Marriage: Seven Questions to Consider in Choosing your Ideal
Marriage Partner
Posted by Dr. Neill Neill
Choosing Well Is The Foundation
For A Good Marriage. Yet choosing is one of
the most neglected pieces of the process
of meeting, bonding, marrying, living life together and possibly having children. Choose well: the good and
bad outcomes of your choice will shape your life, whether a first or [tag-tec ]second
marriage, a Christian marriage, a common-law marriage, a mixed-race marriage or
a same-sex marriage
1. Can You Accept Each Other As You Are, Warts And All? You can’t change another person and you have
absolutely no right to try to change your spouse. At the same time don’t
promise to change if your potential partner can’t accept you as you are. This
in no way means that you have to be the same. Acceptance of yourself and
each other can accommodate wide differences between you. Acceptance is the most
basic issue. If you can’t accept the reality of each other,
walk.
2. Do you like each other? Liking is more basic than loving. Is he or she
your ideal ‘best friend?’ If not, consider it a big red flag. Amos 3:3
3. Are your values compatible? Are you open and honest with each other
about your values? For example, do you both value family? Do you both value
commitment and have a common understanding of what commitment is?
4. Are you compatible in the way
you express (and discuss) your feelings? There is probably no more disastrous
marriage than that between one who openly and easily talks about personal
feelings and another who can’t or won’t. The mantra of the latter is “I don’t
want to talk about it,” whether it is expressed in words, silence or leaving.
5. Are you compatible in how
positively you look at life? An optimistic, positive person and a pessimistic
negative person could drive each other crazy. They often do.
6. Are You
Compatible In Your Spiritual Growth? This is a life-cycle issue, that is, a very long-term issue.
People relate to something beyond themselves, and this spiritual inclination
becomes more important over the course of life. If you are both growing
spiritually over the years, ou will experience more fulfillment, even if you
have different religious practices.
7. Is Your Mantra, “Love Alone Is
Not Enough?” Good! There are lots of men or women you
could be in love with, but a tiny fraction of whom you could live with
successfully. . So remember this principle: don’t fall in love with someone
your intuition says you couldn’t build a satisfying and fulfilling life with.
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