Nine of 1–10: The Work of Wedding Vows

The old saw, “Love means never having to say I’m sorry,” has pretty much been consigned to the trash heap along with the rest of the rusty notions about rela­tion­ship. The fact is good rela­tion­ship thrives on each partner’s ability to be self reflec­tive. Here’s what that means with regard to your wedding vows:

That you will recog­nize, admit, repent and make amends to trans­gres­sions, both large and small of those vows.

Being able to say “oh, I could have done that differ­ently, I’m sorry if my actions hurt you” is an incred­ibly impor­tant activity in a marriage. Obvi­ously, there are times, when trans­gres­sions are larger, that you will need more than an ‘aw shucks, honey, I didn’t mean not to listen (when you said it hurt you that I was having an affair!), but even when you blow past the inten­tions of your promises, you want to recon­sider and recommit to their value in your life.

I found someone to agree with me as I was running past twitter on my way over here: Lonnie Hodge: “I think true integrity lies in the ability to express remorse –espe­cially when there is nothing to gain except the truth.” But in marriage what there is to gain is a great relationship.

Tip: Keep your marriage vows close to your heart and your mind. You know it’s not always the big ways we offend our vows that breaks them down. It’s the tiny little slights and indif­fer­ences. How well do you cherish your partner? How does that reflect on you? Do you want to be a person who doesn’t keep your vows, who doesn’t cherish your partner? No. you don’t. So, you want to do your work here!

Eight of 1–10: The Work of Wedding Vows

It may be that one of the most impor­tant pieces of being human is the ability to make and keep promises. (Breaking them? Not so much!) I feel as if this isn’t really explored in our world today. There’s been so much emphasis on how we get ahead recently, that there’s less atten­tion paid to being true to who you are. Well here we are. the getting ahead thing didn’t work out so very well for the economy or even the indi­vid­uals involved!

I don’t mean to say that people haven’t been keeping wedding vows. Many do. (Although there are disturbing new stats that say some­where north of 20 percent of couples are unfaithful in the first year of marriage.) It’s just I don’t know that the impor­tance of this is empha­sized. I don’t know if people under­stand how much it matters to each indi­vidual to be a keeper of promises!

Today’s message about the work of vows (or the work IN vows) is that you will police your keeping and breaking of those vows. There are personal and familial conse­quences to not keeping your word. Your marriage suffers when this happens and your sense of self is eroded. You could easily make this simply a legal issue, but what’s real here is paying atten­tion to the spirit of the vows.

Tip: If your wedding vows are rules for living that you and your partner have constructed and agreed to, then you want to be the person reflecting on whether you are keeping them. Marriage isn’t a police state, it’s a covenant.
Are you living into yours? Are you altering behav­iors when you notice that you’re not? They’re your vows, are you going to honor them?

Seven of 1–10: The Work of Wedding Vows

It’s impor­tant to remember in the making of wedding vows that your integrity and that of your beloved are sacred. This is some­thing you may feel on your wedding day as you stand there with your beloved before your gath­ered commu­nity. It’s some­thing that you need to keep your focus on as you live through your marriage. You’ll not only have a happier and more successful marriage, you’ll be a happier and more successful human being.

It actu­ally is unhealthy to live out of balance with your word and your inten­tions. We do better as humans when we live in accor­dance with what we have promised. It is in our integrity that we recog­nize the divine or the sacred in ourselves and in one another.

Tip: Our humanity is in our word and in our being who we are at the core of ourselves. This is why it’s really impor­tant to make promises that fit us rather than canned promises. We are going to need to live into these promises. They should be tailored to who we are and what we can accom­plish, so that we can honor ourselves as we make our dreams come true.

Will we struggle with our vows? Of course! But the more closely our vows resemble our values and our skills, the less that will happen. But we work to correct and strengthen our vows because we wish to be the kind of people who stay connected to our integrity (and to our promises… and to our partners!)

Six of 1–10 The Work of Wedding Vows

The second five in the listing of the kinds of work your wedding vows do concern the making and keeping of promises:

In Number Six, you are agreeing that your integrity lies in your keeping of your word. You are promising to be respon­sible to and for those promises. You are saying that you will be happy in the compro­mises and commit­ments that marriage demands.

A big part of the social revo­lu­tion of the 60s was against the overly rigid oblig­a­tions under which many people lived. But as always with a revo­lu­tion, things aren’t targeted toward reason, they’re pushing for freedom. So, it’s not so much that people don’t have integrity, it’s that it isn’t a driving force in the life of many people.

Tip: Marriage needs whole­hearted commit­ment. Marriage needs people who take pride in the giving and keeping of their word. The thing about marriage vows is that they’re not imposed from without, they’re offered from your heart. They are designed by you to be the kind of promises you can make. And the kind of promises you can keep. Do this with a sense of honor and great joy.

Five of 1–10: The Work of Wedding Vows

Here is yet another task that your wedding vows do for you. So you might as well struc­ture them right from the get-​​go. It’s not that you’re not going to make changes and adjust­ments to the way you live and grow together, but it’s so much easier to make adjust­ments than blue­prints — espe­cially years into the project!

Here’s the truth

That the projects you under­take and the family you may have will develop within the context of this inten­tional rela­tion­ship. Your marriage is the garden in which chil­dren and ideas will grow. You want to keep tending the garden so that the soil is fertile. You want to keep love alive.

Tip: before you dash off your vows filled with flowery phrases and unre­al­istic hopes, spend some time figuring out, together, what you want and how you might develop that. One of the things we forget to take into account as we’re building our strengths and areas needing support is that our part­ners will have very good ideas about our strengths. They some­times notice things about us that we don’t!