talk about it. I know this is a 'male' trait, and I'm praying hard, but I'm just wondering...
Do men eventually get the hint that talking, assessing feelings, all of that is beneficial for the relationship, and start doing it FOR THEMSELVES, than just because their spouse feels it is a good way to handle things? I know B listens and talks about this stuff because he loves me, and knows it's important to me we do this (and I am grateful, and love him for this, and am determined to be happy that he is at least doing it, whether he wants to or not), but it doesn't stop me praying that one day he will do all of this out of his own free will!
So men - do you get into these conversations, and listen instead of fix, and do all these things that are defined as 'healthy communicating techniques' because you want to? Or are you just doing it to keep the peace?
Sometimes it's hard loving the stereotype!
Sasch