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The Marriage Mindset

Thursday, 29 May, 2008 - 7:31 am

Everybody loves a wedding. The love, the excitement, the heartfelt anticipation of a deep and lasting bond.
When we speak about the beauty of marriage, we speak of deep commitment and selfless, unconditional love.
But what does that really mean?
Commitment to children aside (because children are an extension of ourselves), are we ever really selfless?
And 'unconditional commitment' to a marriage? Why? What if someone feels betrayed? Is a spouse expected to be above ‘conditions’ like respect and loyalty?
Poetry aside, I believe marriage does have a special quality which lifts it beyond any other committed relationship. That quality is: [here I go again…] G-d.

1. Believe in soul mates? The Torah describes husband and wife as two halves of one organic whole. That’s not poetry; it’s a description of reality. Looking through a Torah lens, I see my marriage as a spousal unit with a specific destiny; I am but half of that unit and I’m responsible for my part in life’s work. This creates a very important attitude to dealing with marital friction. Instead of feeling the tension of being pitted against one’s spouse, it becomes the feeling of ‘how do we make it through this fog?’ The ‘we’ is a given; the work is keeping ‘we’ in sync.

2. My internal commitments can shift. For example: If I’m a vegetarian today, I can change my mind in the future. But when I surrender to a force outside of me - Higher than me - as my guiding compass, it brings an inherent stability. My moods can’t affect the compass; it’s beyond my reach. Marriage has the capacity for a deep mutual commitment to something Higher. Seventeen years ago, when I stood under a chupah (marriage canopy) with my wife, that chupah represented the Divine. It still does; I never want to walk from under that chupah, because it shelters my relationship until this day.
 
People sometimes ask why they should get married, if they’re already living in a committed relationship. Does it really make a difference?
To me, it makes all the difference in the world. It’s the difference between two people creating a relationship, and two halves uncovering the Oneness that’s already there.
Can we really compare?

Comments on: The Marriage Mindset
5/29/2008

A Friend wrote...

Mendy, you wrote: "But when I surrender to a force outside of me - Higher than me - as my guiding compass, it brings an inherent stability. My moods can't affect the compass; it's beyond my reach." I understand this concept of surrender. I think you mean, letting go of the baggage - a neccessary cliche' sorry - that keeps a person stuck inside themselves, focused on self....yes, the person that steps outside themselves and beyond themselves is going to find stability in all or many facets of life, not just marriage. But in marriage....doesn't it take two? You can't just do this on your own right? Don't you need to have a partner that is following the same life principles, the same guiding compass? Doesn't there have to be a conscious choice at some point by two people to look up and out...together? For me, independence is easy. I am responsible for myself, the choices I make. But "unconditional" trust and faith in another - a partner, a spouse - even one who deserves it!.......sometimes that gets hard......am I not trusting in myself...or...G-d?
7/27/2008

Yakov wrote...

Mendy,
Is it true that some of prushim during the tiome of the Second Temple were opposed to divorce?
9/5/2008

ryder ziebarth wrote...

Dear Mendy--Your sermon on a higher image which our Higher Power holds of us was fantastic. I loved the concept and will take it to my 12 step group,Alanon,where we often talk about our Higher Powers' ultimate "plan" for us--however, exploring the concept of a higher image , one that we might pray to clarify, is fresh and new to me--thank you for this very empowering message.