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False Messages II: The Heart of Rejection
- 11/10/09
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This short series, guest authored by my wife Aileen, began yesterday with False Messages I: What He Really Wants. Today Aileen picks up where she left off.
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by Aileen Challies
When you thought about getting married and when you anticipated having sex with your husband, did you ever think about how often you’d be saying “no” to him? I know of a few women who decided before they married that they would never refuse their husbands and who have, admirably, stuck to their promise. For the rest of us, though, “no” is is a word we use far more than we ever would have thought possible (or desirable). Maybe we say “no” with our words, whether kind or gracious; maybe we say “no” with our attitudes or body language; maybe we say it with our wardrobe or simply by going to bed long before he is tired. We grow adept at finding new and creative ways of refusing sex.
We are not completely comfortable with rejecting him but at the same time, he wants so much! Can’t he see that I’m too tired? Can’t he see that I’m just not in the mood? Can’t he back off just for tonight (and maybe tomorrow night…and the night after that…)?
Yesterday we touched on what sex means to your husband and its importance in married life. Today I want to focus on an area in which many women harm their husbands. I want to talk about how a wife is to respond to her husband’s advances. How does the Bible want her to view sex? Is she never to reject him? Is she called always to have sex when he is in the mood? What does God want from us in all of this?
You are probably familiar with these words from 1 Corinthians 7: “Do not deprive one another, except perhaps by agreement for a limited time, that you may devote yourselves to prayer, but then come together again, so that Satan may not tempt you because of your lack of self-control.” According to this passage, under what circumstances are you allowed to stop having sex? By mutual agreement, for a limited time and to devote yourselves to prayer. (This is why you always say “no,” right? Because you want to pray? “Not tonight, honey, I think we need to pray…”) Take out the exception clause and it reads as a straightforward command: “Do not deprive one another…so that Satan may not tempt you.”
As I understand it, this command does not necessarily speak to saying “no” to sex tonight; it refers to rejection. Let’s draw a line between these two things. The inability to have sex tonight is not the same as actually depriving him (perhaps you are feeling sick or you actually do have a bad headache or you’re just absolutely worn out in every way). You can turn him down for noble reasons and he will survive until tomorrow. But what may be sin in your heart and what may tempt him to sin is your rejection. You can say “no” without rejecting him. But do you? Today let’s talk about rejection and see what rejection does to you and what it does to your husband.
Rejection and Your Heart
Humans are selfish at heart; wives are selfish at heart. Though we know that God calls us to esteem others higher than ourselves, though we know that he calls us to love our husbands more than we love ourselves, we naturally tend toward self-love. Often we love ourselves more than our own husbands. Often rejection is not a reflection of our bodies or our lives, but of our hearts.
What happens to our hearts when we continually reject our husbands and do so out of selfishness? I believe the answer is that we grow bitter, increasingly hardened toward our husbands. I recently spoke with several friends about our reactions when we tell our husbands “no.” The overwhelming agreement was that we feel guilty and then, from that guilt comes anger. We grow angry at him for placing us in this situation in which we end up feeling guilty. The conversation in our heads goes something like this. “I should be having sex with him tonight. But I don’t want to have sex with him tonight. He should see that I’m too tired. It is his fault for asking. How dare he!” Instead of putting him first, we look first to ourselves and justify our sin by placing blame on him. If we do not deal properly with this heart sin, it grows and bitterness develops. While there are certainly valid reasons for not wanting to have sex or not being able to have sex on a particular night, like so much sin, it often comes down to attitude and selfishness. You are called to serve your husband as he is called to serve you. That calling extends beyond making sure he has clean underwear and a good meal every night (and, in fact, I’m guessing most men would forgo the clean underwear and the meal if it meant they could have regular joyful sex with you).
Angry rejection is not a sign of a heart that is joyfully engaged with their husband. Neither is mere placid participation. A heart that is engaged and willing to serve will find joy in that service if not the act itself. One flows into the other. Regular, joyful sex is for you too! It allows you to connect on the most intimate level with your husband, just as God intended. Your marriage need this connection if it is going to stay strong.
Rejection and His Heart
Women are often said to be the more complex sex—we are more difficult to understand, we have more hidden nuances. However, when it comes to sex, the male psyche is far more difficult to understand (though men would probably beg to differ). In a woman’s mind, we don’t feel like having sex simply because we don’t feel like having sex. Therefore, we say “No, not tonight.” And most of us could be happy going weeks or months like this (and especially when we’ve got little kids hanging off us for years at a time). But the rejection that the male feels in such refusals is far deeper and far more reaching then we imagine. We have not just rejected sex; we have rejected him.
Sin has deeply marred our perception of sex and, as we’ve seen, we tend to believe that it is the physical release men seek rather than the emotional and spiritual connection they experience when making love to their wives. But the truth is, your husband sees sex as a means to show his love for you and in rejecting that act, you are hampering his ability to express his love for you. In his mind you are rejecting not the act, but him and his love. This, more than any other, is an area in which your husband is vulnerable to being deeply hurt. God has given you a huge amount of power over your husband’s perception of his manhood. You can make him feel like a sexual superstar or a complete loser without ever leaving your bed. By rejecting sex, you are rejecting his manhood. It’s not that you can never say “No honey, not tonight” to your husband, but that you need to be careful in how you respond. As always, the heart is the heart of the matter.
In her book Becoming the Woman of his Dreams, Sharon Jaynes says that one thing she learned through all of her interviews and surveys is that men are surprisingly fragile when it comes to their sexuality. They may act all big and macho but they are actually very weak in this way, very vulnerable to rejection. So here is a question for you: how often are you acting from pure motives when you refuse your husband? And even if you are not being sinful in motive, are you perhaps being sinful in the way you refuse? Do you maybe even get a bit of sick joy from spurning his advances? Sex is a wonderful opportunity to give back to your husband, to accept his love, to show your love for him. Why, then, are you sometimes (often? all the time?) so quick to turn it down?
Take a look at two scenarios Jaynes offers in her book. In the first, hubby comes slinking into the bathroom as you are putting the finishing touches on your 15 minute face cleansing and moisturizing regiment. He runs his hand down your back and grins. You know exactly what he has in mind. “Not now!” you snap. “I’ve had a hard day and that is the last thing on my mind!” End of story. In the second, hubby comes slinking into the bathroom as you are putting the finishing touches on that same cleansing and moisturizing regiment. He runs his hand down your back and grins. “Now that’s a nice idea,” you reply. “I’ll tell you what, I’ve had an extremely tiring day today, but if you hold that thought until tomorrow, I’ll make it worth your while.” This story has just begun!
I love these examples. See, in both cases hubby is disappointed, but in only one is he dejected! In one scenario he is rejected, in the other he is simply asked to wait. A man who feels he is begging or asking his wife for a favor feels humiliated. He knows that begging costs him his masculinity. In one scenario the wife protects her husband’s heart; in the other scenario she abuses it. And there is a great danger in this.
Let’s go back for a second to 1 Corinthians 7 and make it a little bit more personal, seeing what can happen when you reject your husband: “Do not deprive your husband…so that Satan may not tempt him.” Have you ever thought about it this way before? Could you actually be setting up your husband to experience temptation to sin by rejecting him and refusing to have sex with him on a regular basis? Could you in some way be contributing to his sin? Coming at the end of Tim’s Sexual Detox articles, ones that focused so heavily on men and pornography, this may sound like a justification for these acts. Of course this is not my intention at all and no man ever has justification to turn to pornography or self-pleasure. However, I think it is wise to remember as with everything, when there is sin in one aspect of a relationship, it often spills over into other areas of that relationship. A wife’s rejection may actually leave her husband more vulnerable to sexual sin. While the rejection is not the cause of the subsequent sin it may be the catalyst.
Men can end up acting out through pornography or masturbation because of shame, humiliation or rejection. This is not to say that the sin of pornography is always a result of this. But is wise to remember that a denial of God’s commands in marriage can only have negative results. In a perfect world, in a perfect relationship, a woman would never say “no” to her husband and a husband would never ask when his wife is not desirous. Of course in that perfect world a woman would also never be up all night with a sick baby! In the real world, though, a woman often ends up rejecting her husband, not knowing just how deep this cuts.
Men, when they feel like men, make better men! They lead better, they work better and yes, they serve their wives better. Feeling like a man includes having a joyful, willing wife. If we are to be truly good wives to our husbands, we need to serve them in all areas, building them up as men. Sex is an important part of that—passionate, joyful, willing sex. Our hearts and attitudes need to be pure. We need to have regular sex with our husbands and always we need to be careful that we are not tearing them down with our rejection.
Conclusion
A pattern of rejection is dangerous to a marriage. It gives the wife a great deal of power over her husband’s heart—a power that she may wield wrongly. Rejection by the wife leads to feelings of inadequacy, bitterness and temptation in the husband. This may then lead him to be less loving, to lead him to struggle in his role as a husband. This in turn leads the wife to reject him more as she desires him less as she sees him as not loving her as she wants. Remember by rejecting sex, she is rejecting him, rejecting his heart. Meanwhile the wife may grow bitter as her rejection causes her to wrestle with guilt and to push the blame for this guilt upon her husband and his desires. The ugly cycle of sin continues.
It is God’s design for marriage that sex displays total love love and acceptance. Therefore a wife ought to be eager to accept her husband’s advances and a husband ought to be eager to accept the body and soul of his wife as they are united as one. It is Satan’s design for marriage that sex, instead of being all about acceptance, should be all about rejection. Whose team are you playing on?
This series will conclude tomorrow on what is hopefully a practical note. Tim and I are glad to get feedback and to have opportunity to learn from you and to hear from you (anonymously if you prefer). You can contact us using the contact form. I will be receiving and reading any of the emails from women.
Posts in this Series:
- False Messages I: What He Really Wants
- False Messages II: The Heart of Rejection
- False Messages III: Desiring Him

I am a follower of Jesus Christ, a husband to Aileen and a father to three young children. I worship and serve as a pastor at
Releasing on April 1, The Next
Comments (23)
Incredibly insightful and necessary words you have to share, Aileen. These ought to be in a book.
I think you understand men very well. You certainly express my feelings and frustrations. I just wish there was a way to get my wife to read your posts.
Last time I brought this issue up (not enough sex,) she got angry and defensive (which I understand) and essentially laid the blame on me. What should I expect when most marriage seminars tell men that, to have sex, you always have to be the ultimate romantic? I have found that these conferences set the bar so high for us men, that we can rarely reach it. Any shortcoming whatsoever justifies the refusal of sex.
After my previous experience, I certainly don’t want to bring it up again. So I just “suffer” in silence and keep my disappointment, anger and resentment inside. But, being middle aged, I now understand clearly one reason why so many men have a mid-life crisis.
Holy sex is to be personally fulfilling for both men and women (1 Cor. 7:2-5) in the context of a life long marriage relationship. For that to properly happen there must be both spiritual and sexual maturity for both the husband and the wife. Sex must never be sex in service of me. Sex in marriage is to be mutually fulfilling; but never sex in the service of us. Sex was given to us for pleasure and fulfillment by God to build a deep bond that leads to sex in the service of God. The way we handle our spirituality and sexuality is to show the supremacy of Christ. Surprisingly, the key to good sex and a good marriage starts with the pursuit of the glory of God, not improving our communications. So what is it about sex in marriage that is not only mutually pleasurable, but good? When we turn away from self and turn to taking care of each other. From that experience of warming each other, we are to warmly care for others. Private intimacy is to be the heart of a marriage relationship that overflows in love to others on the outside. This is sex in the service of God!
Thanks for the comment, Harry. You said that sex is mutually pleasurable and good, “When we turn away from self and turn to taking care of each other.”
So my question is, then, how does this function when one person desires sex and the other doesn’t? To some degree sex has to be about “me” doesn’t it, if my body is telling me that it’s ready? So how does a husband or a wife take that “me” and turn it into “us?” How can he translate that personal desire into something bigger and better without appearing selfish?
Great post…one women need to hear more often. It really all boils down to loving our husbands more than ourselves.
Thank you for these messages.
You married well, Tim.
(And I hope your wife would say the same!)
Aileen & Tim,
This is a great conversation. Aileen has done a wonderful job of getting to the core of the issue here…it isn’t really about the sex, but about the rejection. We men want to be our wife’s hero and rejection of this sort is crushing to our headship/leadership ego. We subconsciously need to feel like we can do no wrong in our wife’s eyes and this screams: failure! Loser! So really it is all about the delivery and communication between spouses.
i would love to see Aileen do a series on “the busy wife and mother”…every wife and mother i know could use some encouragement!
keep it up!
Keller hackbuschReno, NVwww.abidingthroughgrace.blogspot.com
Excellent! Philippians 2:3 (KJV) Let nothing be done through strife or vainglory; but in lowliness of mind let each esteem other better than themselves. I think if this is done, there will be a perfect balance both the husband and wife can appreciate.
Excellent Post again!:) I don’t know if you are going to write about this in one of your next posts but as I was reading, I was thinking that it’s not just about NOT rejecting our husbands but also in pursuing them. My love language may not be sex but it doesn’t mean I shouldn’t/ can’t pursue my husband. The Lord has really shown me that there is no better way to build my husband up than to approach him as opposed to just be a willing participant. He likes to be a leader and is happy if I’m willing…but he’s even HAPPIER when I pursue him….especially b/c he knows my desire isn’t as strong as his. My approach is often far different in pursuit of him than him to me but it ultimately ends the same way. My mom used to tremind me of the verse…”To know to do good and doeth it not, to him it is sin.” This could definitely be applied to our intimacy. When we know we could be an encouragement but won’t be….we are sinning.Having 5 kids, 8 and under, can be tough as far as sleep and having privacy, but I think there is a wonderful gift we can give our children which is to stay close as husband and wife. Not that there won’t be seasons of hardship but our kids feel much security when we’re holding hands, hugging, and kissing. A funny story…we were all sitting to eat dinner and I asked my husband what he wanted to drink and out of the blue our 8 yr. old said..”You two are so great together”. At first, I laughed but as my husband and I were talking later about what he said, it was a reminder that these little eyes are watching. We have such a great opportunity to glorify God and to show our children what a blessing marriage is…especially in a time when Satan is on the attack against godly marriages.Thanks again for a thought provoking post! I look forward to the next!
Tim, excellent question! That is the state of many Christian marriages, with couples just existing and living with resentment. My body tells me I’m ready, sometimes, but not always. I can be dog tired, just about asleep, but a thought or word or action can awaken my mind, my heart and my body to desire sex intimacy. I believe this is true of men and women.
To simple go from “me” to “us” may create sex with good pleasure for both the husband and wife, but the foundation for the marriage may not be strong, and it is not sex in the service of God. If you study Gen. 2:5, 15, 18-25, there is a different primary purpose for marriage than sex or relationship than indicated by our therapeutic culture. “It is not good the man should be alone;” is read through the lens of personal need and well-being. Adam being alone was more than a sexual/relational problem. After all he had God. Rather, he was alone to do the work. Just read the context with that in mind. Therefore, I conclude that the purpose of marriage is not primarily sex or relationship. That is the emphasis of our culture and men appear to approach their wives just for sex (believe it or not, they actually want intimacy/relationship) and women feel like sexual objects. Women want relationship, intimacy and romance and don’t feel cherished. Thus men feel inadequate for the task.
If we start marriage, and live out our marriage primarily for work, that is for the glory of God, with relationship and sex directed to that purpose, we have a foundation to answer the question: “How can he translate that personal desire into something bigger and better without appearing selfish?” If the wife isn’t interested in making love, the husband must start with himself and as the initiator and figure out the problem. Lack of interest is not normal, nor is it God ordained (1 Cor. 7:2-5). Remember, a problem in love-making is a heart problem (sin problem), not primarily a technique problem. That’s why I object to a date-night, be more romantic approach as the only approach. A wife’s lack of interest, usually always coming after the “honeymoon” is over, never in premarital sex, comes in response to a husband thinking more of himself, and less about the purpose, glory of God. In other words, satisfying your wife spiritually, relationally and sexually is a calling to live out the supremacy of Christ in marriage for the glory of God. For more detail, see Chapters 6,7, 10, 11, & 13, in Undefiled.
I am just another wife with another point of view.
My husband is your elder, and I teach your ladies’ Bible class. You come to me for marriage advice, and I point you to Jesus. The game night is at our house, because we a lot of fun—great kids, great marriage, great job, great life.
But I have a secret that I haven’t told you because we are not allowed to talk about it. This is my story.
I married a man 13 years ago, but I didn’t know he was addicted to pornography. Had I known then what I know now and the devastation it would cause, I would’ve run. But as it is now, there are the kids…
It was the same story as everyone else. He had an addiction that he thought would go away when we got married. Perhaps our story deviates a bit from the norm because I was a virgin (as was he) when we married. I waited for marriage to pull out all the stops, and believe me, I did.
It started with him pushing me away with my constant request for intimacy. About a year into the marriage, I found out about the pornography. Everything made sense now. That’s why he wasn’t interested in me; he was otherwise occupied.
I worked through taking this personally and “being good enough” and the lying and all the stuff a woman faces when she finds out. I went to counseling, and the counselor thought I had a good head on my shoulders. (Gee. Thanks.) He told the elders and went through the “recovery process.”
Fast forward a decade. But all these years later, I still face the rejection. He isn’t interested in sex, and it hurts me to the core. I am still attractive, funny, and smart. Men hit on me, so it’s not because of the years’ toll. But my own husband isn’t interested.
I don’t nag him. I am a good wife according to him. He just isn’t interested and never has been. I’d give anything to be in the position of telling my husband, “Not tonight.” Geez. I know what it’s like to be up all night with babies—I get that. I do that every night. But I also understand the deep hurt physical rejection causes because that is the cross that I bear.
If I could tell young men anything, it’d be this: Run from pornography. If not for the offense against God, then for the offense against your (future) wife. Do you want to be so desensitized that you reject your wife? That’s what pornography did to our marriage, and let me tell you, it sucks. 13 years later and the havoc from pornography is not over, even though the habit is.
Pornography desensitizes you over time, so that normal intimacy is unable to achieve the high you’re looking for. It’s like a drug—a horrible drug that needs more and more to feed it until there is just nothing powerful enough.
I am young, attractive, very willing…but hung out to dry. I will honor my marriage vows. I will give my husband an appearance of a good life. I will laugh at his jokes, run his house, and encourage him daily. But I will always hurt deeply -my stomach is sick as I type—because of his rejection of me. All these years…
There is healing for many, but then there are those who live with the consequences of someone else’s actions. Sin is terrible, and I will live with it and pray for it for the rest of my marriage. There is nothing else I can do about it.
[Tim and Aileen, please don’t look up my IP address. You’ll know who I am, and I don’t want to dishonor my husband by your knowing.]
Hello Aileen,I’ve only been married for 6 years, but no matter the length this is true from honeymoon on. I totally see your perception on this subject. I agree with it all and it’s biblical basis. Wives are to love their husbands (Titus 2:4). Along side the love, there are other issues the Bible addresses to wives attitudes and responses toward husbands that tie into life together including the love life. I believe these issue are wider spread throughout scripture than wives just loving their husbands. They may be unpopular to speak about, but is important to God and the success of married life, including the sex life. The issue is of wives submitting, being subject and respectful toward their husbands (Eph. 5:22, 24 & 33; Col. 3:18; 1 Peter 3:1 & 5; and as mentioned above 1 Cor. 7:1-5). Because love is different than these, I would like to see you tie these critical issues into the sex life of married couples.
Thank you,Bethany
Proverbial Wife,
Thanks for sharing your story, hard though it must have been to do so. It is stories like yours that were the impetus for my original Detox series. Pornography is largely a guy problem…or so people think. If it was just guys who were being damaged by it, it would still be terrible, but not nearly so terrible as the reality—that it impacts wives just as deeply; more so, even.
I do know there can be healing even for something as painful and deep-rooted as this. So don’t give in to the temptation to think that this is the end, that this is the way it always has to be.
Proverbial Wife-
My heart breaks for you and your story. I can not imagine all that you have gone through but all the same, I yearn for the new heavens and the new earth when all things will be made new and the pains of this world will be gone. Remember this is not it…the best is yet to come and God will honor you for keeping your marriage vows despite the hurt and betrayal you have endured. May your story show others what it looks like to stay with your spouse through better or worse. And like Tim said, do not think this is the end and there is no hope. Remember the race is won by endurance…may God use you to show others what it is to keep running the race no matter how difficult the terrain for the prize that awaits you in Christ Jesus. He will never fail you or betray you.
Proverbial Wife,
If you can, if you’re willing, I’d really like you to contact me. I don’t want you to violate conscience or anything, but do want to offer you something that will be a blessing to you, I’m sure. You can contact me anonymously, if you like. But please do think it over.
Tim and Aileen,
Wow, what an array of postings you have received today. I want to compliment you on the sensitivity you have shown toward those individuals who felt comfortable enough to express their pain and struggles via your blog. I also want to commend you on removing certain postings that were gratuitous.
Sola Gratia
I am sure that for some wives, struggling with the temptation to say “no” all the time is a real struggle. I am not yet a mother, so maybe I can’t fully understand that yet. However, I have many close married friends, and have been to many showers for new brides and more often than not, I am hearing the women admit that they actually have a greater desire for sex than their husbands, or at least want it more frequently. Most all of these are women who were virgins until marriage and are in Christian marriages. Have any advice for this?
I Cor. 7 reads, “Do not deprive one another…” not, “Wives, do not deprive your husbands.” (I do not believe it refers to rejection, but to deprivation.) This may not only refer to frequency. A man may deprive his wife even when they have sex often, if the sex is not satisfying to her.
There should be no more guilt for a woman not desiring sex than for a man for desiring it. But perhaps a deeper look at the whys is necessary. Both men and women, perhaps more so women, are overworked these days, whether they work outside the home or not. Few have hired help like so many middle-class families did just a few generations ago, and the pace/demands of modern life have increased. If it takes more effort for women to have sex to begin with, and they are exhausted, then no wonder decreased desire is a problem.
Perhaps to some extent men train themselves to desire sex often by indulging themselves when they are young and single. Or perhaps they over-identify their need for closeness and intimacy with the act of sex, whereas some of this need could be fulfilled otherwise. Perhaps women, being more attuned to a “whole-life” sexuality, would do well to be more sexually outgoing. Perhaps women, especially those of older generations, have not been “allowed” to see themselves as sexual creatures in their own right; a woman is almost expected to be less sexually-charged than a man in order to be seen as feminine, or properly chaste. Perhaps we have been conditioned to think that men require sex every time they want it, and that women are obliged to figure out what’s wrong with them if they don’t when he does, or feel pressured or manipulated, whether by guilt, teachings, etc.
If a man feels hurt by rejection, then perhaps he is not aware of how he may be rejecting his wife. He may be rejecting her needs for rest, or understanding, or for having a sexual relationship that is as much on her terms as it is on his. Rather than focus on his feelings of rejection, he might look outward and delve deeper, and consider what he might do to help his wife be less tired, or more willing to be sexually open with him. A wife would do well to be honest about her thoughts, feelings, and desires, and not have to worry about hurting her husband’s feelings or showing herself in a bad light. In other words, perhaps a man ought not take a wife’s refusal personally, just as she ought not take his advances in a negative light, if they are not accompanied by pressure.
I am suggesting that if a man’s feelings of manhood or success are dependent upon whether or not his wife accepts his advances, then the problem lies not with her, but with him. A true leader is not led by how others treat him. I am not saying that a wife should not be kind and considerate should she refuse, but his sense of himself ought not be affected by whether she does or not. He might be saddened or disappointed, but she ought have no more power over him than that. If she does, then he is too dependent upon her and not upon God. (The same goes for a wife.) Both must be willing to look at the overall picture of their lives and their marriage, and work out together how to best serve one another’s needs and desires in a way which honors God.
wow! Ok, I was seriously laughing out loud at some of the “thoughts” that you put into words throughout this article. It is amazing to me that so many women have the same exact thoughts and verbalize it in the same way. As an enganged young woman I would have never dreamed that I would think these things or say these things-in fact I vowed I never would. Then came the sinful flesh and selfishness and it became a struggle. Thanks for the thoughtful and encouraging advice; I can’t get enough of it!
Had a great marriage - including physical side of things for 12+ years. Then my husband became “married” to his ministry (in addition to a 50 hour a week secular job). Expressions of love - verbal, touching, holding hands, talking, etc disappeared. He was always too busy and too tired. I never denied him in bed - in fact was happy he even was spending a few minutes concentrated on me. But it began to feel more and more as though I was just a prostitute for his physical relief. Then I discovered an emotional affair with his ministry asst and he reluctantly did a couple of counseling sessions. It has been several years. Hasn’t told me he loves me or appreciates me in many years. Stil no touching outside of the bedroom. And in the bedroom it is twice a month at the most and the entire point is to pleasure him, nothing for me. I’m trusting God to restore my marriage but nothing ever changes for the good, just slowly getting worse. So I am another ministry wife who feels abandoned and rejected and wondering what I’ve done wrong. It is hard when it is the husband who loses interest. We are in our mid-40s so I don’t know, maybe this is normal for middle aged men. By the way, we have an outstanding marriage in the eyes of everyone else and I have worked hard to never dishonor my husband in any way.
” In his mind you are rejecting not the act, but him and his love”
This is so true, and the first time I have ever seen it in print.Thank you
>>Men, when they feel like men, make better men! They lead better, they work better and yes, they serve their wives better. Feeling like a man includes having a joyful, willing wife.
Aileen, YOU ROCK!!, and that’s all I am going to say :)
“”I’ll tell you what, I’ve had an extremely tiring day today, but if you hold that thought until tomorrow, I’ll make it worth your while.” This story has just begun!”
While this is good…the wife who says this MUST follow through with joy. If tomorrow roles around…and she does not pursue with joy the hope of the promised intimacy…then the rejection the man feels is 10 fold. And the next time she says this…what heart ache and disbelief. Use care with the words you share wives.