Nov 2, 2011

Save My Marital life - Prevent Divorce by 5 Proactive Guidelines

By Belle Smith


When you said "I do" on your wedding day, you purchased yourself a ticket for a roller-coaster ride that is stoppable by death alone. You will go through both exhilarating and sickening periods, bad and good times and bold and cowardly days. Once you and your partner become unwilling to go through the down times, you're relationship will be in crisis. Otherwise, your marriage will suffer and worse, you might eventually break up.

To refrain from asking, "How will I save my marriage?" don't be reactive in mending the issues in your relationship. Below are five guidelines on how to carry out this positive approach.

Marriage requires communication.

Communication must be a two-way street in marriage. Sharing each other's dreams, wishes, fears and insights is the best way to connect. However, it would be ineffective if you fail to grasp the exact message of your spouse. Listen with your ears and eyes because the real message lies beyond the words. The body language will tell you what the words couldn't.

Marriage needs healthy silence.

When rage and depression dominate you, you tend to blurt out hurtful statements. When you find yourself in this kind of situation, just be quiet. Let the negative energy leave you first before you initiate a conversation. As you think silently, reflect on how you can convey your ideas without hurting your partner's feelings.

Don't let the fire die.

Spend quality time with your partner on a regular basis. If you have kids, you can ask your parents or friends to look after them for a couple of hours. Continue doing things you enjoyed before you settled down. Don't stop sending love notes, exchanging gifts and throwing surprises. Tell your partner your love hasn't changed a bit. Little things like these can prevent you from experiencing the difficult save-my-marriage battle.

Marriage means compromising.

You will have disagreements with your partner once in a while. You want to order steak but he/she asserts sweet and sour fish. You feel like exercising together but he/she is too tired for it. You want to enroll your son in a private institution but he/she thinks you can't afford the tuition. When you have different opinions and preferences, make a compromise. Reach an agreement and gladly fulfill whatever your deal is.

Marriage is an investment.

Treat your marriage like it's a business you own. If you're responsible for it, you'll try out all the options to nurture it. You will continually assess the situation, examine the problems and foresee the threats to keep it from failing. You will celebrate its strengths and milestones too. If you treat it like an investment, you will prioritize it more than anything else.

Don't wait for your marriage to get miserable to deserve your attention. Give your union ample attention, address your and your partner's needs and resolve your relationship issues to prevent any save-my-marriage battle.




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