Wednesday, January 11, 2012

You never marry the right person

First of all - I am SO sorry that I have neglected my blogging responsibilities! It has been one thing after another - flu, crazy busy season at work, cancer....

I promise to catch you all up but until I find myself a few minutes at work, a minute in my afternoon or evening (when Nick and I aren't watching election coverage) - feast your eyes upon this amazing article by the talented Tim Keller. 

Holy Amazing!!!!
Be sure to click the link above to read the whole article. You will want to, I promise!

In generations past, there was far less talk about “compatibility” and finding the ideal soul-mate. Today we are looking for someone who accepts us as we are and fulfills our desires, and this creates an unrealistic set of expectations that frustrates both the searchers and the searched for.
In John Tierney’s classic humor article “Picky, Picky, Picky” he tries nobly to get us to laugh at the impossible situation our culture has put us in. He recounts many of the reasons his single friends told him they had given up on their recent relationships:
“She mispronounced ‘Goethe.’”
“How could I take him seriously after seeing The Road Less Traveled on his bookshelf?”
“If she would just lose seven pounds.”
“Sure, he’s a partner, but it’s not a big firm. And he wears those short black socks.”
“Well, it started out great ... beautiful face, great body, nice smile. Everything was going fine—until she turned around.” He paused ominously and shook his head. ”... She had dirty elbows.”
In other words, some people in our culture want too much out of a marriage partner. They do not see marriage as two flawed people coming together to create a space of stability, love and consolation, a “haven in a heartless world,” as Christopher Lasch describes it. Rather, they are looking for someone who will accept them as they are, complement their abilities and fulfill their sexual and emotional desires. This will indeed require a woman who is “a novelist/astronaut with a background in fashion modeling,” and the equivalent in a man. A marriage based not on self-denial but on self-fulfillment will require a low- or no-maintenance partner who meets your needs while making almost no claims on you. Simply put—today people are asking far too much in the marriage partner.

3 comments:

  1. I may or may not have checked this every other day waiting for your next post :) what an amazing article, too!

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  2. I admit, I agree with Katie....been waiting :)

    And I'm dying to read your latest take on the election coverage!!

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  3. LOVE! So inline with finding the "Hero in Your Husband"!

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