Are you celebrating all the wrong things?

What have you been celebrating lately? Have you overlooked simple opportunities to make the people around you feel loved? Feel special? Opportunities to engage with them in a way that can create great family memories and not require elaborate planning or big expenses? Joanne Miller joins us again today to talk about how celebrating meaningful events in her house has helped create a haven of peace.

Are you celebrating all the wrong things-Many years ago when our children were young, I had a Come-to Jesus talk with Dan about the importance of remembering holidays and special occasions. It was Mother’s Day and I waited all day for some recognition, and some appreciation, for all I put into raising our three children. I simply couldn’t believe my family, particularly my husband, would forget to celebrate. I didn’t say anything because I kept thinking there was a huge surprise lurking in the wings ready to be revealed at just the right time.

Didn’t happen.

After tucking the children into bed I asked Dan if he remembered what day it was. He did. He simply didn’t think it was a big deal.

Wrong answer. Wrong attitude.

And, in no uncertain terms I let him know how inconsiderate he had been. But the main point I wanted to make was the message he sent to our children.

Children take their cues from the most important people in their lives, their parents. I felt that by placing so little concern for a day intended to celebrate the importance of motherhood was making a statement to the children that I didn’t want conveyed.

It was hurtful to me that Dan had ignored the opportunity to tell me he appreciated all I did to create our haven of peace. But it especially hurt that he didn’t convey to our children the importance of honoring their mother.

Needless to say, Dan went to bed that night feeling properly chastised and ashamed and this neglect was never repeated. In fact, we decided to celebrate as often as possible any little victory, holiday, birthday, anniversary, etc.

Life can be pretty hectic and crazy and special occasions can get lost in the shuffle if careful attention isn’t observed. I remember early in our marriage I was dumbfounded that everyone in our circle of acquaintance and our families didn’t remember our anniversary.

Coming from a family where divorce was rampant and there was rarely ever a wedding anniversary to celebrate, I was ecstatic that I actually had one. I just figured everyone else would be too. I remember Dan telling me that our special day was very special to us and not to be hurt that others didn’t view it in the same regard.

Here’s a little tip that helps with family harmony and happiness.

Never miss an opportunity to celebrate anything.

Just for the sake of honoring one another. Mark the date on your calendar or in your schedule book or iPhone. Take time to make the date a real celebration, if nothing more than cooking that person’s favorite meal or dessert.

Simply sending a physical card can say, “I love you!” or “I care!” or “Congratulations!” in a way that shows you took time to remember.

Our oldest son, Kevin and his wife, Teri, have seven children. That’s a LOT of birthdays, special occasions, school successes, holidays, etc. So they made an agreement with their children they would do a big birthday celebration every other year.

On the off year, they do a small family dinner and gift giving. On the on year, they get a party with friends and family. The exception is special birth years like 10, 13, 16, 18.

Celebrations of life should be taken seriously in a family because it gives the opportunity to show how much you care.

Our son, Jared, has had many years of sobriety but every year, on the date of his commitment to change his life, I send him a card or note to tell him I am proud of him.

It’s important to him so it is important to me.

My birthday is three days before Christmas and as a child I never experienced birthday parties. So for most of our married life, Dan has made my birthday the highlight of my year by taking me to Chicago…my favorite big city….for several days to celebrate.

His taking the time to treat me to this experience each year speaks volumes to me about how much he cares……and it definitely makes up for forgetting Mother’s Day all those Once I worked for a short time as the manager of a big department store.

It didn’t take long for me to figure out it was not a good fit and after about ten months on the job, I quit.

On my last day at work, my family all celebrated in grand style, showing me how happy they were to have me back home.

I felt their love.

Don’t make the mistake of thinking it isn’t important to celebrate even the small successes and events of your life. Those traditions and special remembrance make a huge impression on others and make large deposits in your relational bank account!

No one is ever too poor to give a gift of remembrance. Just a warm embrace and a bouquet of dandelions is sufficient if you give them with love and sincerity.

And regardless of what any woman says, she is always dazzled by a gift from the heart! Never. Forget. That!

What opportunities are you missing that could be turned into fun celebrations?

What “unusual” celebrations do you observe in your family that might spark an idea for others?

Are you overlooking the importance of celebrations that your spouse might wish you put in higher priority?

Greg McKeown, in his book Essentialism, proposes a new way to choose what we celebrate. What have you been celebrating lately?

“What if we stopped celebrating being busy as a measurement of importance? What if instead we celebrated how much time we had spent listening, pondering, meditating, and enjoing time with the most important people in our lives?” Greg McKeown, Essentialism

007: 5 Steps to Fighting Less about Money


Money issues are are the number one cause of marriage problems in North Amercia.

My wife and I are no different.  For a while we both went on with our days, both working outside the home before we had kids and transitioning to a one-income household when our son was born in 2009.

For years we talked way too little about money. I worked hard and climbed the corporate ladder.  She worked hard(er) at home. All of our bills were paid. We didn't worry.

But we did worry.

She was confident that our bills were going to be paid and that I would work hard.

I was confident that she was frugal in nature and wouldn't spend more than we made.

We both knew how much was coming into the house and we had a general sense of the disposable income.

But she was stressed out because we never talked about how much savings we had, how much we could save every month.

So she didn't really have a clear picture of our financial situation.

And I was stressed because I didn't have a full grasp of the day-to-day expenses or some other purchases, so in my mind I was nervous about making more to take care of our family's expenses and still save up for things like college and to eat more than ramen noodles during retirement….

Screen Shot 2014-03-12 at 2.52.01 PM Because this is such an important issue I reached out to Derek and Carrie Olsen who blog at Better Conversations on Money & Marriage to see if they could help us work through this important topic.  I'm a loyal listener of their awesome podcast by the same name and knew they would add incredible content with flair if they would agree to be on the show.

Lucky for us, they were game!

Derek and Carrie help people have better conversations on money.  And that helps people have better marriages.

Screen Shot 2014-12-29 at 6.06.45 PMDerek and Carrie offered to talk with me about a five-step process to fighting less about money that they dive deep into in their upcoming book, One Bed, One Bank Account: Better Conversations on Money and Marriage that is up for presale on Amazon as an ebook and also as a great presale deal on their site where you can get the book, workbook, and audio book.

And if you head on over before the end of January 2015 they have a really great preorder special discount price and some special bonus items!

Definitely check it out.  Everything Derek and Carrie produce is super high quality.  And the topic is a really important part of having a successful marriage!

And they even called me out on each of these steps and helped me work through my issues talking better about money with my wife!

OK.  For those of you who prefer the printed word, here are the Five Steps to Fighting Less about Money.

1. Set the date

This is a great one. Set a date to talk about money. Setting a time when you're not just getting home from work or in the middle of the mall with sparkly object syndrome. Set a date where you can sit and talk about money issues before they become a problem.

We definitely need to work on this one. We're getting better, but it's definitely something we need to become more regular about.

2. Be an Amazing Listener

I'm terrible at this. Again, getting better, but it's so important to listen intently at what your spouse is saying, why they're saying it, and only then respond. Sometimes – too many times – I'll get all wrapped up in the emotions of a money issue that I'll stop listening. Listening to what your spouse is saying helps put you in their shoes and understand them better, which helps you connect better, respond better, and reach a common ground.

3. Let go

Couples, including me, have a hard time letting go even when they've made a decision or compromised on a money issue.  When you and your spouse have agreed on something, move on. Let go. Boy could I use help with this.

4. Design your shared vision

This is powerful and involves planning together for a common ground that you both take ownership in. For nearly a decade my wife and I had totally different visions of our future. Mine was all high rises and law firms. Hers was family and single-family homes.

But in May 2013 I spent some time in the suburbs with Dan and Joanne Miller and was just blown away at how I had been wrong for so many years. I immediately shared my wife's vision. Six months later, we were driving behind a moving van. Out of the city. To Massachusetts. To be with family. It's powerful.

5. Have a Brain Hurricane for solutions instead of focusing on a “problem.”

Take turns saying creative, silly, or even outride ridiculous ways to solve a money problem. Being silly will help you both smile, unfold your arms, and may even reveal a solution that would actually work. In any event, having a Brain Hurricane of powerful, solution-focused talk gets you out of fight mode.

So there you go. Five steps to fighting less about money.  Thanks so much to Derek and Carrie Olsen for walking me through these.

Be sure to connect with them on their blog or podcast and be sure to check out their book, One Bed, One Bank Account:Better Conversations on Money and Marriage,  which is on presale until the end of January 2015 on their site or, if you're only looking for the e-book, on Amazon.  It expires at the end of January 2015, so if you're on the fence it's time to make a decision…. Fences are pointy.

What’s Your Mission? How to Create Family Harmony This Year.

In the final post of 2014 I'm super excited to bring you another post by Joanne Miller where she brings you behind the scenes for another look into the Miller household and how she and Dan created an environment of peace and raised three awesome kids who are doing the same with their families!  This is another post I'm going to take action on right away in the Pavlidis household!  If you do, too, I'd love for you to share your mission statement in the comments or email it to me along with brief reflections on the creation process for a guest post!

How to Create Famly Harmony This Year.In a few days it will be a New Year.

Much like the season of Spring, the New Year is a time of new beginnings.  Many people set goals, rules and boundaries this time of year.  One of the most important areas to strive for success is in family dynamics.

Whether you have children or not, setting some ground rules for what you want to achieve in relational harmony is a major key to creating a haven of peace in your home.

One way we helped prevent arguments and fighting was to draw up a Family Mission Statement.  Many years ago I found a magazine article that included a mission statement I thought embraced our philosophy. 

We had a family meeting to talk about it and each of us agreed it was what we believed in and wanted for our home. 

Because all family members agreed on this philosophy, when someone did something that violated that mission statement, whether it was one of the parents or a child, instead of being accusatory or angry, all we needed to ask was, “Was what you did (or said) in line with our family mission statement?”

It took everyone out of the hot seat in being the judge and jury, encouraging each of us to be responsible for our actions and behavior.

So how do you come up with a family mission statement?

I suggest you call everyone together for a family meeting. 

We used to have them at least once a month.  It was a time to talk about grievances, frustrations, disappointments, accomplishments, desires, family vacations, schedules, rules, expectations, etc. 

Sometimes these meetings were serious and covered some important issues and sometimes they were just crazy fun.  But it was definitely a time to communicate freely without fear of condemnation or judgement. 

It was our SAFE PLACE  

Ask each child to submit his/her ideas for consideration in adopting a mission statement.  It doesn’t matter how long or involved it is. The important issue here is that you all agree on it wholeheartedly so if it is violated (and it will be), the parent or child will know he/she is wrong and has no one to blame but themselves. 

Let me give you another hint on how to make this work well in your home.  Don’t laugh. 

Write or print out the Statement and tape it next to the toilet in every bathroom of the house. 

Seriously.  It really works.

I meticulously hand-wrote in a crude form of calligraphy our Statement and took it to a printer to have laminated, then thumb-tacked it beside the toilet paper roll in the main bathroom of our house. 

Kids memorize easily and if something is where they see it many times during the day for days on end….they will memorize it.  Stick it on mirrors, the refrigerator….whatever works….but know that it is important it becomes ingrained in their minds so when someone abuses the rules they know immediately they are guilty. 

And don’t be at all surprised if your five-year-old brings it to your attention if you have let something slip that violates what she has memorized!

Here is the Miller Family Mission Statement that greatly influenced the interaction in our home  

Perhaps it will help you formulate your own code of conduct and make this New Year a more peaceful setting in the most important environment of all…..your home. 

A Safe Place

In a safe place, people are kind.

Sarcasm, fighting, back-biting and name-calling are exceptions.

Kindness, consideration and forgiveness are the way of life.

In a safe place there is laughter.

Not just the canned laughter of television,

but real laughter that comes from sharing meaningful work and play.

In a safe place there are rules.

The rules are few and fair

and are made by the people who live and work there,

including the children.

In a safe place people listen to one another.

They care about one another and show that they do.

Please God, make this a safe place.

 

Excerpt from Turnabout Children by Mary MacCracken

Joanne Miller has been happily married for over four decades to career coach and author Dan Miller (48 Days To the Work You Love).

In her new book, Be Your Finest Art, you will find more ideas about how to be a better communicator and listener and how playing games creates great memories and family time. This book is full of color and art and is a unique and beautiful gift for that special someone as we approach St. Valentine's Day or just to say “I love you.”

She has also authored four children’s books, which my kids LOVE. She and Dan have three grown children and twelve grandchildren and lots of years living the entrepreneurial roller-coaster life of adventure!

Matt Ham, Redefining Life by Redefining Success, Redefining Values, and Redefining Rich

MattHam-RefefineRichEpisode 4 of The Confessions of a Terrible Husband podcast features, author, speaker, small business owner, father, and husband, Matt Ham. Matt’s new book, Redefine Rich and his podcast of the same name, talks about what it means to truly be rich.

Along with his blog, and public speaking, Matt challenges others to rethink our views on wealth and to reprioritize what’s really important in life.

Doing the Next Right Thing

Matt says he never started wanting to be an author, or speaker, or podcaster. But, he found himself wanting to help solve problems he had in his life. “As I began writing, and praying about that, seeking wisdom, and asking those around me, I just began doing the next right thing, taking one step at a time.”

Matt was born and raised in North Carolina, grew up playing sports – baseball, basketball and football in high school.

His senior year in high school, Matt became involved in a campus ministry called YoungLife. That group took a mission trip to Bimini in the Bahamas. “It was the first time I had stepped outside of my world, my bubble.” Matt says he thinks about that moment a great deal.

“In hindsight, it’s easy to see, but in the moment it’s not. In the moment, you’re living life, doing your life and what’s important to you. But, in hindsight, I was very much completely confined in my little world.”

That trip, working in an orphanage for a week was an eye-opening experience for 18-year-old Matt Ham.YoungLife

The life changing experience set Matt up to begin questioning things that weren’t easily evident beneath the surface. “These kids, the way they lived and the energy with which they embraced the day, king of their passion, they were living in what I would consider just destitute poverty.”

“It was like nothing I had ever seen before, they all smiled. They were still joyful, they were still happy.” Thinking how could they be so happy with no roof over their head, Matt says, “I didn’t really understand that.”

The following year, he went to college with that experience in his mind, knowing that he wanted to make some changes in the world.

“I wanted to influence people, and help people, and give back that mentality.”

To do these things, he says,

“I thought I would have to become wealthy, because, in our culture, that’s just the American Dream. We’re told that you can make it on your own, you can do anything you want, you can take it down, and if you make money, then you can use that and be philanthropic.”

Nick Pavlidis, host of the podcast “Confessions of a Terrible Husband,” says he recognizes that pressure to get rich.

“In my journey as a terrible husband, I was constantly chasing the money with this noble goal, because I thought it would trickle down and help my family… there’s got to be some point where you either realize you don’t need the money to be what you want to be, or, to do what you want to do, you just need to be creative.”

Nick also states that for him, his goals had to change. “For me, I just gotta be home more, be more committed.”

Matt says that as he and his wife were married right out of college, moving from North Carolina to Florida,

“I always thought that if I could reach this mark, I could help more people.” But, he says, while you're in the chase, “the next thing you know, you’re leveraged with houses and rental property, and you got a commission-based income.”

From Bad to Worse

That’s where Matt was in 2007. “I had bills and no income. And that’s not a good spot to be in,” Matt says, honestly and soberly.

Matt says he never realized how bad it was, until it had actually happened. At that point, he and his wife moved back home, “with my tail tucked between my legs, kind of humbled by my circumstances.”

Those were the bad times, says Matt, “but then it really got a lot worse.”

Trying to start a family, the two were struggling financially, then, there was a two-and-a-half-year struggle with infertility.

“I think that infertility is something that not a lot of people in our culture talk bout, because it seems like anybody and everybody just gets pregnant. I know as a husband, it was particularly difficult because I couldn’t do anything about it.”

But, he says, it is a very real and devastating battle for many married couples. “I Know as a husband, it was particularly difficult because I couldn’t do anything about it.”

Matt says he felt like he was just a resource for his wife. He struggled. “I can’t solve this problem. I can’t make it happen. And as much as I wanted to try to fixt it, I couldn’t fix it.” The frustration led him to just shut off.

Saying he was tired of the emotional battle, he just quit fighting.

Matt says. He and his wife’s marriage had begun falling apart.

“I can’t tell you how important it is that I finally stood up and fought that battle… We loved each other, but were like roommates that loved each other.”

Eventually, he says, he and his wife finally came to the conclusion that this was not what they wanted for each other or themselves, and the two found themselves returning “to some of our core values, and our faith, and when though some marriage counseling.”

During that process, Matt explains, “I just saw how broken we were, and how oblivious we were to our own broken situation.”

Stand Up and Fight

Matt says he has learned in this experience,

“You have to begin seeing your situation and your circumstance with a different perspective. When you see yourself in the middle of things that are happening, a lot of times, you can pin yourself as the victim… I was very ungrateful for everything.”

Matt describes the vicious swirling eddy of emotions that was dragging him down the vortex of defeat.

“I was very ungrateful for everything. I was ungrateful for the way the infertility battles were going, which, in turn, made me ungrateful for how it was affecting our relationship. So, I came to a point where, if I don’t start changing something how, I’m going to risk losing the one thing that I care about the most.”

At that moment, Matt says he took a step back, and began to interact with more people, which brought him to a point of brokenness.

As he was coaching individuals and speaking publicly, he realized, “so many times i your own brokenness, you cannot recognize that reality. On the outside, it’s like you seeing a friend who’s fallen down in an accident or something and they’ve broken their leg. They keep trying to stand up on that broken leg, yet, you can’t help them out.”

Matt says, he was in a position that he was either going to be humbled by God’s presence or his circumstances.

“I think one of the two is going to happen… that humility is often found by taking a step back away from your emotions and really looking at a situation objectively,” he says of his situation at that time.

Admitting to Being a Terrible Husband

Admitting to being, at that time, a terrible husband to his wife, Matt Ham says he came to point in his life where he was broken, but ready to heal.

“I think when you begin to respond in a certain way, that is the catalyst for change,” says Matt.

Man's Search for MeaningReferring to the late Viktor Frankl’s book Man’s Search for Meaning, Frankl, imprisoned in German concentration camps, saw people dying all around him. As a psychiatrist, he observed that “everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms — to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.”

“For me,” says Matt, “that was the beginning. The marker, the capstone. I said ‘I’m going to respond differently. Rather than sitting off and meeting buddies on the weekend, and letting my wife do her thing, I’m going to fight.” Deciding what that fight looked like, Matt says he began taking some practical steps in the direction of his wife, and embracing their struggle together.

It was at that time that the two of them returned to their faith. And they went through some marriage counseling in their church.

“From there, it began a personal journey back to my faith foundation, which leads me back to that story of Bimini and the Bahamas,” Matt says.

During that trip to the Bahamas in high school, Matt led a Vacation Bible School for the orphans.

“[That’s] where I really started to see something greater than myself that was a key catalyst for everything that was going on in my life.”

Matt says his book, Redefining Rich, helped him see all of the markers i his life.

“When you take a step back from your life and start to look at the key moments, put them on a timeline, you start to see themes… commonalities among those moments that are leading you, or pointing you , in a direction.”

Noticing those markers in his life helped bring him and his wife together.

“As the story goes,God is, in my experience at least, and the way I feel, I think God is incredibly redeeming. But, He also has a fantastic sense of humor.”

Matt and his wife now have three children — all born within 15 months.

The first born, a son, Matthew, which the doctors saw wasn’t going to happen. Then, eight months later, while on a company trip to Hawaii, the couple came back with a bit more than a sun tan from the trip.

15 months later, little Matthew’s identical twin brothers were born.

The Ham family had moved from a completely destitute, impoverished, infertile couple to a family of five in about a 17 month period,

“It was quite amazing to see how that transformation took place,” says Matt, “but the interesting this is that tin the middle of raising three kids, late nights, being up all night, and bottles and stomach bugs and hospital visits… there was a moment where as much as I had been a terrible husband before, I was a terrible dad.”

Recognize the Source of Your Thoughts

Matt says there was a moment, while the three boys were young that he recognized he hadn’t improved quite as much as he had thought he had.

One night, as his birthday was approaching, he had scheduled to take his wife to a Dave Matthews concert.

Two days before the concert, one of the boys got a stomach bug, forcing them to sell their tickets to the concert and cancel their date.

”I was like my two-year-old at the time. I was throwing a fit in the middle of the floor. ‘I worked so hard, I deserve to go see this concert,’” he says.

Then he recognized,

“I was like “oh my gosh, I was so ungrateful.’” He told h himself that this wasn’t who or what he wanted to be in his life. “This is not emotions you want to feel, what’s going on underneath the surface,” he asked himself.

The moment, he says, lead to the writing of his first book.

Saying there’s incredible power in taking in actually thinking your thoughts, Matt says it’s a practice that he is trying to improve — to understand where thoughts come from, how they align with his greater goals, and what motivates him.

Those things, Matt says, are at the root of C.S. Lewis’ commentary about pride being the greatest sin of all.

“At it’s core,” Matt says, “I think so often, my battle is pride. It’s like I deserve this and you want to elevate yourself over a situation.”

He warns,

“When you start to be proud… I think there’s a problem. That’s why we talk so much about humility. Kind of leading back to that is so key to being able to grab your thoughts and find out if your motive is rooted in pride.”

Redefining Rich

Matt began writing his book, Redefining Rich, after the Dave Matthews experience in his kitchen floor.

When Matt and his wife returned home from Florida, Matt has run an insurance agency in his hometown of Wilmington, North Carolina.

Getting caught up in the sales competition, Matt says he always felt like he was trying to measure up to someone else’s metric.

HalfTime CoverEventually, he found a book, Half Time by Bob Buford.  Matt describes the book as being about Success versus Significance.

Recognizing that American men often find their significance in their success (or lack thereof), he says it’s important to define success on our own standards, and finding our significance elsewhere.

“For me, the interesting thing was I thought if I can outsell anybody and just grow this business, that will be what validates me.”

Saying it’s the motivation behind the goal that makes that a bad thing, he realized he needed to find his significant from another source.

Matt then began thinking about what it is he really loved. 

“When I came back from that mission trip when I was 18 years old, I was asked to speak at my church. And I gave my testimony and told the story about the kids and all the different stuff. After that I as met with so much encouragement from people who were there that day.”

They encouraged him to consider speaking publicly. Feeling that, as an 18-year-old, he didn’t have anything of value to say, he pushed it aside.

Later, in college, similar occasions would occur where others would recognize his ability to communicate and would encourage him. Again, he would push it aside.

Recognizing his desire to speak publicly, combined with everything else that was coming together in his life, he says he started to see that there could be a greater purpose in his desire to speak.

Matt then went to a good friend of his who was a public speaker with 30-years experience for advice. 10 years prior, Matt had talked to the same man about the same  thing. His advice then was “take good notes.”

A similar piece of advice came a decade after the first encounter. “Grab a pen,” the mentor said to Matt.

Matt had practiced journaling much of his life, so referring back to his notes, Matt began writing.

“I started looking back at those notes I had taken, and all the experiences and the pan, and the brokenness and the healing that had occurred, and all this stuff began flooding upon me. I’m writing in my journal, and I’m crying, I’m just emotional, and just losing it, and just saying ‘oh my gosh, all these things have happened for a reason and they’ve all led me to this place, and here I am right here, right now, and I’m here and all of these experiences have led me to this point, and what is the common theme that I see?”

Matt says the word “rich” jumped off the page.

Referring to an experience he had a number of years ago while his aunt was dying with cancer, Matt relates how a nurse told his aunt “you make my life rich.”

“I pieced that together within this big picture that was going on in my life, and all of these stories that were happening, and the brokenness and all the stuff we’ve talked about this far. I knew without a doubt that was what I was supposed to write about.”

Redefining Life

Matt confesses that the original title of his book was going to be “You Make My Life Rich.” Until he was diagnosed with cancer while writing the book. That instance, facing cancer, challenged him to live a life more richly.

Matt says he is constantly redefining what rich is to him and how he lives his life. That redefinition of life was all inspired by the catalyst of four words spoken by a nurse, named Melanie, to his aunt, “you make me rich.”

Matt says of those words,

“You can have a significant impact on the lives of people, not just here and now, but, for years to come. That nurse, Melanie, her story is what proves that to me. That’s where every single day I wake up and I’m seeing my words, and I’d say… your words can impact people in ways that you can’t even imagine. You have to be incredibly intentional, because it can do it the other way as well. That’s why we need to grab onto that richness and hold on to it. Otherwise, it’s just poverty.”

Keeping Focus on a Redefined Life

Saying he still has to focus on leading his family to live richly or his efforts have no value, Matt responds to Confessions of a Terrible Husband host, Nick Pavlidis question about how to keep that focus in the forefront.

“I have a wife who is flat-out awesome… part of it is what we have gone through. That we knew that brokenness at its core. And it’s something we just want to avoid at all costs. We know that there’s going to be adversity, there’s going to be struggle. We’re going to have deaths in the family, and all kinds of adversity that life throws at you. But we want to avoid that level of brokenness again. So, we have a relationship where she k nows me, and I know here. The direction we want to move as individuals and as a couple. So we keep each other honest, and are very intentional about making time for the other.”

Matt recognizes that commitment doesn’t just happen. it takes commitment, and creative ways to find time to accomplish your goals and keep the goals you’ve made for your relationships.

Matt cautions,

“You have to define the direction your life is going, or it will be defined for you.”

Podcast Show Notes and Transcription Services by The show notes Guy, Phillip Swindall