Author Archives: Fawn Weaver

About Fawn Weaver

Fawn Weaver is the USA Today and New York Times bestselling author of Happy Wives Club: One Woman's Worldwide Search for the Secrets of a Great Marriage, adopting the same name as the Club she founded in 2010. The Happy Wives Club community has grown to include more than 1 million women in over 110 countries around the world. She’s an investor in real estate, tech sector and lifestyle brands. When she’s not writing or working, she's happily doting over her husband of twelve years, Keith (and sometimes manages to do all three simultaneously).

The Most Common Trait of Happy Marriages (5 Ways to Do It Better)

*Welcome to week seven of this 12-week series based on the New York Times® bestselling book, Happy Wives Club.  Join me each week as I share 12 principles about marriage I’ve learned from some of the happiest couples around the world.*

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Most Common Trait of Happy Marriages

Each week, when I come to the pages of the Happy Wives Club, I do so with the hope that someone will be inspired.  And not just anyone.  You.   Beautiful, wonderful you.

The posts are always written for wives because that is who this site was created to serve.  That is who has always frequented these pages.  That is, until as of late. 

Since the beginning of this year, I’ve seen a sharp rise in the number of husbands visiting the site.  Most come in hopes of learning how to make their own wives happy. 

Of course, I’d never attempt to give advice on how to make one person’s spouse happy as each marriage is as different as a fingerprint. 

I do, however, share what I’ve discovered to be the most common trait among happily married couples I’ve interviewed over the years.  

And seven installments into our 12 Weeks to a Happier Marriage series, it seemed like the perfect time to share it here.  Two simple words:

Mutual respect.

Whenever I share this, there is always a sigh of relief.  “I can do that!”  And then as they continue to reflect on those two seemingly simple words, they usually come back with a follow-up, “So what does respect look like and how do I do that better?”

Years ago, not long after I began this club, a local newspaper publishing a story on me sent their photographer to my home.  During our time together, he shared that he and his wife had just been in an argument over dinner the night before.

His wife had taken the time to cook a wonderful meal.  But when she was ready to serve it, he continued working on some photos he’d begun editing. She became frustrated. He responded in a like manner, and as is usually the case in these scenarios, an argument ensued.

I posed one simple question to this newly married photographer. I’d heard another counselor ask it of a feuding couple: “Think of someone you hold in high esteem. The president. The chancellor of your university. Your pastor.  Your rabbi. Think of that person you have enormous respect for and tell me how you would have responded if he or she called for you and said, ‘The meal I was preparing for dinner is now ready’?”

The photographer thought about it for a brief moment, gave a smile that let me know he ‘got it,’ and then conceded he would have gone to the dinner table immediately.

I reminded him that his wife was the only person he chose and subsequently pledged to be with for the remainder of his life. He wasn’t given an option in choosing his parents or siblings. He didn’t have the deciding vote in who would be his country’s president. He certainly had no say in selecting his university’s chancellor. But he held each of them in higher regard than he held his wife—the one person he not only had the pleasure of choosing, but who also honored him by reciprocating that choice.

Respect is not said.  Respect is shown.  It is seen in our day-to-day actions and the happiest couples have this down pat.  If you ever want to see respect in full bloom, just spend time around a couple who has been happily married for decades.  They joke with each other, tease one another over their flaws and quirks.  But through the jokes and teasing, the respect is always palpable. 

It is always there, in the midst of every word and every action.

To answer the second part of the question I generally get from husbands -how they can respect their wives better- I generally offer these suggestions (which are relevant to both spouses):

5 Ways to Show the Most Common Trait of a Happy Marriage:

1. Treat your spouse like they are the most important person in the world.  Because they are.  No one else has pledged their life to you.  No other person has committed to be with you through the ups and the downs, the good times and the bad, through wealth and poverty.  No person experiences your rawest emotions and greatest flaws more often than your spouse.  That alone has earned them a place above all other beings on earth.

2. Think about what respect looks like to you and replicate that.  Yes, what your spouse needs from you to feel love may be different than what you need from them (that’s why Dr. Gary Chapman’s The 5 Love Languages is so brilliant).  But respect is respect.  Ask yourself, “How can my spouse show they respect me more?”  And then do everything that comes to mind in response to that question.  The golden rule of doing unto others as you would have them do unto you applies to respect just as it does all else.

3. Do not allow a mistake to negate what has already been earned.  Respect, as most often defined, is “a positive feeling of esteem or deference for a person or other entity, and also specific actions and conduct representative of that esteem.”  We all make mistakes.  Every day.  Not one of us is perfect.  Not even you.  There is never a good reason to disrespect your spouse.  Yes, address the issue.  Deal with the mistake.  Don’ sweep it under the rug.  But when addressing it, try to always do so with the utmost respect.

4. Speak through a filter.  If you’ve visited this site for a couple years, you likely know my two favorite acronyms are AEOD. (Accept Each Other’s Differences) and NJLG: No Judgment.  Love.  Grace.  When speaking with your spouse, applying this filter to your mouth can go a long way.  If the words travel through a filter of NJLG –meaning, if you ask yourself, “Are these words seasoned with grace?  Are they without judgment and are they sprinkled with love?” it will be hard for you to ever say something to your spouse lacking respect. 

5. Remember that respect has no gender.  Women, men, husbands, wives – the key to this common trait among happy marriages is the word that goes in front of respect: Mutual.   In the happiest of marriages, respect and reverence swings both ways.  Your spouse gave up their most prized possession –their life- and placed it in the palm of your hands the day they said, “Til’ death do us part.”  There are few phrases more powerful than that, and the person who said them to you and meant it, deserves your honor and respect.

YOUR TURN: What would you add to this list?  In what ways can a husband or wife show greater respect to their spouse?

Until next time…make it a great day!

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Happy Wives Club Book

 

THE NEW YORK TIMES® BEST-SELLING BOOK: It’s been described as, “Like Eat, Pray, Love but not down on marriage.” Make sure to check out the Happy Wives Club book.  I had the great honor of traveling to 12 countries on 6 continents, interviewing couples happily married 25 years or more, with 1 mission only: to find out what makes marriages happy…and keeps them that way.  It’s a marriage book like none other.  Guaranteed.

Living Your Eulogy: How to Make Time for What Matters Most

Living your eulogy

Living Your Eulogy certainly sounds like an odd title for an article on the Happy Wives Club.  But this morning, as I sit in an oversized chair in my hotel room in Rancho Palos Verdes, California, this weighs heavily on my mind.

I am here for an executive board retreat.  And although I sit on a couple nonprofit exec boards, this weekend, I am here as the spouse.  

My husband, who would most certainly prefer to be sitting next to me while I write this overlooking the glistening ocean, is in a nondescript board room somewhere on the hotel grounds.

As I walked to grab a cup of tea at the front of the hotel this morning, I saw his group having breakfast on a terrace nearby.  

Keith loves red eyes (coffee with a shot of espresso), so while ordering my tea, I decided to order him one.  I then sent a text, “I got you a red eye and will stealthily drop it off.  I love u!”  

On the way back to my room, I went to the area where I’d seen them earlier and asked a young worker, “Please take this coffee to the tall black guy in the room – he’s 6’4″.”  

Twenty minutes later, upon seeing the text, I received one back, “Oh, they gave it to Dutch – wrong black guy.”  Moments later, “I’m drinking it now – I love you,” was his response.

When all our friends and family gather to say farewell to me for the last time, it’s memories and exchanges like this I want to be remembered.  That I thought of my husband often and tried to surprise him with little things he loves.  That I was a wife who loved her man with an endearing love, an unwavering love, a fully trusting love.

This is what I want to be included in my eulogy.

There will be no mention of my business achievements.  There will be no mention of my ability to multi-task and get through my overutilized email inbox by the end of each weekend.

Who cares about that?

Earlier this year, when releasing my book, Happy Wives Club, I set an audacious goal: to debut at the top of the New York Times Best Sellers list.  When it debuted at #3, behind Lone Survivor and The Wolf of Wall Street -both books based on hugely popular movies at the time and nominated for Academy Awards- I considered that a failure.

When the vice president of marketing for my publishing company called to tell me the “great news,” he was met by an awkward silence.  I was disappointed.  I’d set a goal and didn’t achieve it.  For months, I didn’t celebrate that amazing milestone but rather remained focus on how to do get it to the top of the chart.  The type-A in me wouldn’t let that goal go unmet.

But why not?

When the inscription is placed on my tombstone, there will be no mention of bestselling books.  My ability to keep the house clean, while juggling the writing of my next book, inking new business deals and building brand partnerships, will be nowhere to be found.

Because none of that really matters.

What will be on my tombstone, God-willing, is: Fawn Weaver -loving wife, nurturing mother, faithful sister and daughter, friend to the needy.”  That’s it.  That is what I hope to leave behind. 

So where do the emails, business deals, bestselling books, and everything else that has taken up the bulk of this year fall?  Nowhere.  There is no place for it on my tombstone.  There will be no mention of it in my eulogy.

In 1888, the brother of Dr. Alfred Nobel died.  In error, several newspapers printed his obituary.  When he opened one of the french papers and read the headline, “Le marchand de la mort est mort,” which is translated, “The Merchant of Death is Dead,” he was horrified.  The obituary went on to say, “Dr. Alfred Nobel, who became rich by finding ways to kill more people faster than ever before, died yesterday.”

It is reported that Alfred was so disappointed by what he read that when he passed away, his last will and testament -signed after his ill-timed obituary was printed- gave 94-percent of his wealth (in today’s time, around $500 million) to establish what we now know as the Nobel Peace Prize.  In getting a glimpse of what was destined to be his obituary, he decided to spend his final years rewriting it.

Dr. Alfred realized money, power and wealth are not what people remember.  It is everything -minus those things- that will account for your life: generosity of heart, love of family, care for people, graciousness and the like.  

Many of us take pride in our busyness.  But what are we busy doing?  If it is not adding to what we will leave behind, rest assured, it is subtracting from it.

So what are you currently giving priority to that will not matter once you’re gone?  I challenge you to begin, in this moment, living the life you want to be remembered for when you’re gone.  To give your absolute all to your spouse, family and friends.  

That email can wait.

Those dirty dishes will still be there in 4 hours.

Take a moment to have a glass of wine with the ones you love, toast to the breath of life, and commit to begin tomorrow different than you began today: prioritizing your life based on what you desire to be said once it comes to an end.  Because, ready or not, it will assuredly come to an end.

Until tomorrow…make it a great day!

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Happy Wives Club Book

 

THE NEW YORK TIMES® BEST-SELLING BOOK: It’s been described as, “Like Eat, Pray, Love but not down on marriage.” Make sure to check out the Happy Wives Club book.  I had the great honor of traveling to 12 countries on 6 continents, interviewing couples happily married 25 years or more, with 1 mission only: to find out what makes marriages happy…and keeps them that way.  It’s a marriage book like none other.  Guaranteed.

Kick Off Your Weekend with This Awesome Activity

Kick Off the Weekend with This Awesome Activity (for Two)

Kick Off Your Weekend with This Awesome Activity

Earlier this week, I came across an awesome marriage activity on a site I visit often and thought, “Our members would LOVE this!”

I immediately posted a note and asked the author, Lori Byerly, if she’d also share it with you.  I’m so happy she said yes!  I hope you enjoy this creative idea as much as I did.

Until Monday…make it a great weekend!

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How would your husband answer this question?

Who is the most courageous person you have ever met?

Or this question?

What gift would you bring to your spouse in the hospital?

How would you answer it?

One important part of growing your marriage involves communicating often – big things, little things, silly things and important things too. It all adds up to knowing your spouse better and the knowing builds a sense of intimacy; a feeling of oneness.

So, in the interest of encouraging couples to build intimacy, I created a free download.

A Year of Questions for You and Your Spouse

There are 366 questions (an extra one for leap year).  Print out the .pdf (click on the link for it to open in your browser or “right click” on the link and save to your computer), cut the questions into strips, put them in a container (I used an almond jar from Costco) and each day pull out a question to share with your sweetie.

Have fun with it.  And it’s OK to change the question, add a question, create your own rules, and so on.  This is a fun way of exploring each other.  And while answering your questions, don’t forget to speak the truth in love and listen well.

Blessings, Lori <><

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Lori Byerly is the author of The Generous Wife  blog and co-founder of The Marriage Bed website. She lives with her husband of 28 years in the beautiful Northwest (USA). 

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Creating the Marriage of Your Dreams (even when life begins as a nightmare)

Creating the Marriage of Your Dreams

For some, this will come as no surprise.  But for many, learning the happiness I enjoy in my life today was nowhere to be found throughout most of my childhood and teenage years, will catch them off guard.

It’s a story I don’t talk about often.  Not because I’m ashamed of my past or running from it.  Quite the contrary.  It rarely comes up in conversation because my current life bares no resemblance of my past.  

The wounds have long healed and the scars are so faded they are barely seen.

My wonderful circle of girlfriends (most of whom are proud card-carrying members of this Club) joined me on this journey of life 10 to 20 years ago.  So after I published my first book, and gave each of them a copy, they were floored.

Nestled around the center of the book, no more than a couple paragraphs long, they learned something about me they didn’t know.  

“When I reached that part of your book,” a host for Good Day Atlanta told me during a recent interview, “I had to go back and read certain parts all over again with fresh eyes.”

“All that time, I was reading it thinking you grew up happy-go-lucky and just continued that into your marriage.  And that couldn’t be further from the truth.”  

My closest girlfriends all began calling and texting me one by one, as they reached that part of the book, “Wow, I can’t believe you shared all that.”  Transparent was the word they used most.  The odd thing is, initially, I didn’t know what they were referencing.  I try to live my life as an open book so I assumed everyone close to me already knew.  But I quickly realized, only a few did.

Here’s the cliff notes version for those of you who don’t already know: rough teenage years, incredibly low self-esteem, attempted suicide twice, left home at the age of 15, dropped out of high school, and the list continues from there.  But that life -20 years ago- seems so far away because I decided 17 years ago that I would start anew.  I would build the life I desired, the one I believe I was placed here to live, and that’s exactly what I’ve done.

My husband, Keith, had an upbringing that was certainly no dream either; a nightmare really.  I won’t share much of his story as that’s not mine to tell.  But I will say this, his teenage years were spent planning an escape for he and his mother from his abusive father.  And once he finally succeeded in executing his plan (it took a few attempts), his childhood ended very quickly.  He became the man of the house while still in his teens.

When we came together as one, we were -and are- just two people on a journey, determined not to allow our past to write the future chapters of our lives.  A new chapter had begun.  And this one, we could write beautifully from the beginning.

For many, holding on to the past provides a safety net.  I was listening to an interview the other day of an unmarried celebrity who had been dating the same woman for close to 16 years and wouldn’t commit.  ”If you knew my upbringing…” he began to tell the host.  To which she replied, “Yes, but at what point do you stop allowing your past to dictate your future?”

I’m happy she posed that question.  The answer is now.  In this moment.  It’s not easy.  It takes faith (so much faith).  At times, it requires some gut-wrenching soul searching.  But it’s worth it.  The freedom is worth it.

The marriage of your dreams is in the now.  It is a daily effort to create and maintain a marriage so beautiful even the romance movies pale in comparison.

It takes consistent effort; building your dream brick-by-brick.  But when you stop allowing your past to interrupt your present, something magical happens.  That magic is a happy and complete you.  And a loving and whole him.

I’m not sure who I’m writing this for today.  It’s not necessarily a “happy” post.  But I’m hitting the “publish” button in hopes that it will inspire at least one person to -once and for all- leave their past behind and spend every future day building the greatest marriage they’ve ever witnessed.  If that person is you…I’m grateful you stopped by today.  If for no other reason, than to be reassured that a love like this still does exist…no matter how your life began.

YOUR TURN: If your life didn’t begin as a dream, but you’ve been building the marriage of your dreams, please share it here so others can be inspired by you.

Until tomorrow…make it a great day!

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Happy Wives Club Book

 

THE NEW YORK TIMES® BEST-SELLING BOOK: It’s been described as, “Like Eat, Pray, Love but not down on marriage.” Make sure to check out the Happy Wives Club book.  I had the great honor of traveling to 12 countries on 6 continents, interviewing couples happily married 25 years or more, with 1 mission only: to find out what makes marriages happy…and keeps them that way.  It’s a marriage book like none other.  Guaranteed.

God Bless the Broken Road That Led Me Straight to You

God bless the broken road

I sat out on a narrow way many years ago
Hoping I would find true love
along the broken road

But I got lost a time or two
Wiped my brow and kept pushing through
I couldn’t see how every sign
pointed straight to you

Those words piped into my earphones while on my morning walk earlier today.  

As the Rascal Flatts lead singer belted those lyrics, I thought about the broken road that made me the woman I am today.  That same broken road that led me to Keith and Keith to me.

Every long lost dream
led me to where you are

Others who broke my heart
they were like Northern stars

Pointing me on my way
into your loving arms

This much I know is true
That God blessed the broken road
That led me straight to you

On May 9, 2003, that broken road illuminated and the man standing at the end was (and is) the kindest, most loving, gentle, respectful and humble man I’ve ever known.  

Wise beyond his years with an ability to love me with complete abandon.  As if he’d never experienced hurt before, he fell so deeply in love with me that many questioned if it happened too quickly.

He never questioned it though.

Less than 4 months after falling in love, as the sky dimmed on that beautiful Spring evening, he proposed.  And before year’s end, we became husband and wife.

This journey, my marriage, has shaped me more than any other earthly relationship.  It has strengthened me, challenged me, stretched me and made me grow in ways I never imagined.

His unending love has allowed me to feel safe.  His unwavering respect and honor for me, has allowed me to go after my wildest dreams.  His friendship is a daily reminder that I was never meant to walk this road of life alone.

Now I’m just rolling home
Into my lover’s arms
This much I know is true
That God blessed the broken road
That led me straight to you

Every day, when I come to the pages of the Happy Wives Club with the hope of inspiring and encouraging you, I often forget my husband also reads this site and sometimes -although not often as he’d get embarrassed- it’s just good to fill this page with an ode to him.

After all, beside every happy wife is a proud and loving husband.  And for me, Keith Weaver is that man.  And his love is the reason the Happy Wives Club exists.  So to Keith:  Muchas gracias.  Te amo mi amor.

YOUR TURN: Do you remember where you were the moment you fell in love with your husband?

Until Monday…make it a great weekend!

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JOIN THE 1,000,000 MEMBER CHALLENGE: If you haven’t already done it, what are you waiting for? Join the club! It takes only a few seconds and, of course, is free.

Happy Wives Club Book

 

THE NEW YORK TIMES® BEST-SELLING BOOK: It’s been described as, “Like Eat, Pray, Love but not down on marriage.” Make sure to check out the Happy Wives Club book.  I had the great honor of traveling to 12 countries on 6 continents, interviewing couples happily married 25 years or more, with 1 mission only: to find out what makes marriages happy…and keeps them that way.  It’s a marriage book like none other.  Guaranteed.

Chart Your Own Marital Course (the longest-lasting marriages do this)

*Welcome to week three of this 12-week series based on the New York Times® bestselling book, Happy Wives Club.  Join me each week as I share 12 principles about marriage I’ve learned from some of the happiest couples around the world.*

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Chart Your Own Marital Course

“Marriages are like fingerprints.  Each one is different and each one is beautiful.”                                  -Maggie Reyes, ModernMarried.com

When you set out on a journey around the world to find the common denominator among happy and long-lasting couples, as I did, you expect to see incredibly different approaches to marriage.

Although what makes their marriages successful are similar in principle, everything else is very different.

For you, it’s probably easy not to compare your marriage to couples across the Atlantic ocean.  But have you ever found yourself comparing your marriage to that of those around you (in your neighborhood, at church, at work, in your circle of friends, etc.)?  

Comparing your relationship to anyone else’s -I’ve learned through all my interviews, spending time with happy couples, and in my own life- is detrimental to the happiness of your marriage.

This past weekend, my husband and I enjoyed a wonderful evening with friends who have been married for nearly 40 years.  

You only need to be in Miriam and Efi’s presence for three minutes before it becomes abundantly clear just how much fun they have together.  They don’t just love one another; they like each other.  A lot.  

According to their grown children, they’ve been this same way for as long as any of them can remember.

Keith and I do this a lot, by the way.  We love spending time around couples who genuinely enjoy being in each other’s presence.  

Some study marriage in school and through textbooks.  I’ve done it, for the past 11 years, through immersion.  I’ve learned most about creating and maintaining genuine happiness in marriage by being around couples who have successfully done that for decades.  And you know what they all have in common?  They all march to the beat of their own drums.

Even still, no matter how wonderful a couple’s marriage is that we are around, we never compare our relationship to theirs.  Like every other area of life, when you compare what you have to someone else, you always lose.

If you have a great marriage, and compare yours to those that seem less successful, you run the risk of setting your relationship up for a downfall.  Have you ever noticed that so many who esteem themselves (or their stuff) higher than others often lose what they cherish most?

On the flip side, if your marriage seems less “fantastic” than those around you, don’t sweat it.  You have everything you need to create the marriage of your dreams and you have the rest of your life to make it happen.  It will happen, as long as you stay focused on your marriage and your marriage alone.

Yes, Keith and I learn from others.  We even emulate things we’ve seen other couples do successfully.  That is healthy.   Really, that is wisdom.  But enriching our marriage with things we’ve learned from others is far as we go.  Comparisons -in every area of life- always prove to be far more costly than they’re worth.

After spending years “immersed” in loving and happy marriages, this I can say without exception: the happiest and longest-lasting marriages are those who decided years ago to chart their own marital course.

YOUR TURN: Are you ever tempted to compare your marriage to that of another?  When that happens, what do you do to mute that voice in your head?

Until tomorrow…make it a great day!

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JOIN THE 1,000,000 MEMBER CHALLENGE: If you haven’t already done it, what are you waiting for? Join the club! It takes only a few seconds and, of course, is free.

Happy Wives Club Book

 

THE NEW YORK TIMES® BEST-SELLING BOOK: It’s been described as, “Like Eat, Pray, Love but not down on marriage.” Make sure to check out the Happy Wives Club book.  I had the great honor of traveling to 12 countries on 6 continents, interviewing couples happily married 25 years or more, with 1 mission only: to find out what makes marriages happy…and keeps them that way.  It’s a marriage book like none other.  Guaranteed.

5 Reasons a Television Fast Is Good For Your Marriage

5 Reasons a Television Fast Is Good For Your Marriage

Do you ever wish you had more time for your husband?  Family?  When I wrote about this popular marriage secret, did you think to yourself, “Yeah right!  With what time?”

Years ago, I found myself short on time each and every day.  Keith and I were both working 10-12 hour days and would crash on the couch and veg out in front of the television until bedtime.

Then something magical happened.  We moved to a new place, and decided, for the first few months we wouldn’t call the cable company.  We drew the curtains on what had become the greatest suck of our free time.

Those first few months were eye-opening.  All of a sudden, we had more time to take walks together, exercise together, enjoy coffee and talk in the mornings without the sound of news anchors in the background.  

What we thought would be just a few months ended up leading to two years without TV (well, our TV stayed on the wall but we didn’t connect the cable).

If you wish you had more time for regular date nights or to simply spend more time together daily, there are two things you can likely do immediately to create more free time.  

The first is limiting the amount of time you spend on the computer or your handheld devices. Seriously.

I can’t even begin to tell you how much time I got back by limiting myself to 15-30 minutes a day on Facebook.  Looking at all my friends and family’s photos and status updates was great…except once I realized how much time I spent on it. Ditto the time I lose when I go off on online rabbit trails.

Do you do that too?  I’ll go to an online news article and then see another interesting article on the right-hand side.  So I’ll click that story, which will lead to another story, and so on and so on (this just happened to me 5 minutes ago, by the way).  If you’re like me, and can get sucked into this online world quickly, putting yourself on a clock (literally, a timer you can set on your smart phone or any other way you’d like that allows you to limit yourself to 15-30 minutes).  

The second thing you can do is go on a (minimum of) 21-day television fast.  The reason for that length of time is research has shown it takes 21 days of doing something with consistency to create a new habit.  Even if you decide to return to watching TV after your fast, chances are you will spend far less time in front of the tube.  Why?  Because now you are consciously aware of how much time you are losing by sitting in front of the TV and have discovered far more productive things you can do with that time.

There are 5 reasons a television fast is good for your marriage:

1. You have more time for each other. Even if you usually only watch 1-2 shows each day, that is now 30 min-2 hours you’ve freed up for each other.  You’ve created a window of opportunity for a daily ritual, date night or whatever else floats your boat.

2. You’ll have more energy.  There is something about crashing on the couch and vegging in front of the TV that is a real energy suck.  Not sure why.  But if you think about it, has watching TV ever given you energy?  But engaging in things you love, things that breathe life into yours -hobbies, dreaming together, etcetera- will naturally give you more energy.

3. You’ll be better rested.  For so many, the simple act of not watching TV prior to bedtime will provide the most restful sleep you’ve ever had.  About 8 years ago, I participated in a sleep study because I couldn’t seem to sleep through the night.  I would toss and turn and wake up often.  One of the top suggestions they gave me was to turn off the TV (and all electronic devices) no less than 30 minutes prior to bedtime.  Not watching TV at night will allow your body to shut down when it’s ready and you won’t have crazy dreams starring people you just saw on your tube.

4. More time for foreplay.  Hmmm…does this one really need further explanation?

5. Reduce stress, ward off anxiety, improve your mood.  Okay, so maybe these things don’t come just from you turning off the TV.  But they are things that happen naturally when endorphins are released into your body.  And the two most popular endorphin boosters are: sex and exercise (or sexercise if you want to combine the two).  Once you turn off the TV, you’ll create more time to do both of these things.  Exercise isn’t just for looking good, it’s good for your overall health, life- and even your marriage.

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Happy Wives Club Book

 

THE NEW YORK TIMES® BEST-SELLING BOOK: It’s been described as, “Like Eat, Pray, Love but not down on marriage.” Make sure to check out the Happy Wives Club book.  I had the great honor of traveling to 12 countries on 6 continents, interviewing couples happily married 25 years or more, with 1 mission only: to find out what makes marriages happy…and keeps them that way.  It’s a marriage book like none other.  Guaranteed.

This happy marriage rule may be controversial but it works

This Happy Marriage Rule Is Controversial…But It Works

**Welcome to week two of this 12-week series based on the New York Times® bestselling book, Happy Wives Club. Join me here weekly as I share 12 principles about marriage I’ve learned from some of the happiest couples around the world.**

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This happy marriage rule is controversial but it works

I’m not a huge fan of controversy.  Some people thrive off of conflict.  After many years of operating that way, I found it far more effective to find a middle ground rather than insisting on one right opinion.  

Sometimes, I post things I don’t expect to be controversial in the least, like Friday’s post, which got many in our Facebook community pretty fired up.

This aversion to controversy is likely what has caused me to keep one major happy marriage secret…well, a secret.  At least, I’ve not broached the topic on here.  

The interesting thing about this “secret” or “happy marriage rule,” if you will, is I am yet to meet a couple -who have been happily married more than 25 years- that did not swear by the importance of it. 

So what is this marriage rule I shudder to mention?

Put your marriage first.  Then children.  Then all else.

“Do you think I’m a bad person for saying that?” I remember Sandy asking me as I was wrapping up my interview with her for my book.  She and her husband were married 53 years before he passed away.  

“Of course not,” I responded.  ”Every couple I’ve ever met, who have been happily married for decades all live by your same rule,” I assured her.

I don’t remember the first time I heard this “happy marriage rule,” but I can tell you, every happily married couple I’ve interviewed (and I tend to only interview those married for at least a quarter of a century) have all done this one thing.  It was paramount in creating and guarding the marriage of their dreams. 

There are at least 5 benefits of putting your marriage first:

1. If you have children, they will thrive.  Research has proven time and time again that parents who have a loving and stable relationship instill confidence and reinforce stability for their children.  The best thing you can do for your kids is to let them see, hear and experience firsthand that you and your spouse are still in love and the family -even if it is a blended one- will be together forever.

2. Creates a united front.  Whether facing challenging times, exciting opportunities, or establishing boundaries for your kids, this united front is important to everyone around you (especially the two of you).

3. Teaches your children what to look for when choosing a spouse.  Being a living example of the marriage you want for your own children teaches them at an early age what love looks like (and what it doesn’t).

4. Helps you to create the marriage of your dreams…until the very end.  Marriage is a gift.  It is an investment.  It requires consistency and effort.  But it can also get stale and become stagnant if we aren’t conscientious of renewing our efforts to connect with one another daily.

5. Allows you to enjoy the empty nest years.  Have you ever met a couple who, after the kids have moved out or the spouses have retired, had to get to know each other again?  This is one of the most difficult things to do after years of putting other things ahead of your marriage.

If you’d like a step-by-step on how to accomplish this in your own marriage, WedMD did a great article on 7 ways to put your marriage first, that shares not only the how but the research behind why this principle is so important.

YOUR TURN: For those of you already doing this, what other benefits have you experienced from putting your marriage first?

Until tomorrow…make it a great day!

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Happy Wives Club Book

 

THE NEW YORK TIMES® BEST-SELLING BOOK: It’s been described as, “Like Eat, Pray, Love but not down on marriage.” Make sure to check out the Happy Wives Club book.  I had the great honor of traveling to 12 countries on 6 continents, interviewing couples happily married 25 years or more, with 1 mission only: to find out what makes marriages happy…and keeps them that way.  It’s a marriage book like none other.  Guaranteed.

12 Weeks to a Happier Marriage - Week 1

12 Weeks to a Happier Marriage: Week 1

**Welcome to week one of this 12-week series based on the New York Times® bestselling book, Happy Wives Club.  Join me here weekly as I share 12 principles about marriage I’ve learned from some of the happiest couples around the world.**

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12 Weeks to a Happier Marriage - Week 1

I’m not quite sure where I was when I first had this realization.  Maybe it was in the Philippines after interviewing a couple who’d just celebrated their 50th anniversary.  

Perhaps it was in Perth, Australia following back-to-back interviews with two happily married couples who have both been in love longer than I’ve been alive.

Somewhere between Asia and the South Pacific, I had this huge aha moment.  

I’d traveled all over the world, to interview happily married couples before realizing they were all sharing one marriage secret I’d never heard about.  Quite frankly, I don’t even think most of them took note that they did it.

I thought, How is it possible that couples on 6 different continents were all doing this one thing, and yet, most couples married less than 20 years -including Keith and I- don’t even know about it?

Prior to getting married, I heard from many the importance of a weekly date night.  I bet you’ve heard that many times too.  And yes, that is hugely important whenever possible.  Yet, many of these happily married couples I interviewed didn’t go on weekly dates.  

However, what each of them did instead, I’ve come to believe to be an even better way to stay connected.

Every couple I’ve interviewed (happily married 25-plus years) -from North America to South America, Africa to Europe, Asia to Australia- has a daily ritual.  They make the time to do something together…each and every day.

Nothing fancy.  No getting dressed up or spending money at a restaurant.  No spending hours in the kitchen trying to cook the perfect meal or dusting off the china.  What these couples did were simple.  It had been a part of their marriages for so long, some didn’t even realize they had a daily ritual until I pointed it out to them.  It was simply a part of the fiber of their marriage.

Dot and Ken in Cape Town have been waking up every morning for more than twenty years and having what they called their “daily board meeting.”  Ken goes downstairs before dawn every morning and gets two cups of coffee.  Dot gets up and and opens the windows around their bedroom.  Then they both return to bed, backs against the headboard, and sip on their cups of coffee while watching the sun rise.  They  discuss their schedules for the day and anything else on their minds. 

They do this every morning.

Miriam and Efi have been enjoying port and appetizers together every night before dinner for decades.  A tradition they began in Israel and continued once they moved to the US.  While their three kids were growing up, they knew they’d be joined by mom and dad for dinner around the table but the pre-dinner part…they weren’t invited to that.  And like Dot and Ken, the purpose of this time was simply to connect.  To share what was going on in their collective worlds, at work, with the kids, with extended family and friends.  

Around the globe, I began hearing story after story of daily rituals from couples whose marriages were so beautiful I stood in awe.  A time set aside daily simply to connect with one another.  Nothing was off limits.  They shared each other’s dreams and life’s hopes.  Discovering how so many successful marriages from earlier generations include this made me wonder, How would my marriage improve if I added a daily ritual?  

After two years, I can tell you, it changes everything…for the better.  If this isn’t already a part of your marriage, I encourage you to make the time to add it.  It may mean going on a television fast during the week so you can go to sleep and wake up earlier.  It could mean figuring out a way to connect for a walk around the park daily at the end of your day.  

Before I knew about this marriage tip, Keith and I were completely in love and loved being married, but had also allowed our work schedules to dictate our lives.  We were often so exhausted at the end of the day, all we could do was collapse into each other’s arms.  But this marriage principle takes intentionality.  As the saying goes, “You will never drift together, you will only drift apart.”

Here are 3 things having a daily ritual in marriage can do for you:

1. Keeps you connected.  When you make a commitment to do something together, each and every day, for the express purpose of connecting, guess what happens?  You begin to connect on a level you never even knew possible.  Every hope and dream, you lay it out there.  And then you think of ways you can help each other achieve those dreams.  There are no rules to when, where or what you do for your daily ritual.  It’s completely up to you.  But putting aside at least 15 minutes a day (Keith and I wake up early so we can have 45 minutes at the top of the morning) will draw you closer to one another than you ever knew possible.  

2. Builds trust like nothing else.  When you begin the day talking about everything on your schedules that day or conclude it recapping everything that went on within it, there is no place in your head for those voices that enter so many, “I wonder what he’s doing?  Why hasn’t he called?”  When there is nothing left unsaid between you, trust pillars are added on top of the foundation of your marriage to build up the house your marriage has built.

3. Gives you a structured support system.  Knowing you have someone to talk to about anything, at a set time each day, gives you a feeling of comfort and support.  You’re never carrying anything around with you.  Keith and I always tease that our rug stays clean because we refuse to sweep anything under it.  We talk about everything, and I mean everything, and having this time set aside each day ensures we have the time to do just that.

YOUR TURN: Do you have a daily ritual?  And if you don’t, what do you think implementing one can do for your marriage?

Until tomorrow…make it a great day!

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Happy Wives Club Book

 

THE NEW YORK TIMES® BEST-SELLING BOOK: It’s been described as, “Like Eat, Pray, Love but not down on marriage.” Make sure to check out the Happy Wives Club book.  I had the great honor of traveling to 12 countries on 6 continents, interviewing couples happily married 25 years or more, with 1 mission only: to find out what makes marriages happy…and keeps them that way.  It’s a marriage book like none other.  Guaranteed.

Take Your Marriage From Good to Great in 12 Weeks!

Take Your Marriage From Good to Great

If you could take your marriage from good to great or from great to extraordinary in 12 weeks or less, would you invest the time?

Well, that’s what we’ll be doing beginning this Wednesday night.

Every week, I will post the most important marriage tips I’ve discovered since starting the Happy Wives Club with a series entitled, 12 Weeks to a Happier Marriage.  

For the past ten years, I’ve had the pleasure of interviewing (and spending thousands of hours with), some of the happiest couples in the world.  

The kind of couples who, after 25 years of marriage, still gaze into each other’s eyes, are visibly best friends, and are fond of saying, “please” and “thank you” to one another on a regular basis.

Just being in their presence made me want to pull out a pen and pad and write down everything they have to say.  Each word, like a rare jewel of immeasurable value, was worth me recording.

Earlier this year, when I released the story of my journey in the book, Happy Wives Club, I knew it would transform marriages in every country it reached.  

I was confident of this because I wasn’t giving my own advice on marriage but rather sharing that of those who have been successfully and happily married for decades longer than me.

Although I’d discovered so much, I didn’t want to write a “how to” manual.  This was important to me because I’m not a marriage expert; I’m an intentional learner.  

Each lesson I’ve learned along this journey, as well as so much more I’ve discovered in my own marriage and from other happily married couples over the years, has convinced me that every marriage can benefit from learning from other successful ones that have been at it much longer.

It is with this in mind that I’m excited to bring you this upcoming series.  Why 12 weeks instead of 12 days?  I realize more would likely join me for this series if it were for 12 days.  But it’s hard to sustain lasting change when you’ve only had one day to learn how to apply a new principle in your marriage before moving on to the next one.  That’s why I’ve broken it up into one principle per week.

Every Wednesday night, I will publish the marriage principle for that week and it will remain on the home page until Friday.  So “favorite” this post in your browser or save it to your Pinterest or Facebook walls to remind you to return every Wednesday night (or Thursday) for the next 12 weeks.

For our first post in the series, I’ll be sharing the one principle I’d never even heard about until I discovered EVERY happily married couple I’d interviewed had been doing it for decades.  I called Keith from the other side of the world and said, “We have to do this.  Let’s think of a great way to incorporate this into our own lives.”  Now, that we’ve continued it for the past two years, I don’t know how we ever lived without doing it.  You don’t want to miss this!

If you want to get a head start on some of what I’ll be sharing, or learn the behind the scenes stories of couples who taught these lessons, make sure to order a copy of Happy Wives Club.  But whether or not you have the book, I assure you, the next 12 weeks will transform your marriage if you commit to meet me here each week.

Until tomorrow…make it a great day!

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JOIN THE 1,000,000 MEMBER CHALLENGE: If you haven’t already done it, what are you waiting for? Join the club! It takes only a few seconds and, of course, is free.

Happy Wives Club Book

 

THE NEW YORK TIMES® BEST-SELLING BOOK: It’s been described as, “Like Eat, Pray, Love but not down on marriage.” Make sure to check out the Happy Wives Club book.  I had the great honor of traveling to 12 countries on 6 continents, interviewing couples happily married 25 years or more, with 1 mission only: to find out what makes marriages happy…and keeps them that way.  It’s a marriage book like none other.  Guaranteed.

Are You a Gift Seeker for Your Husband?

Are You a Gift Seeker For Your Husband

A few weeks ago, I had breakfast with a wonderful friend.  Actually, it was a double date.  Keith and I on one side of the table with Carolyn and Bob on the other.  

As we sat across from one another, enjoying our eggs and toast, Carolyn began to share with us the amazing gifts she’d discovered since being diagnosed with nasopharyngeal cancer.

She’d already begun losing hearing in her left ear and learned from her doctor that, post surgery, all of her hearing in that ear would be lost.

“But so many great things have come from this,” she told us while smiling.  

She’d gone to church for the first time in many years.  She and Bob had grown close to several couples there and enjoying time with them brought a sense of comfort and community.

“She’s been talking to her sister,” Bob interjected.  ”They actually have a relationship again,” he said proudly.  ”I’m Carolyn’s ‘gift seeker’.  I look for the gifts in everything that’s going on to help her through this time of change.”

The moment he said that, I gave Keith’s leg -where my hand had been resting- a little bit of a squeeze.  ”I love that!  You’re her gift seeker.”  Then I immediately turned inward, as I usually do, and thought, Am I a gift seeker for Keith?

When he’s having a challenging day at work, can he always count on me to look for the gifts in it all?  Rather than trying to help him solve the problem or come up with a solution, why not make it my mission to look for the gifts in the situation to help turn his day around as quickly as possible?

As Bob continued listing many of the gifts they’d discovered throughout this trial, I realized, Carolyn was in the best place I’d ever known her to be and I’ve known her for close to 10 years.  Her spirit radiated gratefulness.  Her heart was at peace.  And she got there, in part, because Bob determined from the offset of her diagnoses that he would seek out -and find- every gift there was to be found in Carolyn’s life.  And he would continue to remind her of these things daily.

Could I call myself a “gift seeker” for Keith at that moment when I was inspecting my heart over breakfast that Saturday morning?  Maybe.  But I knew I wasn’t intentional about it.  I’m working on that now and if you ask me about this in a month, I hope to proudly declare, “Yes, I am my husband’s gift seeker!”

YOUR TURN: Are you a gift seeker for your husband?

Until Monday…make it a great weekend!

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JOIN THE 1,000,000 MEMBER CHALLENGE: If you haven’t already done it, what are you waiting for? Join the club! It takes only a few seconds and, of course, is free.

Happy Wives Club Book

 

 

THE BOOK: It’s been described as, “Like Eat, Pray, Love but not down on marriage.” Make sure to check out the Happy Wives Club book.  I had the great honor of traveling to 12 countries on 6 continents, interviewing couples happily married 25 years or more, with 1 mission only: to find out what makes marriages happy…and keeps them that way.  It’s a marriage book like none other.

5 Discoveries That Made My Marriage Stronger

5 Discoveries That Made My Marriage Stronger

A few weeks ago, while in Minneapolis, I met a popular food blogger, Amanda Rettke.  

She was kind enough to join me for an event I hosted at the local Barnes & Noble.  While there, I searched for a copy of her recently released book, Surprise-Inside Cakes.

Now, if you know me, you know I do very little baking (unless you consider picking a dessert up from Whole Foods and popping it in my oven baking).  But her book cover really drew me in and made me want to try one of the unique recipes.

In looking at all the layers and the delicious icing on the cake, for some reason, my mind immediately went to marriage.

An odd combination, I know.  But I love serving this community so I look for great lessons in marriage just about everywhere I turn.  And if I’ve learned anything in my 10 years of marriage, and nearly 38 years of life, it’s that there is a lesson to be learned in everything.  

Here are the 5 discoveries Amanda made about her own marriage while writing her delicious book.

Until tomorrow…make it a great day!

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When I wrote my recently released book, Surprise-Inside Cakes, I had no idea I’d really be the one in for a surprise.  Writing that book led me to 5 discoveries that made my marriage stronger.

Once you read my five discoveries, I challenge you to spend a couple minutes thinking about five discoveries of your own.  What are some of the things that have made your marriage stronger over the years?

1. We Are a Team:  It wasn’t always this way.  As a matter of fact, it used to be ‘my way or the highway’.  That (most obviously) got us into a really bad place and we eventually sought out help and support.  

One wise friend asked, “Are you two on the same page?  Such a simple question that offered up some significant insight.  The answer was no.  But we wanted to be, and therefore we made the effort to be.

When the opportunity to write this book was presented it all happened very, very quickly.  Even though my book is about cakes, making cakes, decorating cakes, decorating the inside of cakes, sharing my love and passion for all things surprise-inside cakes… everything that my husband does NOT do, I could not have done it without him.  As a team we tackled the long nights of me working in the kitchen while he did bedtime routines.  As a team we figured out the financial sacrifices that had to be made.  And as a team we celebrated the first milestone.  (With cake of course.)

2. Leaning on Him Makes Me Stronger: This was one of the hardest lessons for me to learn, and honestly is one that I continue to struggle with. Crying into my husbands shoulder offered me no comfort, I was convinced he would see me as weak and pathetic.  But it is in his nature to want to protect me and shelter me.  He couldn’t always solve my problems, but he most certainly wanted to be given the opportunity to try.

3. Having a Mutual Value System is Key: At the end of the day, after all the trials and tribulations, we needed common ground.  For us it was our faith.  We both feel so strongly in who we want to be in this world, but yet have very, VERY different approaches in how to achieve that.  I am more in-your-face, while he is a quiet (but oh so effective) leader.  Having a mutual ground, or place where our visions intertwined reminded me of my purpose when I would veer off course.

4. Listening to Him is Beneficial:  When I was making the 20th cake in 5 days and it was 11pm, and I had been on my feet for 14 hours straight, and things were not turning out, I would often turn to my husband.  I would ask him “Why isn’t this cake working?” and of course he wouldn’t know.  But what he did know is that I needed someone to hear me.  That I needed someone to ask me questions.  That I needed his perspective on the whole.  Thinking through him helped me regain my vision.

5. Our Time Together is Precious:  Hearing a word like DEADLINE on a regular basis can often mean that time is focused on the task at hand.  Which also meant that time with my husband was put last on the list of priorities. The book needed to be written.  The pictures needed to be taken. The kids needed support or meals or to be driven places.  There was always a need, but simply being there for my husband wasn’t one of them.

But I was wrong, there IS ALWAYS a need to remain present in our love.

You have to MAKE time together and be intentional with your relationship. Even in the middle of deadlines and school functions.  Share a kiss and a grateful hug.  Make sure your spouse knows they are appreciated!  Even better, plan a date.  You would be surprised how refreshing a romantic date is in the midst of a trial!

I was reminded of a quote I heard in church.

“You will never drift together, you will only drift apart.”

Having the opportunity to share my passions with the world is truly a dream come true.  I wanted to spend time on it.  I treated it like a treasure! I am so grateful for my understanding and supportive husband throughout the entire process.

Looking back I now can see that every trial that arose in the process has brought my husband and I closer together.  And for that, I am so thankful!

I am so excited to share this book with the world, and so thankful that I get to do it with my husband by my side.

Please do head on over to amazon and check out the book, it’s available for Kindle (for 60% off!) and in hardcover!

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