23rd January 2024 9:46:05 AM
4 mins readThis sage marriage counsel came from my mother-in-law years ago, advice I initially brushed aside in my early relationship days. Unaware of its significance as golden guidance for a healthy love life and how to be a good wife, I found myself repeating the same patterns in my second relationship, leading to less-than-ideal outcomes.In the quest for love, couples thrive on mutual nurturing rather than mothering, a distinction often overlooked.
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Many mistakenly perceive them as interchangeable, but they are fundamentally different.Exploring why some individuals, irrespective of gender, tend to adopt a mothering role in their relationships, I have delved into this conundrum over time, largely spurred by introspection into my own strong inclination to mother.I've concluded that my propensity for mothering is rooted in a lack of positive parenting during my childhood.
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Faced with insufficient nurturing, I externalized my inner child wounds by adopting a caregiving role for various animals, ranging from cats and dogs to goats and chickens.While there's nothing inherently wrong with a generous heart, it's essential to recognize and understand the impulses that drive us into overdrive.My personal lesson in love revealed that I had mistakenly equated nurturing with mothering when it came to my significant other.
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Nurturing, as opposed to mothering, is empowering, and here are three reasons why it stands as the most crucial piece of marriage advice.We see where our partner needs support but do not override their autonomyFor example, you offer to make your partner tea when they are tired or simply to do something nice for them.
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Another time, they offer to make you tea, and you accept and don't resist their offer by saying that you'll do it (because you feel you can do it better/quicker perhaps or simply out of that mothering habit).In a good marriage, there is space for kindness and space for support. Learning to step back from our desire to 'do it all' is a step toward healthy self-esteem.
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Nurturing gives rise to sovereignty for either partnerI don’t think we speak enough about sovereignty in healthy relationships. Too much societal, sugar-coated love indoctrination can make us feel that we should become one.A more balanced viewpoint is, as the Buddhists say, two flames sharing a path, with room for each to actualize their individuality.
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We create feelings of empowermentAs partners in a marriage, we share responsibilities while sustainably offering ourselves.Sustainability in love stems from truly knowing our boundaries and our abilities to give ongoingly without burnout.Meanwhile, there are 3 reasons why mothering your husband or wife invalidates them.It sends the signal that we are willing to sacrifice ourselves and our needs for their benefit.
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It not only invalidates their abilities to take care of themselves but screams about our lack of self-worth.It creates further expectations of continuing the same behavior, setting up a pattern difficult to reverse. Whether we mother out of some kind of guilt or from our unhealed wounds and shadows, the result is the same — habits that lead to exhaustion, resentment, and anger.Mothering our partner can lead to a loss of respect.
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Once resentment sets in, we begin to blame the other party for our habit which in effect trained them to expect what we now no longer wish to do. I'm not sure which comes first, the loss of respect for ourselves or our partner, but either way, it makes for a bad relationship.What is a more sustainable path? It considers self-love as integral to the 'whole' of the relationship.
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No one person should sacrifice themselves for another nor should they ignore the needs of the other, without being taken advantage of.To be taken advantage of is to allow it, and the responsibility of whether we are participating in mothering versus nurturing rests with us."They took advantage of my good will" is a disempowering statement often cited by serial motherers which shifts their lack of boundaries to our partner.
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It's difficult it is to break such patterns as it takes some honest self-talk to dig deep into that and come up with something that helps us move through it.Having a conversation with our partner about what's not working may seem daunting, even impossible.Begin with an act of self-love. Take a bath, a walk, and make a nourishing meal for yourself. That is always a centering, grounding way to enter any conversation.
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Be empowered and glass-filled, open to the possibility that there is a way forward. You may be surprised by the response you receive when you approach your beloved. But it all begins with opening up to what you need, what brings peace to your own heart.Author Kim McMillen stated, “When I loved myself enough, I began leaving whatever wasn’t healthy.
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This meant people, jobs, my own beliefs, and habits — anything that kept me small. My judgment called it disloyal. Now I see it as self-loving.” I encountered many of my excuses along the way to truly knowing what co-dependence comes from mothering a lover.And so often, co-dependence, dressed as love, unpacks all those cozy, healthy, fun, romantic ways we used to enjoy before we created a monster of self-sacrifice.
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The good news is, that stepping back to see ourselves in a clear light, allowing for self-love, gathering our courage, and opening an honest conversation can bring a much-needed liberation. It can bring balance and equanimity to any relationship.It all boils down to what kind of expectations we have placed on ourselves and listening to the honest feedback we receive from our bodies and emotions when something doesn’t feel right anymore.
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What's left is acting upon that feedback.
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