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View Full Version : Are You Meeting Your Spouse's Emotional Needs?


Davey Crockett
01-27-2007, 08:22 PM
Marriages are made in heaven they say, but eventually, every marriage has to come down to earth. The honeymoon "orbits" gradually decrease in passion and intensity, due to other priorities that demand our attention. More so, when the bundle of joy arrives!

Loving glances are gradually replaced by frowns, the stars in your eyes do not shine so brightly anymore, and your attempts at intimate conversation is punctuated by wails from the little intruder. You discover, as almost every married couple before you have discovered, that the feeling called "romantic love" has to be nurtured by a continuous process of meeting each other's emotional needs.

What is an emotional need? It is a deep desire within you that, when satisfied, gives you a feeling of extreme happiness and contentment. If this desire is unsatisfied, it leaves you with a feeling of unhappiness and frustration. It follows, therefore, that when a husband and wife meet each other's most important emotional needs, they will be so happy and contented with each other that, they will experience passionate love, and stay in love as long as these emotional needs are met.

But, each of us have different emotional needs, and even if both spouses have the same emotional needs, their priorities for each emotional need may be different. For instance, love and romance for most men are sex and recreation; for most women its affection and intimate conversation. Now, if such a husband and wife pair would spend a recreational evening together, show intense affection, with deep, intimate conversation, it would naturally lead to sexual fulfillment. The result? Passionate love, since the most important emotional needs of both are fully met!

You, and your spouse, fell in love with each other because you both met some of each other's most important emotional needs, and the only way to stay in love, long after the honeymoon is over, is to keep meeting these emotional needs.

So, the first step for you, and your spouse, is to identify what are your most important emotional needs - those that will make you the happiest and most contented. The easiest way is to sit down, take a sheet of paper, and jot down what you would like your spouse to do/not do, that would give you the greatest happiness. A list, of at least five of your most important emotional needs, in order of priority, would be adequate for a start. When you both are ready with it, exchange the sheets of paper.

Now, that you, and your spouse, know what you can do for each other that, will make you both the happiest and contented married couple, it only remains to learn how to become experts at meeting these emotional needs. The degree of expertise you both acquire at meeting each other's most important emotional needs will be measured by the intensity of the fire of love and passion in your marriage.

mashmac
02-07-2007, 08:27 PM
Do you have concrete examples of what five of your emotional needs are?
What would you write? :confused: :confused:
Just trying to get an idea...

EC
02-08-2007, 12:16 PM
Can you guys shine some light on me, I don't know if I am on the right track now.

Lately I have been seeing marriage differently. To me, right now, marriage is not about church not about god, but rather a representation of the "real thing" in relationship, where two people choose to commit and will step through obstacles together, its a journey, tested by time, temptation, person growth, selfishness and selflessness.

What if to stay in a relationship requires you to meet your partner's emotional needs to make things work, and your emotional needs are ignored, or even condemned by your partner? Is it wrong to feel painful, is it wrong to feel so alone, very alone? What if by satisfying your partner's emotional needs and not having your satisfied, you've lost yourself, because you've lost your way of loving and expressing love?

Is it then wrong to say, weren't they the reasons you loved me in the first place? Because I am who I am? And now you have to be someone else just to keep your partner loving you, for who you're not.

Tuxgal
02-08-2007, 12:52 PM
EC- Well, you should never lose yourself within a relationship. I know how it can be to not have your emotional needs met. (Not with Tuxguy,of course) A one-sided relationship is no fun and not healthy. At some point you got to decide when to pull back in order to protect yourself.

Mashmac- Hard to answer...my best guesses would be...making the person feel loved, respected, needed, desired. They want to feel listened to and understood. Hope that helps some. :D