Life
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The Power of Resilience In Your Marriage
Having the shared ability to bounce back takes practice, but will ultimately help you and your spouse build trust and overcome adversity.

"None of us knows what might happen even the next minute, yet still we go forward. Because we trust. Because we have Faith." ~Paulo Coelho

It’s easy to have trust when life is giving us what we want: when our marriage is stable and communication flows. Leaning toward trust when our health is broken, our relationship connections are tattered and we can’t find the words to express our own needs is where trust becomes our capacity for resilience.

In the moments when life is falling apart, when our best laid plans are dashed and lying in a heap of disappointment is when we have the opportunity to grow more resilient. This deep inner work is one of the highest forms of love—it is the work that transforms us into our most authentic and compassionate selves.

I often tell my kids that life is first a problem-solving adventure. Watching as they can easily become overwhelmed with life’s adversity has shown me time and again that the outcome often has less to do with the external life circumstances than what we bring to the challenge from inside.

I have tried to teach them by example that what transforms all life challenges into something that makes us more whole is our capacity to not give ourselves away. This is a kind of radical trust, tapping your inner resilience, which keeps you present to the truth about yourself and doesn’t allow you to make the situation worse with a downward spiraling storyline of victimization and blame.

Resilience, like love, is a skill that we all contain—like a seed of goodness that lets you befriend yourself when things go wrong. It is a form of self-compassion that holds your back and encourages you to try again.

Like love, it takes practice.  Resilience encourages you to know and play to your strengths.  We improve this skill in regular daily choices: by choosing foods that nourish instead of junk that fills; by spending time with people who appreciate you instead of people who undermine; by giving our attention to things that spark our curiosity and desire to know instead of getting lost in negative storylines that surround us in the news and on Facebook.

Maybe the best reason to dedicate yourself to building your own muscles of resilience is because it is the most effective way to build a resilient marriage. Many valuable relationships have been abandoned because one or both of the spouse’s did not have the ability to see beyond their shared adversity and hold onto the many gifts that were also present. 

Resilience becomes more powerful when it is shared, just like love—the multiplier of having someone show up with true tenacity of spirit buoys even in the darkest moments. All long-term loving relies on each partner’s ability to believe in a future that might not always be apparent.

This is the ultimate form of showing up for someone you love—having the courage to bear the disappointment of life together and the patience required to hold the discomfort and not make the situation worse by spinning it into a storyline that cements everyone’s pain.

The most heroic stories we tell and the love stories that get passed on through centuries share this one truth that overcoming the odds of life with compassion, trust and faith is the only life worthy of our efforts. You have everything you need to write your own heroic tale: trusting life begins with building your muscle of resilience.

Wendy Strgar, founder and CEO of Good Clean Love, is a loveologist who writes and lectures on Making Love Sustainable, a green philosophy of relationships which teaches the importance of valuing the renewable resources of love, intimacy and family. In her new book, "Love that Works: A Guide to Enduring Intimacy," she tackles the challenging issues of sustaining relationships and healthy intimacy with an authentic and disarming style and simple yet innovative advice. It has been called "the essential guide for relationships." The book is available on ebook. Wendy has been married for over 30 years to her husband, a psychiatrist, and has four children ages.


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