“Kindness and politeness are not overrated at all. They’re underused.” – Tommy Lee Jones
I was reading an article the other day about a Science of Happiness course taught at the University of Bristol. The professors identified 80 or so psychological interventions shown to improve an individual’s well-being. One of those is acts of kindness.
I happened on this article a few days after replying to comments on my YouTube channel. In response to my video Are You Married but Sleeping on the Couch?, one wife wrote, “Yes…but I do not care…he is nasty anyway.” NOT a lot of kindness happening in that marriage.
And that makes me sad.
It doesn’t occur to me, or to my husband, not to be kind to each other.
I’m not going to say it’s all sunshine and roses. We disagree. We sometimes snark at each other. But mostly, we are kind and respectful.
After twenty years as a Marriage and Family Therapist, mainly specializing in marriage, I am no longer surprised by how unkind spouses can be to each other. But it always makes me sad.
I often wonder how the couple got so off track. Are they this way with everyone? Or just each other?
I get it. It can be very difficult to be kind to someone who isn’t being kind to you.
Letting It All Hang Out May Not Be So Great for Your Marriage
The Free Dictionary defines the phrase “let it all hang out” as “being emotionally open or direct”, or “to express one’s emotions directly.” Sounds great right? Like so many things in marriage, it depends. Yes, you want to share your deepest thoughts and feelings with...
Neither You, Nor Your Marriage, Are Guaranteed a Tomorrow
Last weekend was one of mixed emotions for me. I returned to my special place for the first time in almost 25 years to honor my mother’s final request. She died over 18 months ago and wanted her ashes buried at the cabin our family once owned in the Sierra Nevada...
Do You or Your Wife Make the First Move?
No, I’m not talking about initiating sex. I’m talking about after you’ve had a disagreement or a fight. Who reaches out to the other first? And is it always the same person? Because the details of how the two of you repair the breech in your marriage matters. All...
But, if my wife said to a complete stranger that I was “nasty”, I would want to know what’s going on. I wouldn’t like her thinking that way. But the answer isn’t to respond in kind. That would only reinforce her perspective.
Being kind in the face of unkindness is a superpower. It has the potential to completely change your relationship. Because it isn’t a case of whether your wife deserves your kindness, it’s that you and your marriage do.
If you respond to her unkindness with unkindness of you own, it diminishes you. And it will destroy your marriage.
In addition, when you respond consistently with kindness, it gives you the standing to address her lack of kindness to you. But if you both are wallowing in the mud, dirt will rightfully stick to you too.
No one can make you be unkind. You choose to be that way or not.
And if you choose kindness to your wife, you will change the tone of your relationship.
You’ve got this. But if you don’t, I’ve got you. Reach out and share how kindness shows up (or not) in your marriage.