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“Marriage is not so much about finding the right person as it is about being the right person.” |
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It was rather sad to read recently about the collapse of the celebrity
marriage of Aussie singer, Peter Andre. Andre and his wife Katie Price were
married after falling in love on a reality TV show called “I’m a
celebrity…get me out of here!”
Over the course of their three and a half years marriage they have gained
notoriety for their heated arguments that have been screened on yet another
reality show. The couple has gone from a literal Cinderella style wedding to a
separation that has become very nasty and hurtful and played out in full view
of the public.
It seems to me that there is always a common thread running through the
collapse of celebrity marriages: selfishness! Celebrities are involved in an
industry that caters to their every whim and desire, no matter how ridiculous
it may seem. The entertainment industry feeds that most basic of human
weaknesses, self-centredness as well as fostering and promoting it. So when
you have two people involved in an industry like that you can expect a lot of
selfishness to come out in their marriage relationship. No wonder celebrity
marriages implode so often!
But here is an interesting thought — we are no different in our
relationships! It has been my experience that the number one reason behind the
collapse of a marriage is plain, old fashioned selfishness.
Why won’t a husband pick up the tea towel for his wife and dry the
dishes for her? Selfishness!
Why does a wife disregard her husband’s wishes and still
buys her “must have” new dress or
shoes? Selfishness!
Why do two people refuse to listen to each other but still
expect the other person to listen to them?
Selfishness!
Why does a husband or wife seek to find comfort in the arms
of another lover? Selfishness!
Whether you are a celebrity or not you are still infected by the terrible
disease of selfishness. And when selfishness goes unchecked in a marriage it
usually spells out death for the relationship. Our tendency toward selfishness
is clearly in mind
in the following quote from a marriage counsellor:
“Marriage is not so much about finding the right
person as it is about being the right person.”
As simple as that statement is, it has enormous consequences for you if you
decide to put it into practice because it forces you to stop focusing on
yourself and to begin focusing on the other person, which is the essence of
true love.
I find this kind of wisdom about relationships in the Bible, especially the
Proverbs. Here are just two for you to think about:
“An excellent wife is the crown of her husband, but she who shames him
is as rottenness in his bones.”
Excellent here refers to a virtuous woman — a woman of tremendous class
and quality. A woman who is proud of her husband; one who shows him respect
and is unashamed to do so. Such a woman has the highest place in man’s
life — she crowns it! But a woman who openly despises her husband and is
constantly critical of him and his decisions is like an infectious disease.
Simply put, a woman can make or break her man. If she is going to
“make” him, then she will need to be unselfish.
And husbands are also told “to rejoice in the wife of your youth”.
In other words, instead of moaning and complaining about what she does and
does not do, remember why you married her in the first place and keep on
encouraging those good things in her today. How easy it is for us men to
forget all the good things about our wives and only focus on the negatives
that we see.
If we want to change our relationship for the better then we must stop
focusing on ourselves and begin asking ourselves how we can better serve our
partner — this is called unselfishness and it has the power to transform
both you and the other person.
Isn’t it time you picked up a tea towel?
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