Guest guest Posted May 15, 2004 Report Share Posted May 15, 2004 Mel, Not too awfully long ago a young fellow came to the group with RA. His wife, upon discovering his illness, bailed out. A similar circumstance occured with a young woman who came to the group, and found herself sans husband. When a young man marries his hopes, dreams and desires are often filled by a loving, attentive and affectionate wife. When they, or her especially, decide to have children her affection becomes the thing of his dreams, so wanted does he seem to be. Of course, this assumes things run their natural course and he does not feel like he's being used for stud. Then his loving bride gets pregnant and he's poised for all that may come... sort of. He sees her sick and says, it'll pass soon. He dolts on her and if things go well, the second trimester is reminiscent of times before. Then he sees some other guys and complains about his wife being sick, or unresponsive, or inattentive, or whatever. They all look at him, fathers every one, and say to him with absolutely straight faces that it will all go back to " normal " after the baby comes. He smiles, they turn away as a group and laugh at their joke for they all know to a man that in fact things will never be the same for this naive young buck, and his amorous yearnings will meet with frustration. Men as a rule enmasse don't share such " realities " with thier younger brethren. It's like some right of passage. They had to go through it, he can go through it too. But if he stays the course, be filled with something considerably different -- and better. He will become someone new: responsible, dedicated, serious in ways never imagined. He will also be forced to grow, become patient, see his wife in a new way, etc. My point is simple: life is a growth process. As adults we choose how to grow. You can grow together and stronger by intent; or weaker and more self-indulgent, also by intent. You choose. God gave your son both a mother and a father. The Bible defines an orphan differently than we do. An orphan in God's economy is any child without a father. Not a child without father or mother, but one just without a father. Thus a single mother with child whose husband had died would be a " family " of a widow and orphan. Think about that as it relates to our country today: By God's definition we are rightly called a fatherless nation. Your boy will learn from both parents that God gave him; he will learn good things and bad things from both of you. He gave you a husband with a specific set of instructions, and He gave your husband a wife with just as specific a set of instructions. Rather than looking at his faults, foibles and failures, of which there are doubtless plenty, read Corinthians to see what his instructions are, what is required of him. Then read yours. And before finding those very obvious faults, check the mirror for a log. Arguments require contention. Contention is an evil spirit bent on destruction: destroying your marriage, destroying your family, destroying your future, destroying your child's future, destroying you and creating an inheiritance of mistrust, failure and destruction. It appreciates being nursed and will gladly feed on the sympathetic comments of others. Peace need not be sought for its own sake; it will come naturally as you both WORK to and earnestly obey your God. Being honest takes work too. It's not necessarily an issue of mistrust, it's more often an issue of fear -- self cowardice. And it takes WORK and GROWTH and INTENT to become honest, especially when the risk is great. Recognize your enemy -- it is not your husband. Who is the father of fear? Who is the father of lies? Who is the father of confusion? You are physically better, are you spiritually better? Geoff Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 15, 2004 Report Share Posted May 15, 2004 Mel, I most certainly agree with all that Geoff said, but if you do not want to look at it from a spiritual standpoint, think about it as what's best for your child. Once two adults decide to have children, then the child comes first and their own wants and desires must come second. After studying the generation of the 70s that has now come of age, and the many divorces suffered during that time, they now realize that divorce is NOT good for the children even if the parents are unhappy in the marriage. Too bad. The kids have to come first. Whether mom and dad are in the heavenly bliss of marriage or not doesn't make any difference to them, they don't know or understand. They are but children. They need the security of Mommy and Daddy. So if you have big dreams of something, time to put them on the back burner for 20 years or so. You have a big responsibility just raising a happy and secure child. Divorce is not an option. It's made too easy in this country and we are not reaping any rewards from it nowadays. Even so called dysfunctional families are still families. Just my 2 cents worth. Jill Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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