What Healthy Compromise REALLY Looks Like
Tarah Avery
Though there is truth to this Nicolas Sparks statement, “Marriage is about compromise; it’s about doing something for the other person when you don’t want to;” what I have learned from countless couples who have trusting, committed, passionate marriages is that marriage is not about compromise.
When I was a little girl I didn’t dream about my wedding much. I didn’t have the plans already in place and never played pretend “bride.” Little did I know my future husband was dreaming about and planning for his future wedding! He played “groom” and “wedding” and did all those things that little girls are supposed to do.
During the wedding planning season of our lives, Gordon and I worked tons to create a wedding we would both love. Of course, I wanted something that I would love. Just because I didn’t think about it growing up (I only ever concluded sunflowers) did not mean that it wasn’t important to me once it came, and it was definitely important to him after spending all those years thinking and dreaming of this day.
We actually had the vision of our wedding planned out before we were even engaged (thank you, Pinterest). We did this because we didn’t want all hell to break loose during our season of being engaged. I knew we had different visions of what our wedding might look like: big vs. small, inside vs. outside, formal vs. whimsical; so we made it a point to discover what we both loved, no compromises.
We had a “fun-classy” wedding – black and white with a little bit of gold sparkle, sunflowers, and stripes! It was beautiful. I wouldn’t have changed a thing.
The biggest piece of advice from many married couples is to compromise: “marriage is about compromise.” But what are they really saying?
They are most likely saying meet in the middle, or like the quote above – give a little, take a little.
For example, a husband and wife have a disagreement on what they want to do on their day off. The husband wants to sit and watch football all day while the wife wants to go on a long 7-mile hike. So they talk it out and meet in the middle at watching football for a couple of hours and then going on a shorter 3-mile hike.
Now is either partner really happy? He had to cut the football game off at half time and she didn’t get the nice long hike she wanted.
What we need to do is learn what healthy compromise actually looks like.
Jeff Bethke puts it this way: “for us (Jeff & Alyssa), we’ve committed to compromising. And not compromising to appease the other person, but compromising to love the other person. In fact, we don’t even really like to call it compromising. In reality, it’s just serving. Learning to serve your significant other out of love.”
Isn’t that so true!?
Meeting in the middle is what most people would define as compromising, but truly it’s a selfish way to live your life and a selfish thing to bring to your marriage. But serving one another as Jeff puts it, is compromising to love the other person. It’s selfless. And if done with the right heart it becomes a beautiful cycle of “out-serving” the other person. The more Gordon is selfless towards me, the more I am towards him.
Now someone has to start. You may not be living in a serving relationship now, but I bet that if you took that first step so serve him or serve her, your spouse would want to join in.
And so the cycle begins.
You’ve just discovered what it truly means to “compromise.”
Ditch meeting in the middle and take on the challenge of viewing compromise as serving the other person. So next time you have a differing opinion or preference, I challenge you to be selfless out of love for your spouse.
How have you served your spouse this week?
It could be as simple as where to went to eat, which movie you watched, or what you did on your day off.
Your Friend,