3 Lessons and 2 Tips from Edmund Mitchell.

1452436_10201066878489833_283328813_n3 Lessons and 2 Tips is a series of interviews in which some of my favorite people (and probably some of yours) share three lessons they’ve learned by being married, plus two tips for single people.

 
This edition features Edmund Mitchell, a writer, speaker, and founder of ReverbCulture.com, a community of young adults living the Catechism. He writes about obsessions at edmundmitchell.com and writes and podcasts more formally at Reverb Culture. Excited he agreed to share some lessons and some tips:

AS: How did you meet your wife?

EM: This attractive girl who was a friend of a friend but whom I had never met sat down with us for dinner in the cafeteria junior year of college:

“Danielle, nice to meet you.”
“I’m Edmund. Where are you from?”
“Texas”
“Oh.” (trying to be interested in her and also trying to make a joke) “So, do you own a gun?”
[Awkward silence]
The rest is history.

I was and still am attracted to Danielle because she intimidates and challenges me, she is confident about what she stands for, and she is a softy like me deep down. Plus she’s gorgeous and fun to be around. She also needs me to make her laugh. (We were married on) May 28, 2011.

AS: What’s one lesson you’ve learned in marriage?

EM: Some things you can never take back once you’ve said them. You can apologize until you are blue in the face, but you can’t go back in time and ctrl+z what was said.

AS: And a second lesson?

EM: If you don’t schedule it on the calendar, it’s not real. As a youth minister, this was a hard lesson to learn. Time management becomes huge when another person is counting on you to get your crap done and spend time with them. It also matters because you can go two years thinking “I really want us to start going on more dates soon” and never actually get around to doing it. If you don’t schedule your day/week/month out beforehand, someone or something else will schedule it for you. If you start the month off by marking down Tuesday as date night or Friday as sit-down-and-talk-finances night, you are 200 times more likely to get it done.

AS: And a third lesson?

EM: Another time management tip I learned the hard way. (Can you tell I struggled with this?) Youth ministers shouldn’t work more than 50 hours a week. Period. No excuses. Parkinson’s Law says “work expands so as to fill the time available for its completion.”

I’m a lot more productive when I say I MUST leave the office today by 3 p.m. than when I say “I have so much to do; once I get enough done, I’ll go home.” That’s why Sheryl Sandberg, COO of Facebook, goes home at 5:30 every day.

With whatever job you do, set boundaries for the various sectors of your life. “I should be spending no less than X amount of time with my family. I should be spending no more than X amount of time at work. I should be spending X amount of time praying. I should be spending X amount of time doing something for myself that recharges me.” My marriage got a lot healthier and more fun once I set boundaries.

AS: What’s one tip you’ve got for single people?

EM: Don’t put so much pressure on yourself to date and make that relationship work. Date lots of people. Don’t call it dating. Just go out for coffee with a guy/girl and get to know him or her better. Vocations grow out of a slow building of intimacy and trust. The ideal situation is that a vocation to marriage would gradually and naturally grow out of a friendship. No “Will you be my girlfriend? Check YES or NO” letters. No pressure of “Are we dating? Are we exclusive? Do I smell?” Be yourself because you can’t keep up a charade for long in a marriage. Then pay attention to who sticks around, who brings out the best in you, and if you can see yourself marrying (laying your life down for) that person.

AS: And another tip for singles?

EM: When you’re discerning marriage with somebody, talk about the hard stuff early and lay down a foundational understanding that marriage will be hard and a long process of growth for both of you. You’re in this for the long haul and sometimes you might feel like the only thing keeping you going is the fact that you made a promise to God to stick with this person no matter how much bleeding and tears it takes. Your marriage is God’s way of bringing a concrete example of unconditional love into the world. It’s also the only way you will become a saint (if marriage is your vocation). Don’t be a jerk, because you’re not perfect either and God should have stopped loving you a long time ago. Good thing His idea of love and mercy is bigger than our own. As my Dad once said: “There isn’t THE book you can read to solve all your marriage problems or help you have the perfect marriage. You write that book as you go.” The cool part he left out is that God helps you write it.

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Connect with Edmund on Twitter @EdmundMitchell.

Click here to read all the posts in this series.

3 Lessons and 2 Tips from Dan Brennan.

3 Lessons and 2 Tips is a series of interviews in which some of my favorite people (and probably some of yours) share three lessons they’ve learned by being married, plus two tips for single people.

This edition features Dan Brennan, a blogger and author of Sacred Unions, Sacred Passions: Engaging the Mystery of Friendship Between Men and Women. Grateful he took the time to share three lessons he learned in marriage and two tips for single people:

AS: How did you meet your wife?

DB:  I went to visit a friend who had begun her freshman year in a college three hundred miles from home. She introduced me to her friend, Sheila, who was a Christian teaching mathematics at the college. We met on Saturday, February 21, 1981. I was a taxi driver at the time with three college credits to my name. Sheila was on the verge of getting her doctorate. We were married on October 17, 1981.

AS: What’s the first lesson you’ve learned in marriage?

DB: Learn to cherish the beauty in your spouse and your marriage. Don’t get distracted by how-to manuals or roles but learn to cherish the presence of God revealing himself through the beauty of your spouse and your marriage. Learn to see where beauty dwells in your relationship and in your spouse. What keeps a marriage flourishing is learning to nurture a deep attraction in your spouse beyond the romantic intensity stage. Embracing beauty in your spouse and marriage through the years after you been together means you will enjoy the deep pleasure of each other’s presence years after the romantic intensity has faded.

AS: And a second lesson?

DB: Learn to cherish the friendship of marriage. We all know about the challenge of romantic passion diminishing. Nurturing an ongoing friendship with your spouse is not the same thing as trying to keep the romantic passion alive. Learn to cherish your spouse as your friend and you’ll go through seasons of passion and seasons of solid togetherness. Cherishing your spouse as a friend means you learn to delight in the other as you share life together. It is a seasoned orientation of tenderness, affection, and reverence toward our spouse as a friend. Seeing our spouses as our friend means we will learn to cherish someone who is similar to us and different from us.

AS: And a third lesson?

DB: Learn to tolerate misattunements through change and difference. Starry-eyed newlyweds tend to believe they know each other enough to stay married forever. But all encounter change, growth, and difference as they journey together as a marital couple. There are going to be misattunements where we long for communion with our spouse on a specific issue (political, spiritual, and so on) that means much to us and our spouse will not be able to meet us there. Cherishing beauty and friendship will go a long way in helping us tolerate the misattunements we are going to encounter.

AS: What’s one tip for readers who are single?

DB: Learn to savor and cherish beauty in your present life. Learn to receive God’s beauty and delight in you through the sacraments, friendships, family, community, and vocation. Deep beauty (which is found in God’s presence) is not something you have to wait to experience.

AS: And a second tip?

DB: Learn to cherish your friends now. It’s a virtue that teaches you how to relish and treasure people who are similar to you and different from you. Do not buy into the line that cherishing is for romantic couples only. Cherish your friends. You will discover that cherishing is something you can experience before marriage and within marriage.

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Connect with Dan: Click here to visit his blog.

3 Lessons and 2 Tips from Renee Fisher.

3 Lessons and 2 Tips is a series of interviews in which some of my favorite people (and probably some of yours) share three lessons they’ve learned by being married, plus two tips for single people.

This edition features Renee Fisher, “an adoring wife to Marc and mom to their pit bull named Star. She is the author of four books, including Forgiving Others, Forgiving Me (Harvest House, 2013).” Renee is also the editor and founder of DevotionalDiva.com, and loves nothing more than to spur others forward. She is the creator of Quarter Life Conference, a graduate of Biola University, and a spirited speaker and author to the 30-somethings. She and Marc have been married since Oct. 15, 2011. I’m excited she’ll share three lessons and two tips:

How did you meet your husband?

I met Marc at my parent’s house. This was nothing short of a miracle because growing up, my mom always told me not to search for my husband—that he’d come to me. I didn’t realize this would literally happen. I was co-leading a growth group at my parent’s house through my church and he joined last minute. It was definitely a God thing because it was meant to be!

What’s the first lesson you’ve learned in marriage?

It’s okay to be hungry. I actually wrote about this for StartMarriageRight.com about a month after I was married. After I woke up from the Turkey induced coma of Thanksgiving, I realized that only God could fill my loneliness. It’s OKAY and NORMAL and perfectly HEALTHY to hunger and thirst for God first before your spouse. In fact, God designed it this way.

And a second lesson?

My identity is not in my spouse (or my job). I didn’t get married until I was 29, and one of the things I’ve had to learn is the things I put in place of my identity. First, it was my job. Now I find myself easily doing this with my husband. Thankfully, we are both very independent and it’s not as easy to do this with my marriage yet. However, I know this is a lesson I will be learning and re-learning.

And a third lesson?

I took the first year of marriage off from speaking. I focused all my efforts on learning how to be a wife during the first year, and I am so glad I did! During this time I was able to get healthy, go back to the gym, weed through some difficult friendships, and finally finish a book I had been working on getting published for many years. I think our culture is so obsessed with fast results that we don’t take the time we need to really learn how to live. I’m so glad I took the time to enjoy my husband because I prayed so much for him. It was a blessed year.

What’s one tip for readers who are single?

“The One” will never be as important as Jesus. I used to dream of the day I’d get married that I’m glad God allowed me to wait until He burst every naïve bubble I had of marriage. Marriage is NOTHING like I expected but everything I need it to be.

And a second tip?

You really can wait for marriage for sex. If you listen to anyone but Jesus you will fail. Even if you do fail, it is possible to try waiting again. Don’t beat yourself up.

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Connect with Renee at ReneeFisher.com.

3 Lessons and 2 Tips from Lisa Hendey.

ND-20133 Lessons and 2 Tips is a series of interviews in which some of my favorite people (and probably some of yours) share three lessons they’ve learned by being married, plus two tips for single people.

This edition features Lisa Hendey, “the founder and webmaster of CatholicMom.com and the author of A Book of Saints for Catholic Moms: 52 Companions for Your Heart, Mind, Body and Soul and The Handbook for Catholic Moms: Nurturing Your Heart, Mind, Body and Soul. She married her husband, Greg, in 1986. I’m excited she took the time to share with us:

AS: Where did you meet and marry your husband? 

LH: Greg and I met as juniors at the University of Notre Dame. We had mutual friends and would occasionally see each other while crossing campus. We began dating in the Fall of our senior year. We were married a year after our graduation from Notre Dame, on May 31, 1986 at the Basilica of the Sacred Heart on campus. As you can imagine, being married at our University was a blessing not only for us, but also for our family and friends. The Basilica is such a special place! An Irish priest – Msgr. Michael Collins – who was a lifelong family friend of mine from California officiated at our wedding.

AS: What’s the first lesson you’ve learned by being married?

LH: Keep God at the center of your marriage. Continually pray for one another and with one another.

AS: And the second lesson?

LH: Enjoy each other. Greg and I don’t have identical interests, but we’ve learned to enjoy each other’s favorite pastimes. This enables us to spend our leisure time with one another, rather than away from each other. I’m not saying by any means that we are constantly together – we both have active careers and hobbies we enjoy. But we strive constantly to put our relationship first. Have fun with one another!

AS: And the third lesson? 

LH: Maintain open lines of communication, especially when you are most busy. Do not make important decisions without speaking with each other. Have stressful conversations in private, rather than in public.

AS: What’s one tip for readers who are single?

LH: Don’t rush into anything and do not compromise your values simply because you desire a relationship.

AS: And a second tip for singles?

LH: Remember that God has a perfect plan for your life! Pray for his will – not your own – to unfold in his time. Pray for the grace to be open to life’s adventures as they come. Use the extra time you may have to serve the world around you.

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Connect with Lisa: Follow her on Twitter @LisaHendey.

Click here to read all the posts in this series.

3 Lessons and 2 Tips from Sarah Reinhard.

IMG_94563 Lessons and 2 Tips is a series of interviews in which some of my favorite people (and probably some of yours) share three lessons they’ve learned by being married, plus two tips for single people.

This edition features Sarah Reinhard, a “Catholic wife, mother, author, writer, blogger, speaker, chugger of coffee” who married her husband in November, 2003 on a day so cold it nearly snowed. Sarah’s books include A Catholic Mother’s Companion to Pregnancy and Catholic Family Fun. Grateful for the time she took to share lessons and tips with us:

AS: Where and/or how did you meet your spouse?

SR: We met at what I call the Big Green Dealership of Love: the John Deere dealership that we both worked at. I was working the parts counter and he was a mechanic. Every time we talked, it felt like a grown-up was really taking me seriously. Eventually we started dating. And now we’ve been married almost 10 years and we’re blessed with three kids.


AS: What’s the first lesson you’ve learned by being married?

SR: Don’t speak badly of your spouse. Ever. Not even in your mind.

AS: And the second lesson?

SR: Laugh together. A lot.

AS: And the third?

SR: Make time for each other. Even when you’re too busy. It’s the most important investment you’ll make in another (aside from making time for God).

AS: What’s one tip for readers who are single?

SR: God’s got your back. Yeah, yeah, I know it sounds like an empty sort of comment, but there’s hope and God knows what’s best.

AS: And a second tip for singles?

SR: Enjoy life in the present. It will change soon enough, so enjoy what you have.

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Connect with Sarah: Read more about Sarah’s work at snoringscholar.com.

Click here to read all the posts in this series.