Saturday, January 24, 2026

Lessons of a Newly-wed


     Only close to two years married.  By no means a sage of wisdom on this matter, but here are a few things God has been teaching me.

Your spouse is your partner, not your project. Life is not going to be perfect, and after marriage, there will be more to see of one’s flaws and vices than what may have been known during the courtship period. Thing is, we aren’t supposed to be in a relationship with someone in hopes that they eventually become a person we can build a life with. We date them, because we believe we can build a life with them. If we are trying to build a relationship with someone, in order that they may fit our image, then the truth is the relationship is going to be self-serving, and the other person will feel like they never measure up or are being used. Neither feeling shouts love.

Marriage is not an escape from your past. What issues - whether it’s recent or been a long time - will creep into your marriage. Especially when wounds haven’t totally been healed. Often we marry someone, as a reflection (familiarity) or a response (wanting something different) to our own child-rearing years. Triggers - whether it be a tone, behavior or phrase - can come swinging at any moment. It can become tempting to see your spouse as a perpetuator of any abused incurred in life. The challenge is to look at a conflict at all different perspectives and evaluate. Easier said than done. But knowing that your past can influence your present helps to inform your role and responsibility.

Healing from the past comes from your response to present triggers. Triggers inform our bodies and minds that we are in danger. However, when these triggers occur in a safe setting, it’s important to breathe, and see the situation for what it is (to clarify, I’m not negating the REAL concern of abusive relationships…take that evidence and address it, as much as you can). Healing comes in knowing that you can find yourself in a disagreement or conflict and realize there isn’t anything to fear. And when you work through the trigger and find a safe place, healing can happen. It is ok if it is a process.

Your spouse is going to fail you. No person is perfect, but there is a special kind of pain when it comes from family. There is an unspoken agreement that the person who you decided to spend the rest of your life with won’t harm you. Thing is, it’s going to happen; you’ll get hurt. Seeking for the intention and effectively communicating needs without accusation will encourage grace and growth. Secondly, we must remember that we, ourselves, are prone to sin and, unfortunately, will fall to sin.  We will fail our spouse, too.  If we want mercy, then we should be merciful. This doesn’t excuse behavior, or seek to never address it, but it does mean that in addressing a matter, the hope is to work towards reconciliation.

Remind yourself why you love -and like - this person. I wonder if gratitude is the emotional glue for marriages. Bringing these things to mind helps bring joy in the good times, and perseverance for the hard times. It restores a relationship and encourages the emotion of, “THIS is why I chose you!”

Boundaries are grace in action. Often, boundaries has been a term high jacked to blur controlling the individual. However, boundaries are just stipulating what is acceptable for YOUR own self, and the steps YOU will resume to accommodate their choice of behavior. It protects from being bulldozed, but it also allows a person the freedom to choose what they want to do.

Marriage is a journey, not a destination. Getting to the wedding is just the start. Which means that there is a whole lotta growing before getting old!! Different years and chapters still bring in new things and focuses. The power of marriage is staking the ground and growing together - and that is a long-haul process. And remember, it’s not just about them growing; it is just as much about your sanctification in self-reflection, too.

Have safeguards. What lines do you and your spouse agree on to help guard its sanctity? The devil loves ALL KINDS of tampering…including adultery, disagreement, and encouraging insecurities. What “rules” are in place to keep your marriage healthy and growing in health? (KEY: respect, how it looks and sounds like is a huge indicator).

Healthy communication skills are a must. Engage in telling your spouse what’s going on in your head; don’t expect them to read your mind. Also, employ healthy forms and put away the unhealthy (blaming, put-downs, dismissals). “When this happens, I feel this, because…” Hear one another out. There are two perspectives on the same problem, be open to seeing things from a distant vantage point. Navigate when it is something to address or when it is time to let go (easier said than done; a lot of asking God for help in this department). Focus on the objective, not just make personal jabs. And as important as it is to address the negative things (conflict), also remember to mention the positives (gratitude).

Keep loving on and being respectful to the person as much as you can, even when you don’t feel like it. In marriage, we desire to feel loved, but it is important to practicing loving our spouse, even when they fail in being loving towards us. Yes, we can all cite Ephesians 5…but we are not released of our vows and responsibility to love, in spite of how well or negligent our spouse loves us. Above all, we still love our spouse, even in their lack, because we are honoring Jesus while doing so. Be mindful of differing love languages. Many confused feelings occur, because one spouse is loving the other as they understand love, and yet, they aren’t speaking the same language. Learn how your spouse receives love best.

Grow in a secure attachment with Jesus. Being loved is a REAL need. On the topic of finding out that your spouse is unfortunately, NOT the perfect image of Jesus, they will fail you. In their failure, it will be an easy temptation to question if you married the right person. Diving into having a healthy and thriving relationship with Jesus will help bring balance, but more so, an ability to persevere in love when it’s hard to do. Again, easier said than done. Especially, if you have insecure attachments with previous relationships, whether it be family, social or romantic.

Find opportunities to stay engaged and flirty. Not about the grandiose gestures, although, that is nice. Different chapters will require different adjustments. But finding the little things that can be done on a regular basis helps tell your spouse you still want them. A simple kiss, holding their hand…other physical flirting brings a smile while in the mundane.

Be aware of what is within your responsibility, your history, and how it influences the now. Your past does shape your present, and your present shapes your future. No one gets married holding an empty suitcase; not even the ones who come from the healthiest families. Recognize the wounds you may carry, how it affects your perspective, responses and expectations. Building safety in a marriage will take time, and that’s ok. Where you find an incongruence, take the proper steps to amend the outcome. And sometimes, the outcome is more about you than the situation, but that is case to case.  It’s not always your spouse that needs fixing for things to carry on. 

Get a circle of friends that you both can mutually trust. A rule of thumb I like to have: as a woman, I won’t talk to another woman whom I’m not comfortable with her husband knowing that information. Even if confidentiality is practiced, I act as if both spouses will know. Find people who will support BOTH of you in your marriage. Willing to see both sides, where both sides can be heard. That the couples you pick will fight for you in prayer and in friendship. Not everyone can fit this…some people carry their own trauma, others will naturally be biased (i.e. parents), others lack experience. The biases often can persuade a negative opinion of one, even if it’s unfair to do so.

Find godly wisdom from a healthy, long lived marriage. Speaking on experience, it’s best to find a couple who have lived holding onto those vows through thick and thin on the LONG HAUL. The irony of writing a blog on marital lessons as a newlywed isn’t lost. But in writing this, I’m trying to remind myself, for when there will be hard times. Some of the things I’m writing are things I’m learning, as I go, but others are wisdom gleaned from married vets. On the note of younger couples, it’s not wrong to ask them to pray for you. But they are not likely toto ask for advice.

Pray for your spouse. It’s easy to pray for a spouse while they are in their weakness. For “their” good, but really, to better “your” life. Maybe their vice truly is a sin, but I have been challenged to pray for certain areas, not just for how it affects me, but for their sake. Not in a sort of religious way - “if they could just this together, they’d be more godly” - but rather, seeking God’s wholeness and healing for THEM.

God isn’t going to send someone who is exactly just like you. No…in His humor and wisdom, you’ll often marry someone who has a different personality, temperament, sometimes even perspective. It’s all about how where one is strong where the other has a weakness. We’re not called to tear them down in that area, but rather, help encourage and build up. Sometimes, what you accomplish together is more expansive than apart, because the different variables pull in different gifts and interests.


Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Hey There, (De)Lila

 Hey there, Delilah
What’s it like to be in heaven?
Is it more beautiful
Than what was written
In scrolls found from long ago?
I can only imagine what you see.

Hey there, Delilah
What’s it like to be in His presence
And become His Man’s best friend?
God, we miss her so…
Please hold her close.

Oh, what you did to me…
Oh what you did for me…
When I was alone,
You were there for me.
Oh what you did for me…
What you meant to me…

For a sum of years,
You brought joy to my life,
Now I must say goodbye.
I miss how you curled up in my arms,
Always stood by my side,
Barked with excitement at my sight.
I wish the earth wasn’t so cruel
But I won’t play the fool:
I know you are without pain
And this ain’t the end.
So, I wish you well, my friend.
As you run, please tell
Our loved ones, “Hello”,
From us.

Oh, what you did to me…
What you meant to me…
Oh, The tears I weep!
The pain
I can’t deny
What you will always mean
My dear, Lila.

*parodied from "Hey There, Delilah." Plain White T's. 2006.

Friday, November 14, 2025

Loving You in Your Weakness

The hardest thing
About loving you
Is while you are in your weakness.
I had this ideal
That you would heal
The wounds buried in my soul.
Yet, in your humanity,
You have revealed
Your brokenness.

I hoped love would fix
The flaws I carried
Within my identity;
That your affection would make
Me a believer
Anything was possible.
But the ring proved itself
To be a mirror.

How much of my desire
Was, in fact and fruit, lust?
A longing to be worshipped;
And would your affirmation be enough?
But Love is not self-centered.
We all fail, and Its proof remains
When we remember
The dust from which we came.

So...will I remember
To carry you when the world
Sits upon your shoulders
For eternity?
Will I learn to bring encouragement
When critics await their chance
To jab at your hidden fears?
Will I pray for you while you fight
Unspoken battles you will not share?

May I
Hope in times of despair,
Believe in times of doubt,
Provide in times of lack
Until we utter our last..
For if God could look upon
Our sin, and desire
Grace for our immortality,
Then may I continue to hold
Joy in the presence
Of your face in my life,
Whether in darkness or light.

Tuesday, November 11, 2025

I Am Deadpool

     I am Deadpool.  
     Okay.  Not literally.  But boy...after watching Deadpool and Wolverine, did I get a reality kick in the heart.  How often have I desired to do something great?  Inspirational?  Make a difference in the world...only to continually feel like I'm out of place or not fitting in?  But more so...and this is what Happy was getting at - how often have I sought after the glory of greatness, in an effort to promote my importance?   
     Like Deadpool, I have sought for assignments and effort to prove to myself my own worth.  Sure, I wanted to save the world from it's own damnation.  But...it wouldn't hurt to have a minor credit that I helped make it happen.  Or so, I thought.  I mean...sure...I cared about the world.  Want the best for them.  But also...I wanted to know that I made my impact.  That this life wasn't just wasted.  That I did something that meant something.  
     Funny thing about that mindset is that often we overlook the little blessings in our lives.  We forgo doing certain acts of kindness for "better opportunities", because of the "need" to fill our love buckets.  Or worse, we can do EVERY act of kindness and then get butthurt, because no one thanked us for it.  Gratitude is appreciated, but it can become a curse when the giver requires it as a debt. 
     If there is one thing I am gradually learning about life and love...it isn't necessarily about me.  It's not about how the world can service my needs or ego...it's about how I can love others.  The Avengers probably wouldn't have needed me, either.  I would go in helping in every single mission, wanting the best outcome.  But if the best outcome didn't require my assistance, my ego would be devastated.  And that's the problem.  My pride can be my Achilles heel.  If everything I do is to build my own glory, then who is receiving the service of my actions?  
     Me.
     I am serving me.
     But it isn't about me.  It's about others.  It's about putting others above myself.  It's learning to rest in the love that God already pours Himself out for me, and knowing that nothing can remove His heart for mine.  When I stand in His affirmation, I don't have to serve the world for my gain.  And with that realization, I don't have to be a super hero.  Maybe the greatest acts I can do, is be present for the people and tasks laid in front of me.  No matter how little my name may be known or remembered. 
 


Image from Google


On the Charlie Kirk Assassination

     

Found on Google Images

  Why is the assassination of Charlie Kirk so unnerving?  Because it was in an accumulation of opposing thoughts presented, someone was killed for them.  It has been a growing trend for conservatives to watch how they say something.  If something came across as offensive, it could be labeled as intolerant - or worse - violent.  And when the public is encouraged that words themselves are violent, then the public will soon be encouraged to defend themselves against those who speak it.  That is, self-defense is often a physical matter.  A man was killed for just wanting to talk.
     He never threatened anyone's lives.  He never pointed a gun at somebody's head and demanded 'they should believe like him, or die.'  Rather, the public left called him a fascist; a Nazi.  Probably called him an ally to the Klan (oh wait...that was Trump).  The problem with these accusations is that they are based on the persons who ended up being the first ones to become violent.
    Looking back at history, we can all say Hitler was a bad dude, and the Valkyrie plot was justified, though it failed.  The thing is, however, the plot did not materialize until there was proof of violence on Hitler's end, and there were signs that it wasn't going to slow down.  And when I say violence, I mean the physical aggression or the intent to do physical harm.  While Hitler was propagating that Jews were the enemy, he wasn't being outright violent.  Prejudicial, sure.  Hateful, absolutely.  But did the rhetoric influence the public to take the next step, which was actual violence?  ABSOLUTELY!!  And THAT is the natural progression of fascism.
     Fascism doesn't start with physical violence.  It sows seeds of discourse, factionalizes communities, and when it tears apart cities and kills, it says it has done it in the name of self-defense.  It also removes the arms of law-abiding citizens.  Yeah, all these hints have hit our shores.  
     Now, can words be offensive?  Yes.  Should we create boundaries of how one should treat us, especially in regards to respect?  Absolutely.  But would we ever say someone is justified in taking physical action just because someone said something offensive or disagreeable?  No.  In fact, we teach our children that the only reason to be in a physical altercation is if someone else gave the first blow.  Otherwise, the way to deal with a verbal offender is 1) confront/set a boundary, 2) act like it never hurt you, 3) agree to disagree (and move on), or 4) create a physical distance to keep the peace.
     Kirk's approach was to debate and have conversation.  His death feels like as if Malcolm X decided to shoot Martin Luther King, Jr.  And if we're not free to speak our minds, resentment seethes and seeks an opportunity to bleed out.  Someone took that, literally.  I fear for my freedom to share my opinions.  I fear for our nation.  
     Over the last few years (since COVID), there has been an increase of violence over being hurt or offended.  Now, to be offended is a real thing to deal with.  I have had to deal with that demon and it took two decades of my life to defeat it.  But when you are so overcome with hurt that you become hateful, murder doesn't look so vicious.  Sometimes, it seems vengeful.  And I get it...unfortunately, ANY time there is an opposing point of the view, our instinct is to rise up in outrage.  I come from a generation that held ideas, beliefs or feelings described as lunacy by the former generation.  The dismissal card was often played.  The left had their thoughts, but when they proposed them, there wasn't any hearing out and explanation for why things were the way they were.
     And yet again, we live in human nature, which is prone to sin and rebellion.  Either there wasn't a response or the answer wasn't the one desired.  So 'push came to shove', as the saying goes.  Anger undergirding the desire to have a voice opened a way that when allowed to finally speak, they did so with such velocity, it became indoctrination.
     Sound familiar?  Heck, Hitler's rise to power was initially for the good of Austria and Germany.  After all, these countries were left destitute after World War I.  Nevertheless, the League of Nations didn't become the bad guys in WWII.  Hitler did - because he allowed his personal and public offenses to influence finding scapegoats to justify his violent movement in power.
     Charlie Kirk's death is a huge warning light that we are going down the same path as post-depression Germany.  Thing is, I think we are getting it wrong about who are the true fascists.  Fascism seeks to disintegrate all forms of dialogues,  desires absolute power, and destroys opposition.  Where did Kirk fit on that line?   His whole premise was to CONVERSATE!!  No...His death is a turning point.  
     Either we learn to listen to one another, even with opposing views, or more violence will ensue.  I'm concerned the latter may accumulate.  Will the left stop telling the right that they are violent just because they don't agree with certain things?  Surely there can be a solution to some of the things we disagree.  I fear that won't be the case, however.  I wonder if the left will condemn the violence openly, but still accuse any conservative as remaining the bigoted.  As long as we fail to hold people accountable for actions, I fear violence will breed more violence.  Will we have second civil war on our hands?  For, if a man can be killed for talking, will true self-defense have to be the response?  After all, our country has learned to demonize opposing political views, and one person has just died for them.

(Written on September 13, 2025)

A Mother's Poetry: "A Fountain of Joy"

The organ was full and about to burst;
He couldn't hold back.
First, he held his breath
Then he let the water gates spring wide
In a fling,
He let out a WEEEEE-iz
And a glee-filled smile to accompany.

Wednesday, October 29, 2025

Possible Government Shutdown Solutions?

 Dear Congressman ______________________,

I want to write on behalf of the government shutdown, and if I am not overstepping, I was wondering if any of the following ideas could be considered on a statutory or even federal level.  My hope is that a solution can be found that can be both economically feasible, but also meet people's needs practically, even if some ideas need to be modified, combined or consulted by an economist for detailed practices.

1) Graduated welfare system:   What if the welfare system was reformatted where at certain incomes, it could be gradually decreased, at a slower rate (than a 33% drop), in which families are encouraged to get higher wage paying jobs, rather than not work, at all? 

2) EBT: Is there a way for benefits can take into consideration people's rent/mortgage, as well as their income?  Or can it modify a gradual system to include working families?

3) Disability welfare:  It seems like if an individual is on disability, they are ineligible for work.  What if we modeled disability benefits after SPED procedures (i.e. assist where needed, and no more...ex: a regular physical wouldn't count, but specialized services would).  Additionally, determining how much disability benefits required could be determined by doctors and family members (i.e. cases of inability to care for self)?

4) Can we make it illegal for insurance policies to choose which hospitals/services they cover over patients' preferences, PLEASE?!  What if all insurances had to abide by the 80/20 rule until deductible was met?  It still would leave competition on premium prices/deductible level, as well as payment for co-pays and meds.

5) Pharmacies:  Is there a way to cap a percentage profit for medicine, beyond price of manufacturing/labor?

6) Medicaid:  What if SS/Disability/children under 18 are exempt from costs, and other adults on program paid $20/no income for 100% coverage or $0/no income for an 80/20 rule.  Increased income can use the already existing scale.


**The format to email our congressman was limited to 2,000 characters, so I didn't have much room to expand on my thoughts.  Hopefully, this can help.