“Blessed is he who expects nothing, for he shall never be disappointed.” Alexander Pope
Getting married to make you happy is self-delusional. An unhappy marriage ends in a divorce. Getting married is to help yourself and your partner live in reality, thereby giving each other happiness.
Tuesday, May 23, 2023
Processing Mental Expectations
Monday, May 22, 2023
Teaching Children About Sex
TEACHING CHILDREN ABOUT SEX
Sex is “a big deal,” especially in a marriage.
Surprisingly, some couples may have more sexual intimacy after several years of marriage. The explanation is that by then they may have much reduced level of stress: better financial environment; children growing up; less worry about conceiving a child. In short, sex can even get better as years go by in a good and healthy marriage.
However, some couples may also cease their sexual intimacy due to: childbirth; pursuing a career; midlife crisis; an out-of-marriage affair. That, unfortunately, is also the reality.
Living together without love or physical intimacy is “living separate lives”—it may also be due to pornography, which is addictive, pervasive, and destructive to the addicts and their respective relationships.
So, it‘s important for parents to educate their children about sex. But how?
Like building the foundation of a pyramid, teach them about the values of life and living, which are usually dignity, honor, and respect for self and others.
Growing up and getting married isn’t just about self or just two people: it’s about human relations—how you relate to others around you. For example, in a marriage it isn’t just about the relationship between you and your spouse; it also involves your children or stepchildren, the in-laws, and the friends. So, learn to develop good relationships, and teach your children to do likewise as they grow up.
Relationships are related to emotions, both positive and negative ones. Teach your children to control and manage their emotions and temper tantrums, which will play a pivotal in their subsequent life choices and decisions.
All of the above will define and shape your children’s perceptions and understanding of the meaning and the importance of sexual intimacy when they grow up into adolescents and young adults.
The reality
Remember, just do your best, and let God do the rest. You can teach your children about sexual intimacy, but you just can’t control what they feel and experience in their lives. Controlling only generates resistance and distancing. This applies not only to your children, but also to your spouse. You can share with them what you believe in, but you just can’t make them believe what you believe in. That’s the reality.
Stephen Lau
Sunday, May 21, 2023
Happiness and Mental Focus
Human existence is meaningless, if it is devoid of human happiness.
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Saturday, May 20, 2023
Love and Money Wisdom
The wisdom of love
If you feel gratitude for those you love and for those who love you, you‘ll be happy.
If you appreciate what you now have, you’ll not feel the lack.
If you love and forgive yourself totally (only you can do that, and no one can do that for you), you’ll learn to let go of the past and move forward with your happiness.
The wisdom of love will give you the energy within for you to do anything and everything in every aspect of your life to give you happiness.
The wisdom of love and money
If you want to marry rich, do you think of love first, or the one you’re going to marry?
If you’re rich, does your loved one love you or your money? The rich and the wealthy, due to their ego, often don’t really care.
If you aren’t rich, do you love an individual irrespective of that individual’s abundance or lack?
There’re no definitive answers to all of the above questions. True and genuine love is unconditional, which is loving someone with or without money, and love is priceless.
The bottom line
Money cannot buy love, and love cannot buy money—that’s the reality. But love is hardly disconnected from the reality of living in the material world that involves money. And that’s also the reality.
So, you must focus on your own core values, such as honesty, integrity, love, compassion, generosity, and gratitude, among others. Your core values have little to do with money; instead, they demonstrate the values of what life has to offer, and not the values of things purchased with money. Your core values affect how you may live for the rest of your life, including with your marriage partner.
So, look at love and money from your own perspectives, such that you’ll not end up only loving money, and not its wisdom.
Stephen Lau
Copyright© by
Stephen Lau
“GETTING MARRIED TO MAKE YOU HAPPY?”
Click here to get your copy.
Friday, May 19, 2023
Infidelity in Marriage
Tiger Woods, one of the world’s most famous and wealthiest golfers, was caught with his dark secrets of infidelities and lies in 2009. At first, he vehemently denied and even concealed them. But, eventually, he was more forthcoming and apologetic to his fans and his family at several press conferences:
"I have let my family down and I regret those transgressions with all of my heart. I have not been true to my values and the behavior my family deserves. . . I am not without faults and I am far short of perfect. . . I was unfaithful, I had affairs and I cheated. What I did was unacceptable. I hurt my wife, my kids, my mother, my wife's family, my friends, my foundation and kids all around the world who admired me."
But Tiger Woods’ serial adultery and cheating made it difficult for his wife to accept his sincerity and true repentance. They were divorced in 2010.
Maybe in one of his statements to the public, Tiger Woods was telling the truth of adultery:
“I thought I could get away with whatever I wanted to. I felt that I had worked hard my entire life and deserved to enjoy all the temptations around me. I felt I was entitled, and thanks to money and fame, I didn't have to go far to find them.”
Tiger Woods was awakened to the reality of accountability. With fame and money, he thought he could get away with anything. That was his self-awakening, but it came with a hefty price—a stain on his legacy.
The reality
The purpose of a married couple is to glorify God in everything they say, do, or accomplish, and to be an expression of sacrificial love, grace, mercy, and justice to everyone—especially to each other and their children.
King David’s adulteries
In spite of his efforts in seeking God’s wisdom, King David also demonstrated his darker side of the sin of lust.
One night, King David saw Bathsheba, the wife of one of King David’s generals, bathing on the rooftop. Succumbing to his own sin of lust, King David sent for Bathsheba, and committed adultery with her. To gratify his lust, King David even purposely sent the general to the war front to have him killed so that he could marry the general’s widow.
King David eventually married Bathsheba. Although penitent for his sins, God punished King David, and their firstborn son died.
King Solomon’s adulteries
King Solomon, the second son of King David, despite his profound human wisdom, violated God’s standards of sexual purity. His decision to disobey God and marry foreign women with their different gods led to his own idolatry. As a punishment for his sins, God divided Israel, and Solomon suffered bitterness and emptiness at the end of his life.
The difference between King David and King Solomon is that King David always lived in the presence of the Lord. So, King David always turned back to God with remorse and repentance, while King Solomon only distanced himself from God with no contrition and remorse.
So, living in the presence of the Lord always reminds you of your own accountability to Him, without which you will do anything and everything, thinking that you can get away with it.
The reality
Always live in the presence of the Shepherd. Always let the Shepherd guide you in the green pastures. Always let the Shepherd overcome your enemies of pride, lust, and deceit. Always let the Shepherd use His rod and staff not only to protect you but also to restrain and discipline you. Always let the Lord be your Shepherd throughout your marriage journey.
Adultery is a conscious and deliberate act to do just the opposite of what a marriage commitment requires. Adultery is prevalent because it has become the new “norm.” According to many, adultery is just a sin, not a crime, and everybody commits sins of some sort anyway. But adultery is a sin directly against God, who creates the marriage, joining the two as one. So, committing adultery is lack of accountability to God, and is unforgivable without judgment and repentance.
Stephen Lau
Copyright©
by Stephen Lau
“GETTING MARRIED TO MAKE YOU HAPPY?”
Click here to get your copy.
Thursday, May 18, 2023
Changing Yourself and Your Marriage Partner
Marriage is about change in everything in life, including changing each other.
At the beginning of a marriage, every change may seem refreshing, like sunshine and fresh air. But, before long, two people spending a lot of time together will notice their many differences in their characters, in their thinking, and in their daily preferences. These differences may result in dissatisfaction. Even small annoying qualities, if they aren’t changed, will lead to frustration and tension.
So, changing each other is no longer an option. But how to change each other?
What to do
Be honest with yourself: what you like, and what you don’t like in your marriage partner.
Create some teachable moments to express your advice, such as in a peaceful and quiet environment: “Honey, you just have to be more careful.”
Express your helpful suggestions with your kindness: “Darling, please don’t do it again.”
Always use “I” to express your own feelings, instead of “you”, connotating blame and judgment: “I’m very upset.”
Always ask
questions first to have a better understanding of the situation, as well as to
show your “less critical” view of the unpleasant situation: “Please tell me, in
the first place, what really happened.”
What not to do
Avoid direct and personal criticism: “I’ve never seen someone like you!”
Stop your demand: “Stop doing this!”
Never
threaten your spouse: “If you ever do it again, I will . . .”
The reality
Everybody needs to change as life goes on. But the change may be slow and subtle, and therefore unrecognized by an individual. If the changes are negative, as perceived by the marriage partner of that individual, then those changes ought to be recognized and addressed by both to improve their marriage relationship.
So, changing each other should always be in the form of a request, and not a demand, and the request should offer feedback with love and concern. Also, remove any judgment to show your care and concern. Always focus on the problem itself, and not on the individual. With your empathy, connection or re-connection to each other may ensue.
Stephen Lau
Copyright©
by Stephen Lau
“GETTING MARRIED TO MAKE YOU HAPPY?”
Click
here to get your copy.
Wednesday, May 17, 2023
Avoiding Adultery
Given the importance of intimacy in marriage, especially over the long haul, you and your marriage partner should work together to nurture each other’s intimacy, both sensual and sexual. The effort should be joint and continuous for the rest of the marriage journey.
Life is never a bed of roses; it always has some thorns that may come in different forms, such as death and dying of loved ones, financial failures and unemployment, health issues, alcohol addiction and drug abuse problems, among many others.
But one of the most devastating adversities that affect marital bliss is adultery, a betrayal of trust and a break in the bond of marriage.
Adultery, which is not uncommon these days, occurs when a married person engages willingly in a sexual relationship with someone other than the person to whom he or she is married.
Disposition and vulnerability
Given that adultery occurs in 25 percent of married couples and 40 percent of unmarried couples, do your best to avoid adultery in your marriage by doing the following:
Don’t distance each other both emotionally and physically. That explains the importance of the continuation of sensual and sexual intimacy throughout the marriage journey.
Don’t nag and criticize each other in public or even in private. They only foster negative emotions leading to adultery.
Don’t spend too much time hanging around with friends who don’t know your spouse.
Don’t disclose the secrets of your marital life at your workplace or with your close friends. Your disclosure or “secret-free” mindset may only encourage marital unfaithfulness not only from yourself but also from those around you. So, avoid “emotional adultery.”
Don’t commit adultery with your eyes, because your eyes are gateways to your soul.
Jesus had rightly said about “visual adultery”: “You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall not commit adultery.’ But I tell you that anyone who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his heart. If your right eye causes you to stumble, gouge it out and throw it away. It is better for you to lose one part of your body than for your whole body to be thrown into hell.” (Matthew 5:27-30)
Don’t commit adultery with the emergence of technology: sexting and sending explicit photos through social media platforms. Remember, having “no physical contact” may transcend into real-life adultery sooner or later.
Don’t “threaten divorce” with your spouse—ironically enough, it often becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.
The bottom line: Engaging in adultery is playing with fire; the thrill isn’t worth it because it inevitably gets yourself burned.
So, nurture each other’s intimacy, both sensual and sexual, continuously.
So, restrain your pride or help to restrain that of your marriage partner. Pride is often a dear friend of unfaithfulness.
Stephen Lau
Copyright© by Stephen Lau
“GETTING MARRIED TO MAKE YOU HAPPY?”
Click here
to get your copy.
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