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Intimacy Bundle Winner!
What a great resource you've created @Kashina Smith ! I can glean from the all and especially enjoyed the Date Night ideas and how you broke it up the way you did. Budget. Energy levels. It's all vital! Well done. 🄳 The "cook a meal together you haven't made before" made me laugh as I know my husband would provide a LOT of commentary on the process. šŸ‘Øā€šŸ³ The Market Stroll is great too - because we have markets once a month in our town which we both enjoy. And this weekend, he introduced a new Series on Netflix to me that appealed to our shared Sci-Fi enjoyment. Not over the top Sci Fi. Just enough suspense and quality story (with some great actors by the way) to keep you totally engaged.
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Welcome to the Kingdom Relationship Room šŸ™šŸ¾
You are not here because your relationship is falling apart. You are here because you refuse to coast. This is the space where Christian couples do the real work together. šŸ’–Step 1: Start in the Classroom. You can find the Intimacy Bundle in the classroom, or use this link. https://www.skool.com/the-kingdom-relationship-room/classroom/6100406c That is your home base. Inside, you will find faith-rooted tools, psychology-backed resources, and practical challenges built around communication, conflict, intimacy, and parenting. Start there. Work through it at your own pace. Want something else in there? Let me know, this space is yours! šŸ’– Step 2: Introduce yourself Drop a comment below. Tell us your name, and one thing you are hoping to build in your relationship this year. Glad you are here. Now, let us get to work.
Changes are happening
Hey everyone, I know I was quiet last week, I have not been 100%, but feeling better, praise God. We will be making a few changes to the group, and I want to be able to add even more value here. I wanted to know what you would prefer, do you prefer live sessions or videos that you can come back to and watch in your own time?
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Your brain is working against your marriage. And it does not even know it. šŸ˜”
Let me be vulnerable with you for a minute. A few weeks ago, I took four of our children to the shops. My husband kindly offered to stay home with our one year old, even though he was working, so I could get in and out quicker. On the way home I called and asked him to put lunch on. He agreed. I walked through the door. Nothing was on. My first instinct? To run a mental list of every time he had done this. Every dropped ball. Every moment he had not followed through. My brain had the receipts, and it was ready to present them. But then I caught myself. Because I also had a one year old who stayed home. I had an easier shopping trip. I had a husband who rearranged his working morning for me. That is negativity bias. And it is quietly damaging marriages everywhere. So what is negativity bias? šŸ‘‘ It is the brain's tendency to give more weight to negative experiences than positive ones. It is not a character flaw. It is actually wiring. Our brains is created to flag threats and problems because that keeps us safe. But in a marriage, that same wiring means we can: Register the one thing he forgot and miss the ten things he did šŸ’› Hold onto criticism longer than we hold onto kindness. Build a case against our spouse without realising we are doing it Gottman's research found that healthy relationships need around a 5:1 ratio. Five positive interactions to every one negative. That is how strong the pull of the negative is. What happens if we let it run? If I had gone into that kitchen and let the bias take over, here is where that conversation goes. I make him wrong. He gets defensive. I escalate. He shuts down. We spend the afternoon cold with each other over lunch that never got made. And here is the part that stings. Nothing about that argument would have been a lie. He did agree to put the food on. He did not do it. But the full truth was bigger than that moment. And negativity bias shrinks the picture until all you can see is the problem. Over time, that shrinking becomes a habit. You stop noticing the good. You stop expecting it.
Your brain is working against your marriage. And it does not even know it. šŸ˜”
Is criticism killing your marriage?
When I speak to a lot of husbands, they say they feel their wives are constantly criticising, or telling them what they are doing wrong. I don't believe this is intentional, but I do wonder whether we recognise how our words, and the way we are saying things, are impacting our spouses. I really like how the amplified Bible puts it. Your love for criticism has consequences. Death and life are in the power of the tongue, And those who love it and indulge it will eat its fruit and bear the consequences of their words. Proverbs 18:21 (AMP) Have you ever criticised your spouse or felt criticised by them? How did it end? Let us know. No judgements here.
Is criticism killing your marriage?
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The Kingdom Relationship Room
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Build a legacy, not just a marriage. Faith-rooted tools for Christians who are dating, engaged or married and ready to go deeper. šŸ‘‘ Free to join
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