Shoulder to Shoulder
by Amy Gentry
by Amy Gentry
Scenes from an Italian restaurant:
Boy meets girl with a bouquet of
roses and a box of chocolates at the door. Sitting across from each other
holding hands and eating with your meal one handed so you won't be the first to
let go. Candlelit table with French brand and pasta with the least messy sauce
that have on the menu ... Alfredo. Gazing at each other thinking, "Wow,
they really get me."
SCREECH, CLANG, SMACK!!!!!
Reality. 10 years later you find
yourself in another Italian restaurant with sauce on you chin, (and not too
bothered by it) thinking about texting your BFF about how many calories must be
in your Alfredo sauce. Oh ya... And he is still here but we can't talk because
we're eating.
Is this what a friendship in
marriage is suppose to look like?
Song of Songs 1:8
"Friends
If you do not know, most beautiful
of women,
follow the tracks of the sheep and graze your young goats by the
tents of the shepherds."
The friends of Solomon's wife are
telling her, "Hey, lady... Why don't you go hang out by your husbands
side?!?!"
Women want romance and nurturing and
we want to discuss our feelings and find out how our husbands are feeling too.
They were not made like us. Not wrong but different. They were made to work,
labor and toil with co-laborers. Side-by-side. Shoulder-to-shoulder.
Men thrive in relationships that are
built through shoulder-to-shoulder time. As the seconds on the clock tick by
men usually open up and begging to connect with those who are beside them
engaging in the same activity. A prudent wife would cultivate a true friendship
with her husband by sacrificing her busyness to focus on meeting his friendship
needs.
Instead of:
-Sitting at the baseball game with
earbuds in listening to christian music while reading a Christian book because
baseball is boring. (Done that one). Instead of watching the game, being silly
and having fun together.
-Cashing in on a road trip nap
instead of talking to my husband about different kinds of music. (Done this one
too)
-enjoying the A/C in the house
instead of making us both a glass of iced tea, grabbing a lawn chair and being
with him in the yard on chore day. (Grrrr... Done that one recently).
CHALLENGE: work on a project or
watch a sporting event shoulder-to-shoulder every weekend this summer.
P.S. "But we have nothing in
common" is the phrase I hear most often when discussing being friends with
your husband. Maybe you both don't like to digital scrapbook or watch English
Rugby, but you both have The Lord and your family in common. See... You do have
something in common. Start there.
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