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What every marriage needs.


A newspaper columnist Noun 1. newspaper columnist - a columnist who writes for newspapers
agony aunt - a newspaper columnist who answers questions and offers advice on personal problems to people who write in

columnist, editorialist - a journalist who writes editorials
 puts it well: "We promise to work to stay together not because we think things between us will never change, but because we know they will."

In July of 1999, a crowd of marriage-improvement gurus will make a pilgrimage to the University of Notre Dame Notre Dame IPA: [nɔtʁ dam] is French for Our Lady, referring to the Virgin Mary. In the United States of America, Notre Dame  to celebrate 50 years of the big grandparent group of them all--the Christian Family Movement. Publisher Sheed & Ward will help mark the occasion by printing a history of this modern movement heard round the world, a revolution of a different sort that got its start on American soil.

The CFM Grandmother, Patty Crowley, still holds forth in her Chicago high-rise home on the shores of Lake Michigan. She and her late husband, Pat, were cofounders of CFM.

Though she prefaces any comments about good marriages with the disclaimer that she's been a widow for years, she's quick to respond when asked to name a crucial ingredient for a strong marriage.

"Common interests," Crowley says. "If spouses are interested in many of the same things, they do things together. And when spouses do many things together, they grow together."

It wasn't always so in Catholic groups. In fact, in the beginnings of CFM, Crowley says, the men and women were separated, like the Knights of Columbus Knights of Columbus, American Roman Catholic society for men, founded (1882) at New Haven, Conn. (where its headquarters are still located), by Father Michael J. McGivney.  and the Daughters of Isabella. Only later did the wisdom surface that marriages might benefit by spouses actually working on projects together.

But what other wisdom has 50 years wrought?

Well, the fact that there are no guarantees, for one thing. Crowley says one of her children is going through a divorce right now, and there's no way to reverse it or take away the pain. Successful marriage is not necessarily hereditary, and decades of marriage-enrichment groups may have collected insights, understanding, and experience--but not how-to manuals.

Second, people need to know early on that marriage requires work. Chicago Tribune Chicago Tribune

Daily newspaper published in Chicago. The Tribune is one of the leading U.S. newspapers and long has been the dominant voice of the Midwest. Founded in 1847, it was bought in 1855 by six partners, including Joseph Medill (1823–99), who made the paper
 columnist Eric Zorn Eric Zorn, born January 6, 1958, is a columnist and a blogger for the Chicago Tribune. Zorn plays and is an advocate for folk music.

Zorn is a 1980 graduate of the University of Michigan, in which he was a senior editor at the Michigan Daily and a creative
 puts it well: "We promise to work to stay together not because we think things between us will never change, but because we know they will."

As the numbers and different styles of marriage-enrichment groups increased, different flavors and emphases emerged: CFM, Cana, Pre-Cana, Engaged Encounter, Marriage Encounter, Retrouvaille, Rainbows for All God's Children, and other such groups brought together like-minded people to try to improve, save, resurrect, or recover from a marriage.

The common wisdom is that half of all marriages these days fail, both in and out of the church. One can ask why those that do make it succeed. What lessons have the marriage gurus learned that can be passed on to those just beginning a marriage, or perhaps to those just about to end one? After all, the church at every level (parish, diocese, national, worldwide) has given serious attention and applied serious resources to help couples succeed. Clergy, family-life ministers, and guidance counselors guidance counselor Child psychology A school worker trained to screen, evaluate and advise students on career and academic matters  have struggled with struggling couples; and they do have some telling reflections, if not answers.

Invested interests

Kay and Gary Aitchison, of Ames, Iowa Ames is a city located in the central part of the U.S. state of Iowa, about 30 miles north of Des Moines in Story County. It is the principal city of the 'Ames, Iowa Metropolitan Statistical Area' which encompasses all of Story County, Iowa and which, when combined with the , are the current executive directors of the Christian Family Movement. Not surprisingly they second Patty Crowley's plea for common interests in a marriage, and Kay Aitchison says couples also have to nail down those interests on the family calendar. A marriage simply won't make it in a couple's spare time; and shared activities--with just the spouses--are the lifeblood life·blood  
n.
1. Blood regarded as essential for life.

2. An indispensable or vital part: Capable workers are the lifeblood of the business.
 of marriage growth. Also not surprisingly, the Aitchisons make a strong case for the need for a spiritual base for a Christian marriage, not just church but shared prayer at home.

Quite often, say the Aitchisons, couples' involvement in the Christian Family Movement or similar enrichment groups works in quiet and indirect ways. The small-group dynamics of workshops or parish programs can show a couple how other couples communicate, build a spiritual base, and help create shared goals and values. It's caught, as much as taught. As new couples grow in their shared values, they inevitably start to reach out to others, to share their joy and their love. And the circle just gets bigger.

Kay Aitchison also makes the point that groups such as CFM provide a comfortable and safe place for couples in interfaith marriages.

"The small group is much more inviting to the non-Catholic spouse than the larger community. We find that CFM involvement helps interfaith (or interchurch) couples feel more comfortable with the church. It provides a lot of catechesis cat·e·che·sis  
n. pl. cat·e·che·ses
Oral instruction given to catechumens.



[Late Latin cat
. In many cases the nonCatholic spouse ends up joining the church."

But it takes time for that sort of small-group comfort to kick in, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Han and Megan Huang Evanston, Illinois Evanston is a city on Lake Michigan in Cook County, Illinois directly north of Chicago, east of Skokie, and south of Wilmette. The city was first settled in 1836, and has a total population of 74,239[1]. Evanston is part of Chicago's affluent North Shore region. .

They completed a one-day Pre-Cana session last fall before their wedding. Despite an overall positive reaction to the content of the mandatory pre-wedding training, they said there really wasn't much interaction with the other couples. And Han, who is not Catholic, said they left the topic of interfaith marriage until late in the day when everyone was pretty tired. They have not continued with any sort of group involvement since the wedding.

Group dynamics group dynamics: see group psychotherapy.  

Marilyn Zieserl, of Wilmette, Illinois, talked over a chorus of grandchildren GRANDCHILDREN, domestic relations. The children of one's children. Sometimes these may claim bequests given in a will to children, though in general they can make no such claim. 6 Co. 16.  when I asked her about all of this. ("No this isn't Zieserls. This is Jeremy!" said the preschool voice answering the phone.)

"Yes, CFM helped us a lot in the '60s, early in our marriage. It not only helped us hook up with an established community of good people, but led us into areas of communication we otherwise might have avoided or overlooked. They didn't spoon-feed us pat answers but led us to ask important questions of ourselves.

"It also gave us an appreciation of the spiritual element in our marriage as crucial for development. I see building a marriage somewhat like building a spider web--an intricate blend of physical, emotional, intellectual, sexual, and spiritual elements. Leave out the spiritual, and there's a big hole in the web.

"We also saw others go through what we were going through or would face someday," says Zieserl. "Any marriage of some years has learned the painful interplay of growth and suffering in a family--kids, crises, sickness, death--that both test and temper a married relationship.

"Dedicated spouses support each other through the turmoil and survive as stronger people, stronger partners, a stronger couple. That which does not kill us makes us stronger!"

A quiet but consistent lesson begins to emerge: couples who want to strengthen their marriages will take pains Verb 1. take pains - try very hard to do something
be at pains

endeavor, endeavour, strive - attempt by employing effort; "we endeavor to make our customers happy"
 to seek out groups of couples who have been there, done that, and grown through the experience.

If that is so, why aren't newly married couples knocking down church doors to get into such groups?

A bunch of reasons. Father Thomas Lynch Thomas Lynch is the name of several notable people:
  • Thomas Lynch (statesman) (1727–1776), South Carolina delegate to the Continental Congress
  • Thomas Lynch, Jr.
, a Stratford, Connecticut Stratford is a town in Fairfield County, Connecticut, United States, located on Long Island Sound at the mouth of the Housatonic River. It was founded by Puritans in 1639.

The population was 49,976 at the 2000 census.
 pastor and former representative for family life of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops, sets up an intriguing interplay of marriage growth.

Couples, he says, begin as housemates, grow into heartmates by sharing with each other their deepest emotions, and a very few "take the journey to become soulmates." At the spiritual level the average couple remains in a constant state of need and looks for their spouse to fill these needs.

"They do not know who their God is nor how to relate to him in ways that are life-giving for themselves and their relationship."

Lynch says most couples settle "somewhere between the state of being housemates and heartmates as their only option of living together." For couples to make the leap needed to become soulmates, they simply have to surrender to the need for Jesus Christ Jesus Christ: see Jesus.

Jesus Christ

40 days after Resurrection, ascended into heaven. [N.T.: Acts 1:1–11]

See : Ascension


Jesus Christ

kind to the poor, forgiving to the sinful. [N.T.
 to become real enough to them for his love to make all the difference.

Most marital problems are rooted in past hurts and within their family-of-origin story, says Lynch, "and only the power and love of Jesus Christ can heal those hurts and wounds." When couples have a distorted vision of what a marriage can be, parishes can help couples "frame a new vision and develop maps and strategies to realize this vision."

But Mary Jo Pedersen, of the Omaha, Nebraska “Omaha” redirects here. For other uses, see Omaha (disambiguation).
Omaha is the largest city in the State of Nebraska, United States. It is the county seat of Douglas County.GR6 As of the 2000 census, the city had a population of 390,007.
 Family Life Office, questions whether any sort of vision can enrich some marriages. She claims that anyone who has done marriage preparation knows some marriages are doomed from the start: "running away from your family of origin, rebounding from another relationship, or `saving' your mate, etc. etc. etc.

"If you enter marriage for the wrong reason or with the wrong person there's not a chance in you-know-where that the marriage will ever be strong, no matter what you do by way of enrichment."

Pedersen says couples need to start with the right attitude, a mutual promise "to take at least as good care of this marriage relationship as we take of our cars." She tells of a couple who went through two job changes in one year, serious illness, a move across the country, the death of one spouse's brother, and a period of unemployment.

"Now that's a marriage that's been rode hard and put up wet!" But couples cannot assume that they can weather such storms automatically. "There's nothing automatic about growth in marriage," says Pedersen, and couples have to work at it and seek out enrichment opportunities.

You're the one

Sometimes the very determination to "become one" gets in the way, according to some family-life gurus. Poet Khalil Gibran Khalil Gibran (also known as Kahlil Gibran; born Gibran Khalil Gibran, Arabic: جبران خليل جبران, Syriac: ܓ̰ܒܪܢ ܚܠܝܠ , in The Prophet, directs married people to maintain "spaces in your togetherness" (anyone who has not heard this at a dozen weddings, please raise your hand), but too few folks quote the next line: "And let the winds of heaven dance between you."

Don Paglia, of the Family Life Office of Hamden, Connecticut Hamden is a town in New Haven County, Connecticut, United States. The town's nickname is "The Land of the Sleeping Giant". History
Hamden was originally settled by Puritans as part of the town of New Haven.
, says, "After 20-plus years in the helping business I have stopped trying to get couples to focus on `good communication.'"

Paglia says skills and technique will never do the job. Instead he urges each person in the relationship to work on the self, to become less reactive and more mature.

"I get each to look at how they became chronically anxious long before they met and married each other, and that pointing the finger at the other to change or blaming the other for how they make you feel is the wrong focus."

There's no quick fix, but Paglia says each partner has to "calm down and get off of the intensity of the marital relationship Noun 1. marital relationship - the relationship between wife and husband
marital bed

family relationship, kinship, relationship - (anthropology) relatedness or connection by blood or marriage or adoption
. The way to calm down is for each one to go back to his/her family of origin and study their family and see how each learned to get caught into the emotional triangle of his/her parents, and how the multigenerational mul·ti·gen·er·a·tion·al  
adj.
Of or relating to several generations: multigenerational family traditions. 
 emotional process stuff got caught or transmitted."

Instead of togetherness, these troubled couples are practicing "stuck-togetherness," says Paglia, and they "are either stealing some self from the other or they are overriding the self of the other."

The result is two incomplete selves trying to form a whole marriage. The long-range solution is to work on one's own "emotional reactivity" and work on one's own wounds by making one's family of origin "a personal research project."

Paglia urges parishes not to try to solve problems that don't exist. He says that traditional marriage preparation doesn't work well. "Until there is a crisis, we end up chasing the couple." People have to feel the pain a while to want to reach out for help, and helpers are better off waiting for the call. Paglia says it's an occupational hazard occupational hazard n. a danger or risk inherent in certain employments or workplaces, such as deep-sea diving, cutting timber, high-rise steel construction, high-voltage electrical wiring, use of pesticides, painting bridges, and many factories.  for marriage counselors to want to step in too soon.

Paglia also urges parishes to embrace a family spirituality and stop pushing a monastic one that makes most family people "feel less." People need to hear they "are already sacred and holy people not because of anything that they do, such as go to church, say prayers, or help out at the parish, but because they are living, breathing images of God in our midst." People need to come to church not to find God, but to celebrate the God they've found at home.

Sister Kay Ryan Kay Ryan is an American poet and educator born in San Jose, California in 1945. She grew up in California's San Joaquin Valley. She received both bachelor's and master's degrees from University of California, Los Angeles. , C.S.J., director of the Family Life Office of Albany, New York For other uses, see Albany.
Albany is the capital of the State of New York and the county seat of Albany County. Albany lies 136 miles (219 km) north of New York City, and slightly to the south of the juncture of the Mohawk and Hudson Rivers.
 and current president of the National Association of Catholic Family Life Ministers, says spouses also need to be willing to take responsibility for themselves while being there for the other. She offers four hints for couples to use daily in the home:

(1) Pray for each other daily, "for the grace to respect, honor, and love your spouse."

(2) Make your commitment to each other basic or foundational for all other decisions in the marriage.

(3) Realize that you can't be responsible for the happiness of your spouse, or vice versa VICE VERSA. On the contrary; on opposite sides. .

(4) Take time to celebrate your commitment to each other, "in any way you can dream up."

Ryan suggests parishes find ways to partner with married couples, to avoid driving a wedge in marriage commitments versus parish commitments. Don't force couples to choose.

Just between us

Some marriage-improvement gurus are not big fans of the "two- or three-step approach to a better anything." David Thomas David Thomas may refer to: Arts
  • David Thomas (composer) (1881–1928), Welsh composer
  • David Thomas (editor), British editor of Punch
  • David Thomas (musician) (born 1953), American singer, songwriter, and musician (Pere Ubu)
 plies plies 1  
v.
Third person singular present tense of ply1.

n.
Plural of ply1.
 his trade as graduate professor of family ministry at Regis University Campuses
Regis University has several campuses throughout the state of Colorado. The main campus is located in northwest Denver at 50th and Lowell Boulevard. Other sites include: Aurora, Longmont, Colorado Springs, Denver Tech Center, Fort Collins and Interlocken at Broomfield.
 in Denver. He and his wife, Karen, have five "more or less" grown children, two adopted 5-year-olds and a through/he-years roster of about 70 foster children.

Thomas avoids the tactical view of marriage enrichment that reduces reality to "doing things." He likes what Garrison Keillor Garrison Keillor (born Gary Edward Keillor on August 7, 1942 in Anoka, Minnesota) is an American author, storyteller, humorist, columnist, musician, satirist, and radio personality.  said in an essay a few years ago.

Keillor says that between each husband and wife there lies a secret. This secret keeps them together between thick and thin. Neither would be able to describe the exact content of the secret, but each would give their lives to preserve it.

Thomas says Thomas Say (June 27, 1787 – October 10, 1834) was an American naturalist, entomologist, malacologist and carcinologist. He was a taxonomist and is often considered to be the founder of descriptive entomology in the United States and one of the founding fathers of the  that, as a theologian, he thinks the secret is that both are loved by God and that God takes pleasure in their marriage. He also says that fear or faith tend to keep relationships together; and strong marriages are based on faith, a faith which gives great meaning to all the acts of love which build that strong marriage.

"It's something interior and probably a little different for every person. I would say it is a conviction that the marriage is important, almost on a cosmic scale, and that this faith creates enough satisfying moments to keep [people] together, whatever the costs."

Despite his distaste for paint-by-the-numbers problem solving problem solving

Process involved in finding a solution to a problem. Many animals routinely solve problems of locomotion, food finding, and shelter through trial and error.
, Thomas does Thomas Bartwell Doe, Jr. (October 12, 1912 – July 19, 1969) was an American bobsledder who competed in the late 1920s. He won a silver medal in the five-man bobsleigh event at the 1928 Winter Olympics in St. Moritz. He died in Hendersonville, North Carolina.  have some telling reflections for couples with "problems." He says that communication as such isn't often the problem, but "misunderstandings" are.

"The marital relationship places us in a very vulnerable position vis-a-vis each other. We communicate in shorthand shorthand, any brief, rapid system of writing that may be used in transcribing, or recording, the spoken word. Such systems, many having characters based on the letters of the alphabet, were used in ancient times; the shorthand of Tiro, Cicero's amanuensis, was used , in simple looks and gestures, in partial sentences and shortened paragraphs." It doesn't always work well.

To nip the problems in the bud, it's time It's Time was a successful political campaign run by the Australian Labor Party (ALP) under Gough Whitlam at the 1972 election in Australia. Campaigning on the perceived need for change after 23 years of conservative (Liberal Party of Australia) government, Labor put forward a  for double-checks of what's going back and forth: "Here's what I thought I said, and here's what I meant." "What did you mean when you said . . . ?"

Sometimes the problems are not part of the relationship at all.

"Both men and women can enter hard times when their bodies, minds, emotions, or spirits (or all together) can change. Many of these conditions are driven by anxieties which are not easily overcome," says Thomas. And it's a sign of strength, not weakness, to seek outside assistance, "if only to learn what's happening."

Thomas also joins the family-of-origin refrain when he says we "repeat in a thousand ways the marriages of our parents--unless we intentionally do otherwise." Take what was good and get rid of the rest.

And here is where marriage-enrichment groups can shine, but not for the reasons sometimes given.

"I don't think we learn much of personal value from others, but we can learn wonderful things about our wife or husband in these gatherings." At the parish level such gatherings can encourage couples, says Thomas, along with similar encouragement from the pulpit.

"Most marriages are a lot of work, and it's always good to be reminded that God notices and approves."

By Kevin H. Axe, a writer who lives in Evanston, Illinois.
COPYRIGHT 1998 Claretian Publications
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1998, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Christian Family Movement
Author:Axe, Kevin H.
Publication:U.S. Catholic
Article Type:Cover Story
Date:May 1, 1998
Words:2650
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