By Taisa Efseaff Maffey
Today is my anniversary.
Ethan and I have been married four years now, which I’m sure sounds like
nothing to most people. Four years is
not much of a milestone. And yet, I will
probably post something sentimental about it and about him on Facebook at some
point today. But really, this is nothing
out of the ordinary.
If you’re Facebook friends with me, you know that I regularly post
about married life with Ethan. Sometimes
funny things, sometimes mushy things. I actually
saw an article shared on Facebook not long ago that derided and bemoaned
Facebook friends who post too much about their significant other. Really?
What’s next? Boycotting pictures
of puppies and kittens?
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgIMdIPAWfxVutmX1G12P17l5AsfrqJAQDL8CEK5YEpLkkcYlTGWQdFwkuhAfcKGNc-xiTJyBm37p1_FTTv5Os06x1SCciRFIiEBQpboSiBmSyDTN3AZD3ttjlsYtRrbLxV2G5ggJrBz8o/s320/32.01.png)
Truly, I’m not here to judge what anyone else does or doesn’t do. I’m only here to explain why I personally like
to publicly celebrate my husband and why I would encourage others to do it too. Yes, even on Facebook, anti-PDA people be
damned.
For starters, I married a really great guy, and I flat-out like to
brag about him. Why? I want to honor Ethan and show off what a good
husband he is. Not to make anyone else
feel bad but because I want him to know I appreciate him, and I want to
encourage him to continue everything he’s doing right. I want to keep all that good stuff going for
us because I treasure our marriage, and I don’t want to ever take him or what
we have for granted. And so I live out
our marriage with thanksgiving, and out loud so he hears it and knows it too.
We all have our primary love languages, but the truth is we need
to be able to “speak” all five love languages with at least some fluency. (You can find out your and your spouse’s
primary love languages at http://www.5lovelanguages.com). We all need to hear the “I love you,” and the
“Thank you,” and the “I think you’re the greatest.” I once read that it takes something like 10
compliments or positive statements to counteract 1 criticism or negative
statement. Confession: I’m not a perfect
wife and I do regrettably sometimes find myself criticizing or critiquing
things that my husband has said or done… or not said or not done. With all my heart, I don’t want those things
to discolor how Ethan sees me as his wife.
I don’t ever want to be the nag; I want to be the encourager, the
admirer, his biggest fan and his safe place.
And so, I brag.
“Pleasant words are like a honeycomb,
Sweetness to the soul and health to the bones.” (Proverbs 16:24)
Secondly, I am hoping that other husbands out there will see
Ethan’s example and take some notes! I want
to encourage all husbands to make it a daily point to love on their wives, make
them feel important and special and beautiful and appreciated, listen to them,
show interest in what they think and feel, care to know and understand them
better, seek to please them. Apostle
Paul gives these instructions to husbands:
“Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ also loved the church
and gave Himself for her.” (Ephesians 5:25)
“So husbands ought to love their own wives as their own bodies; he
who loves his wife loves himself. For no
one ever hated his own flesh, but nourishes and cherishes it, just as the Lord
does the church.” (Ephesians 5:28-29)
Both of these Scriptures describe selflessness and self-sacrifice
as characteristics that husbands should have.
(Side note: These are also characteristics of a good leader.) The comparison is made to nourish and cherish
one’s wife as someone would take care of his own body and as Christ takes care
of His people. Husbands, are you
nourishing and cherishing your wife, to the point of making her a priority over
everything else? Are you putting her
needs and desires first, even above your own?
Obviously, I’m not talking about her “need” for new bedroom furniture over
your need to get your only vehicle repaired, but rather maybe putting her need
to talk and be listened to at the end of the day over your need to check out on
your phone. Or putting her need for some
help in getting dinner on the table over your need to watch your show or game. For the record, it doesn’t hurt to check in
with her and actually come right out and ask her, “How are you doing? Are you doing okay? What can I do to help you or make you feel
better?” No kidding, she will look at
you like you’re her own personal superhero!
Also, did you happen to notice that tiny part of the verse where
it says, “he who loves his wife loves himself”?
The fact is when you seek to nourish and cherish your wife, you are
activating happy, appreciative, loving feelings in her towards you. In other words, when you love your wife in
word and deed, seeking to fulfill her needs and please her, then she will in
turn seek to fulfill your needs and please you.
In this way, when you love your wife, you are loving yourself because it all comes back to you… from
her. Husbands, are you actively
investing in your marriage and in your wife’s well-being? One definition of “invest” is
”to put (money) to use, by purchase or expenditure, in something offering potential profitable returns, as interest, income, or appreciation in value.”
Okay, so we’re not talking about investing money here but rather
time, energy, attention, emotional and verbal engagement, you get the idea. But the goal is the same: to invest “in
something offering potential profitable returns, as […] appreciation in
value.” Not that the goal of marriage is
to seek what you can get out of it. That is the definition of selfishness,
the exact opposite of what those Scriptures above were talking about, and it’s a
recipe for disaster when it comes to marriage.
No, the point is that marriage is a symbiotic relationship. The more a husband invests himself in his
marriage and his wife, the higher the profitable return he will receive in the
marriage and the greater his wife will appreciate in value. Case in point: My husband makes me a better
wife by the way that he loves me and treats me.
If he withheld his time, attention, or affection from me or outright treated
me poorly, any interest or incentive I might have had in treating him well or pleasing
him would steadily decrease and our marriage would self-destruct. But Ethan treats me extraordinarily well, so
my natural response is to reciprocate.
This is how it should be.
“If a man has enough horse sense to treat his wife like a
thoroughbred, she will never become an old nag.” (Quoted from a decorative
plate that used to hang above the kitchen stove in my house while I was growing
up)
Lastly, I want to encourage other wives to make it a point to
regularly praise their husbands. I’ve
written about this before in other posts (Marriage is Not 50/50), but it bears repeating: It’s a common
joke in our culture that husbands are always wrong and the wives are always
right. More than once, you’ve probably
watched a TV sitcom where the wife scoffs when her husband tries to help out
around the house. The response is
usually something like, “Well, what do you want? A medal?” or criticizing them for not doing
it exactly right. This kind of reaction
basically guarantees that your husband will never try to do anything nice for
you ever again!
“It is better to dwell in a corner of a housetop,
Than in a house shared with a contentious woman.” (Proverbs 25:24)
“A quarrelsome wife is like the dripping of a leaky roof in a
rainstorm;
Restraining her is like restraining the wind or grasping oil with
the hand.” (Proverbs 27:15-16)
Instead, show respect for your husband as a man and reinforce the
good things that he does with words of praise, encouragement, and
thanksgiving. It’s that marital
symbiosis I mentioned before – the natural reciprocity of taking care of your
spouse’s needs and then having your needs met in return. I think we wives sometimes forget that husbands
have emotional needs too. They like
feeling needed by us, they covet our approval, and above all they need our
respect.
“Nevertheless let each one of you in particular so love his own
wife as himself, and let the wife see that she respects her husband.”
(Ephesians 5:33)
Even if it’s something small like changing a lightbulb, thank
him. Even if it’s something you think he
should be doing anyway, like mowing the lawn, acknowledge that he did a good
job making the yard look nicer. Even if
he didn’t notice you got your hair cut last week, tell him he looks handsome
today. Even if you can’t immediately
think of something nice to say because there are complaints and criticisms in
your head competing with each other, find something positive to focus on and
praise him. Retrain your brain to look
for everything he does that’s helpful, good, and right, and seize every
opportunity you can to say something encouraging to him and about him, especially when he’s in earshot. The more you do, the harder he will work to
please you. It’s a win-win.
“Finally, brethren, whatever things are true, whatever things are noble, whatever things are just, whatever things are pure, whatever things are lovely, whatever things are of good report, if there is any virtue and if there is anything praiseworthy—meditate on these things.” (Philippians 4:8)
“Finally, brethren, whatever things are true, whatever things are noble, whatever things are just, whatever things are pure, whatever things are lovely, whatever things are of good report, if there is any virtue and if there is anything praiseworthy—meditate on these things.” (Philippians 4:8)
For the record, none of what I’ve said here
comes from personal mastery over these principles. I don’t claim to have a perfect marriage. As much as I love and appreciate him, Ethan
is not a perfect husband, and I am certainly not a perfect wife. After four years of marriage, we are still
learning and always trying to do better.
And sometimes that means going back to the basics. I once heard a marriage counselor share that
his very first assignment to the couples he counseled was simply… to be nice to
each other. Pretty good place to start,
I think. Some people, like the author of
that article I mentioned earlier, might think it’s overdoing it to openly
celebrate your marriage on Facebook, to brag about your husband or wife, to remind
others that marriage is a wonderful thing.
Personally, I’d rather overdo it than underdo it. Who’s with me?
P.S. Happy anniversary, dear! I love you.
![]() |
Photo by Marina Koslow Photography
|