9 Things To Do To Have a Practically Perfect Marriage

Aloooooooooha! From Ko Olina, Hawaii, just northwest of Honolulu on Oahu, where Susan and I celebrated our 36th wedding anniversary last night. A Great! time was had by all. Not just last night, but almost every night of our wedded life, we have gone to sleep happy being married with each other and looking forward to staying that way the next day.

Many of the people we meet in her family medical practice and my lifecycle law practice, however, are not nearly as happy as we are. We talked about America’s 50% divorce rate a lot this past week during our Last Year – Next Year Planning Week in Hawaii and we’ve decided to work during our entire 37th year cohosting a Sunday morning podcast called Marital Symbiotics – How to Collaboratively Start, Strengthen, Sustain, Save, and, If Need Be,  Stop Your Marriage By Doing What’s Best for Everyone Involved. I doubt we will say that whole title very often. For the most part, we will call it simply Marital Symbiotics.

Last night we recorded the first audio podcast, which will be released next Sunday, discussing Things To Do To Have a Practically Perfect Marriage. If you want to stay married for the long term, then you must do at least these 9 things:

  1. Affirmatively want to stay married all the time – every second of every minute, hour, day, week, month, year, decade, and score of the rest of your lawfully wedded life.
  2. Agree and live by the rock hard promise to never give up on your marriage at any time the other of you has.
  3. Prioritize your spouse and your marriage before all others, except God and your self.
  4. Be thrilled with a practically perfect marriage.
  5. Recognize and avoid threats to your marriage.
  6. Be comfortable in your own skin and help your spouse be comfortable in his or hers.
  7. Lean in, lean back, lean out, and lean down.
  8. Complement and compliment each other early, often, and always.
  9. Share your self.

These will be the topics for the first nine weeks of the podcasts. Before we tell you what all of these ideas mean to us, we want you to help us hit your hot buttons by telling us what they all mean to you. So help us out by answering the following question.

[reminder]Which of the nine ideas listed above do you think is most important?[/reminder]

We’ll talk to you on Sunday. In the meantime, you GOTTABGATT!, so go out there today and be Great! All the time!

The 7 Most Important Things for Having a Practically Perfect Marriage

Hello from Dulles International.

Susan and I are heading to Hawaii for the 36th anniversary of our honeymoon there in 1979. We have a practically perfect marriage. Hopefully, the next 36 will be as good as the first.

How have we held our marriage together for so long? By understanding and using the P10 Principle to make our combined life Great! All the time! through marital symbiotics. We both know the best part of each of us and our marriage will quickly and simply die if we do not nurture the symbiotic relationship of our marriage.

Staying married nowadays seems to be one of the most profound challenges a couple faces. It takes constant investment of some of all eight of the types of our life’s precious resources (self, time, effort, energy, emotion, intellect, property, and people) to build and maintain a symbiotic marital relationship like we have.

Marriage is a psychological revolution that changes our relation to almost everything and everyone around us, not just our selves and our spouses. Priorities get shifted, roles get redefined, and the balance between freedom and responsibility gets massively overhauled.

Making a family, even a family of two, requires spouses to redistribute their resources, rights, and responsibilities. Creating one sensational single couple from a couple of sensational singles takes all of the seven affirmative P’s in the P10 Principle (proaction, perception, planning, preparation, practice, and persistence promote practically perfect performance).

Maintaining a practically perfect marriage and family at a high level takes using the P10 Principle almost every day in almost every way you live your lives in the service of each other. If you don’t apply the P10 Principle to your marriage constantly, you will almost always fail to keep the spark alive and a sparkless marriage soon dies a cold and angry death.

Here are seven ways to make your symbiotic marriage practically perfect: 

Ask for help. It takes two to tango. People hate to admit they cannot do everything they need all by themselves. Your spouse will always be your greatest resource, but you have to ask for his or her help, with specific details, in order to get the help you need.

Pitch in. It takes two to tango. People hate to be put upon, so don’t view your spouse’s request for help as a burden. Think of each plea for help to be an opportunity to excel at work, in this case homework, and thrive in life.

Give and take time off for good behavior. Make sure that each of you two individual people in your symbiotic marriage has time to himself and herself and commits to preserving some form of personal primacy. Release the guilt you may feel when doing something solely by your self, with only your self, and for your self. More importantly, release your partner in life to also live a part of his or her life alone. Alone time is critical for each individual to feel complete, which is an important ingredient for your symbiotic marriage staying practically perfect and increasingly and unceasingly vibrant.

Stay out late on a monthly date. Plan and execute one carefree night with your spouse at least once every month. Put your relationships with and responsibilities to any person, place, thing, or idea other than your spouse aside for at least one night each month.

If you’re a doctor or a lawyer or just an employee or a parent constantly at your patients’ or clients’ or bosses’ or child(ren)’s beck and call, get someone else to handle them, turn your darned cellphone off, and go focus for an evening on the most important relationship in your life (after your relationship with God and your self).

And stay out as late as your spouse wants to. Not until you’ve had enough, but until your spouse has had enough. Go out all night and don’t worry about when you have to be back home. This gives you excitement for your outing and a glimmer of your past life as a couple of swinging singles. Just because the rest of the world has structured responsibilities, doesn’t mean you have to live like that every minute of every day as well. At least once a month, go out and allow yourself to enjoy some open-endedness that reconnects you to the sense of wonder, possibility, and anticipation of the other you had while you were dating in your first month together.

Do something new and different. Skip the typical movie night, and instead, plan an experience that’s new. Novelty breeds testosterone, which hopefully leads to other breeding activity.

Plan your night out well in advance. Build anticipation and mystery around the activity itself. Anticipation is important, as is connects us to our imagination (the antidote to responsibility).

Plan your monthly date together, but work on it separately though symbiotically. For many couples, it helps if one person is responsible for the adult end of the planning (date night activities, researching vacations, booking reservations, etc.), while the other focuses on the coverage details, like handling your kids’ end of things (reserving babysitters, packing overnight bags for the grandparent’s house, etc.). Systematic symbiotic distribution works; one partner holds vigil for the family, the other focuses on the couple. Remember how much you need each other, and practice being grateful for your complementarity. Never blame your partner for not focusing on the same important priorities as you. Properly planned, prepared, and practiced, your spouse has his or her on oar to row getting your love boat launched.

And, finally, and, most importantly, when you finally get out on that monthly date night, do not spend the time talking about work, friends, or, if you are blessed with them, the children. Talk to each other about each other in ways that enhances your unique, intensely personal relationship.

Make homemaking easier through marital symbiotics. Cooperation is the name of the game. When you both work together well, well then you can play the same. You don’t have to sacrifice enjoying life to have a well-tended home. Shift cooking, cleaning, and other tasks from a chore to a quick and lively part of your morning, afternoons, and evenings. Clean house together, do the laundry together, cook together, eat at home and eat together. But do all this stuff as easily and efficiently as possible, by constantly looking for ways to make your homework life as simple, quick, healthy, easy, and inexpensive as possible.

Don’t depend on God to “work it out,” but rather plan your life together together. The important word here is plan. Structure doesn’t stifle freedom; it leads to it. This concept is often hard to get your head around, since it’s the opposite of what you have probably thought most of your life. The single biggest thing most unhappy couples do not do and the most important thing practically perfect couples do well is plan their lives in fairly immaculate detail using their values as their guide.

Pray together daily. The couple that prays together stays together. Whether your prayers are as short as “Good bread, good meat, good God, let’s eat!” or a long as the hour a day others spend talking to God, take some time to bond with the third party of your symbiotic marital relationship. As Solomon says, “A three-ply cord is not easily broken.” Intertwine the Third Ply in your practically perfect symbiotic marriage to keep it that way forever.

[reminder]Susan and I are working on a Save Your Marriage with Marital Symbiotics Webinar, but we need your help. Tell us, what’s the biggest obstacle to your marriage being Great! All the time!?[/reminder]

4 Things To Make Yourself the Go-To Guy or Gal

We all want to be the “go to” guy or gal in life. The person other people go to for advice, assistance, or whatever else they desire. The person others trust, admire, and respect for our compassion, competence, confidence, and demeanor, regardless of what is being asked of us and regardless of whether we are acting as a family barrister or a family butler, which seem to be my two main roles in life.

People seem to want their doctors, lawyers, other advisors relatively well-aged, well-experienced, and well-regarded. So, if you are not old, haven’t practiced your profession for a score or more, and are not even known in your community, much less respected, what do you do to appear well done?

Many people tritely answer this quandary saying, “Well, you just have to fake until you make it.” This is neither, however, the well-aged, well-experienced, well-regarded, nor correct response.

If you want to be the “one” to whom others go, then you have to  Continue reading “4 Things To Make Yourself the Go-To Guy or Gal”

4 Ideas to Help You “Get To It, Now!”

Being Great! All the time! is no easy task. If it was, then everyone would be it. We all have two sides of our selves. Our good side, which  positively drives us past our status quo and our bad side, which negatively either drives us backwards or at the very least allows us to wallow in our status quo.

If you want to be Great! All the time!, then you have to encourage your good side and discourage your bad side from the moment you wake up in the morning until you go to bed each night. And even while you are asleep if at all possible. To help you accentuate the positive and eliminate the negative and Get To It, Now! each morning, here are four ideas, courtesy of an old Rabbi, Yehuda Ben Teima, as written in Ethics of the Fathers. Continue reading “4 Ideas to Help You “Get To It, Now!””

7 Steps to Make Your Family Your Avocation

If you want to have a Great! family life, then you have to put more of your life’s precious resources into being the Great! leader of your family. Being Great! at work is one thing. Thriving as the leader of your family requires even more work at home. Work is your main vocation. Being Great! at home has to become your avocation. Continue reading “7 Steps to Make Your Family Your Avocation”

Judaism is a Source of Values That Drives My Greatness!

Religion plays a significant part in most people’s personal facets. Having practiced Judaism for all of my life, with my level of observance of God’s teachings in His Torah swinging back and forth several times in my 56 years, I have, since 1984 as our first of six children was born, been on a rising path of Torah observance. On October 20, 2015, I began an in-depth Torah learning program with the goal of achieving my first rabbinic ordination (smicha in Hebrew) by Rosh Hashanah in 2017. As my father Leo used to always quote my Grandma Rose, “It’s never too late to do good.” Continue reading “Judaism is a Source of Values That Drives My Greatness!”

Your Personal Facet

 

Say this to your self "All the time!"
Say this to your self “All the time!”

You personal facet is one of the most important facets of your life. Our discussion of your personal facet on the blog proceeds from the premise you are your most precious asset.

If you want to be Great! All the time! and own your own life instead of it owning you, then you must not only recognize, but also, more importantly, believe your own self is your most precious resource.

Why? Continue reading “Your Personal Facet”