6 comments

Erin Davis

Give Your Man the Gift Of Being Enough

Posted on 07.16.12 by Erin Davis | Twitter: @ErinGraffiti

FYI: All this week you can listen as Nancy Leigh DeMoss and Dr. Emerson Eggerichs talk about Love & Respect, the secret to cracking the communication code between husbands and wives.

Father Fun

I have a great husband. He loves being a dad and is very involved in our boys’ lives. He changes diapers, participates in discipline, and picks up from preschool. And yet, I can never seem to shake the feeling that I wish he would do more.

Ever since I got pregnant with my first, Eli, it has seemed to me that the burden of parenting has landed more squarely on my shoulders than it does on my man’s. He can never be home enough, involved enough, or concerned enough for my taste. At my worst moments I feel (and sometimes say) that I have to do everything in our home. I reduce his role to being nothing more than our kid’s pal who comes home and wrestles them while they squeal with delight. I just have a hard time seeing what he does for our family and acknowledging that his contributions matter. We mothers make the best martyrs.

Misery truly does love company, and I take comfort in knowing I’m not the only one who struggles with discontentment in this way. Many of my mom friends have expressed frustration that their husbands work too much, move too slowly, or engage too little. Before your mind starts compiling a list of all the things your husband does wrong, might I propose a radical solution?

Let him off the hook.

Oh, I do understand that he doesn’t do things your way. Yes, I’ve seen firsthand what happens when dads are left to dress their children unsupervised. And I am well aware of what they think qualifies as a nutritious dinner (Please pass the cheese puffs). But think hard about this predicament with me for a moment. Do we really want husbands who parent just like us? I know that you have mothering instincts and that no one knows your children quite like you do, but is having two identical parents really what’s best for your little ones? I’m thinking that God’s plan to create children through the combination of a man and a woman was not a flop. Perhaps the ways your husband parents differently from you actually have the power to benefit your children. (Feel free to read that sentence again to let it sink in.)

So, why not give your man the gift of lowered expectations today? I’m not advocating that you shoulder 100% of the parenting burden, but rather that you make a conscious decision to admire the husband you have rather than wishing for someone who does things differently.

Parenting together is a constant process of negotiating and re-negotiating boundaries and responsibilities. What’s more, you are learning on the job. Your hubby should give you grace as you make mistakes, ride the rollercoaster ride of hormones (whee!), and do all that you do the best you can. Doesn’t he deserve the same measure of grace from you?

Make the choice to see the things he’s doing right as a dad instead of fixating on all the ways you wish he would be more. That might sound a little something like this, “Honey, you are a great dad. I am so glad we are parenting together. Our family is lucky to have you.”

In light of those kind words, I’d like to make a little prediction. The more you acknowledge the things your husband does right, the more likely he is to keep doing them. The more you focus on the ways he’s a great dad, the less likely you are to see the areas where he misses the mark. The result is a dance where you each do your best and become each other’s biggest cheerleaders. Sounds nice doesn’t it?

But here’s the rub—it requires you to stop falling on your sword and fixating on the feeling that it’s all on you. It also requires you to do the hard work of parenting because it matters and it’s ministry, and not to earn words of affirmation, positive strokes, or "atta" girls from others (including your husband). It’s not an easy shift to make, but it will make life easier on you, your husband, and your kids.

PS: If you haven’t taken the 30-Day Husband Encouragement Challenge before—and even if you have—it’s a great way to focus on the positive in your husband. Sign up for a daily email reminder here, or download the PDF.

Comments

  1. This is an excellent post Erin. I could have written it. I've raised 4 kids and have said everything you've written here. Well done!!
    I would add that when we get together with our girlfriends who are great gifts from God to not talk about our husbands and the fathers of our children except in a positive light. Being in ministry for 25+ years I've been witness to the way wives demean their husbands in such a way you want to crawl in a hole and not listen to what is being said.
    Again, great post!! Happy Monday! Psalm 119:1-2
    www.jodylynne.com
    posted by Jody
    on Monday, July 16, 2012 at 10:00 am
  2. Thank you for this Great Post! Every wife needs to hear this because we all fall into the trap of feeling put upon in the home. Thanks again for the positive words of appreciating what our husbands do.
    posted by Rhetta
    on Monday, July 16, 2012 at 10:55 am
  3. GREAT POST!!!!!!!! Our kids are ALMOST grown & I have discovered that when we women think our husbands AREN'T thinking about us..., when they work all those long hours & overtime, it is BECAUSE OF US that he is doing so! I used to complain about all the overtime etc., & discovered my husband was thinking of the future, retirement all along, a much bigger view than I had. He was working hard that we would have enough when the time came! The time came quicker than we thought & now he is home ALL THE TIME with us! I LOVE IT! I feel all the long hours & overtime WAS WORTH IT! Yep, two DIFFERENT people raising kids is RIGHT! God DIDN'T flub-up! :)
    http://tladydesigns.blogspot.com/
    posted by Becky Green
    on Monday, July 16, 2012 at 2:11 pm
  4. Thank you for the encouraging messages on this subject!
    posted by me
    on Monday, July 16, 2012 at 6:24 pm
  5. This was a timely post. I have 5 out of 6 children living at home. I have been guilty numerous times of feeling like I am carrying it all on my own and that no one in my home can do a better job. When in fact, my husband deserves the trophy for father of the year award, especially for the last two years, while I was finishing up college. Sure, things were not done the same, however, I would have never imagined graduating from college, if I weren't married to my best friend.
    posted by Janet White
    on Tuesday, July 17, 2012 at 9:31 am
  6. A great post, I came across this tonight and just had to comment. I am a married mother of two grown children. I am helping my daughter( a recovered heroin addict of 5 years by Gods grace) raise her little girl as a single parent. My sweet granddaughter will be two and they both live with us. My daughter is an AMAZING single mom who never complains,looks at her child as a gift that changed her life and does the best with where she is, being grateful for all the help her Dad and I offer. Just wanted to say to the married couples, be grateful for all you have and think what it might be like to be on the journey without that partner, and the strength you would need alone. As Joel Osteen says, find the one good thing about your spouse and focus on that, not what they are not. Peace
    posted by Melissa H.
    on Tuesday, July 17, 2012 at 11:03 pm

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