4 Tips to Surviving Life’s Hurricanes – Together

By Margie Sims on Friday, September 27, 2013

4 Tips to Surviving Lifes Hurricanes Together

Whenever HWC contributors, like today’s writer Margie Sims, submit posts, my request is always that they be less than 500 words.  My goal is for you to be encouraged -within a few minutes- and able to continue on with your day.

So when I opened up Margie’s post and saw is was longer than usual, my first instinct was to figure out where to ‘trim the fat’.  But as I was pulled into her words, and the beautifully woven story, I couldn’t bring myself to shorten it.

So, yes, this post is a little longer than the usual.  But I hope you’ll agree that it is worth every additional word.

Until Monday…make it a great weekend!

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How do you make sure your marriage survives -and flourishes after- life’s hurricanes? 

My husband and I married in May of 1986.  We had our first baby by the time we celebrated our first anniversary.  We both desired a large family, and just after our seventeenth anniversary, we discovered number eight was on the way. 

With the exception of my parents’ failing health, up until that point, our marriage had been in pretty calm waters.  Oh, the regular irritants like broken washing machines and stomach viruses occurred, of course, but that is life, after all.   He was climbing the corporate ladder with a promise of a job relocation soon, our kids were healthy, we were happy. 

In July of 2003, we were living in Memphis and I was about seven weeks pregnant. That afternoon was like any other southern summer day with high temperatures and not much of a breeze.  Then the wind stirred, picked up speed and began not merely bending and snapping the trees, but sending them flying.  Straight-line winds -we learned later- that act like a tornado, only without the funnel cloud. Memphians wryly refer to it as Hurricane Elvis.

The power was out, debris filled the yard.   We all went out back, and as I waded through the broken branches, I saw the tiniest baby squirrel on the ground, umbilical cord still attached.  For some reason, it made me think of my own baby.  A sign, I would soon learn.

That night, in the middle of the night, I lost the baby.  It was my first miscarriage after having seven normal pregnancies that produced big, fat, overdue babies. Traumatic, to say the least.

Two days later, the power still out, we threw away all of the food in fridge.  For a family of nine, it was a small fortune.

On day three, the transmission on the car went out.

On day four, some dear friends invited all nine of us to stay with them until our power was restored.  I was so grateful to get a hot meal and a hot bath–a tiny bit of relief.  I will never forget their hospitality.

On day five the power in our neighborhood was restored.  People were cheering in the streets for the power company. With power on, we went home and restocked our fridge, only to realize by day seven that it had died.  For the second time, we threw away our food. And we bought a new fridge.

On day eight, the A/C joined the ranks of the transmission and the fridge. 

Then, to top it all off, the job relocation fell through. 

In span of eight days, we lost our baby, our savings, and one of our dreams.  The stress was unbelievable. It was the most pressure we had been under since we had been married. Hurricane Elvis left a mark I have never forgotten.

Fast forward one year.   We had a twelve week old baby and had just relocated to Vermont for a new job. Our friends had invited us to the annual Mozart Festival in the Greene mountains; I was holding my daughter while watching the sun sink behind them.  As the sun was setting to Mozart, it occurred to me that it had been almost exactly one year since that terrible trial.

I learned from that trying season, that though we may hope for and even experience long periods of quiet, hurricanes are just a part of life.  As I reflect on that trying time, here is how we weathered the storm.

  • LOOK TO EACH OTHER.   A few years ago, I heard an elderly man reflecting on the difficulty of The Great Depression and WWII.  He said, “Back then, we let trials pull us together, not tear us apart.”  I have often thought of his words, and they give me a new determination to face trials together every time.
  • LOOK UP.  Someone said, “God is either working in you or on you.”  Hold on to your faith. Trust in God and His goodness.
  • LOOK BACK. That was ten years ago, and whenever we face a new trial (and there is always one lurking, it seems) we point to that week and remind each other that we made it through that stressful season back in 2003, and we can make it through whatever is ahead.
  • LOOK FORWARD.  The revelation I had on that mountaintop was shocking:  If someone had told me during that awful week a year before, “Don’t worry, in one year your husband will have a new job and you will be sitting on the top of a mountain in Vermont, watching the sunset, listening to Mozart while holding your new baby,” I would not have believed it.  When your marriage faces trials, remind each other to hold on until it the end.

I would not have chosen to go through the pressures of that week so long ago, but I am thankful Hurricane Elvis came to visit us that day.  It was our first real trial, and I don’t think we would have strengthened our marriage or faith, to this magnitude, any other way. 

QUESTION: How have you and our spouse overcome life’s challenges together?

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Margie Sims is a writer and speaker. She lives in Richmond, Virginia, where she survives life's hurricanes by keeping the faith and the funny in life with ten kids. Follow her blog at MargieSims.com

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  • Acquah Theodora

    Thanks a million!! I’m so blessed by this piece. May the Lord continue to strengthen us with much grace for the hurricanes ahead.

    • http://www.happywivesclub.com/ Fawn @ Happy Wives Club

      So happy it could be a blessing!

  • Slong

    At least married people have each other to look to during trials. It sucks going through a hurricane season when you’re all alone.

    • http://www.happywivesclub.com/ Fawn @ Happy Wives Club

      It is certainly much easier going through the hurricanes of life with a helpmeet by your side. No doubt about that.

  • Neri

    this was great article..but not everyone’s storm passes. we have been married 11 years and continue to experience storms year after year. :( hopefully one day we can say our storm has lifted, but every year more keeps testing us. Pulling us apart. :( not sure how much more i can handle.

    • http://www.happywivesclub.com/ Fawn @ Happy Wives Club

      So sorry to hear that, Neri. I wrote a post about a message I received from a member of this club a few months ago. It might inspire you. http://www.happywivesclub.com/the-one-thing-you-need-to-know-today-about-your-marriage/

    • TheZooCrew

      My husband and I have been together for 17 years. We now have 10 children. I’ve birthed two, step-parented five, adopted one, and we are now guardians for two more. I could have never imagined the heartache and trials that we would have to face and continue to face day after day, year after year. At times it can be overbearing. My go to saying is, “If it’s not one kid, it’s three. If it’s not one thing, it’s ten.” We never seem to get a break from the insanity, and it’s always heavy stuff. No small potatoes here. The one thing I can say that holds us together when we just don’t know how much we can handle, and our minds do go “there”, is that we are 100% committed to each other. Period. With faith and commitment ALL THINGS can be faced, battled, and conquered…TOGETHER. Keep the faith, and stay committed. You got this!

      • http://www.happywivesclub.com/ Fawn @ Happy Wives Club

        What an encouraging note. Thank you for taking the time to share what holds your marriage together so we can all be inspired!

  • B

    Definitely looking to God and looking to each other are the only ways to make it through those hard life storms. My husband and I are kind of in the middle of one right now and every day it seems a little more overwhelming; but God is faithful and good, ALWAYS. Even when life isn’t. And the storms never really go away. There are good days and bad days, but every day brings a new set of trials and tests. Some we are prepared for; some we aren’t. But trusting God and sticking with our spouse makes it all worthwhile.

    • http://www.happywivesclub.com/ Fawn @ Happy Wives Club

      Yes, it does! Thanks for stopping by, B.