Love and Respect Journey
Love and Respect Journey
When my husband first suggested that we go through the Love & Respect study together, I honestly thought it would simply confirm what I already believed about marriage. I figured we would read a few chapters, nod along, maybe discuss a few ideas, and move on. I thought I already understood what respect meant.
I was wrong.
Walking through Love & Respect by Emerson Eggerichs together turned out to be one of the most life-changing things we have done for our marriage, especially within the framework of our Domestic Discipline relationship. It helped me see things in ways I had never really considered before.
Before the study, I believed I was respectful. I didn’t yell. I wasn’t openly critical. I supported my husband in many ways. But what I learned is that respect is not only about the obvious things. Sometimes it’s the subtle actions that speak the loudest.
- A sigh.
- A tone.
- An eye roll.
- Correcting him in front of the kids.
- Questioning a decision in a way that communicated doubt rather than trust.
Those little things added up more than I realized.
The study helped me see that while I believed I was being reasonable or simply expressing myself, what he often felt was a lack of respect. And when a husband feels disrespected, it affects how he leads.
One of the most powerful realizations for me was understanding that following is not weakness. In fact, it takes real strength.
In our Domestic Discipline marriage, my husband leads and I submit to that leadership. For some people, that sounds like giving up power. But what I have discovered is that choosing to follow well actually requires humility, trust, and self-control. It is a conscious decision every day.
And something beautiful happened as I worked harder to show him respect.
I watched him grow as a leader.
When I stopped pushing, correcting, and subtly resisting, he didn’t have to fight me for the role God had given him. Instead of tension, there was cooperation. Instead of defensiveness, there was confidence.
He began to lead more clearly and more calmly. Decisions were made with thoughtfulness. Our home felt more peaceful.
And our children noticed.
That was another powerful part of this journey. Our kids are always watching. They see how we treat each other. They learn what marriage looks like by observing us every day.
When they see their father leading with strength and love, and their mother supporting and respecting that leadership, they see a united front. They see stability. They see that we are linked together, working toward the same goals for our family.
It has created a sense of security in our home that I don’t think we fully appreciated before.
I used to think respect meant agreeing most of the time and avoiding obvious criticism. Now I understand that respect is much deeper than that. It’s about trusting his leadership, honoring him with my words and attitudes, and choosing unity over winning an argument.
The truth is, my husband has always been a good man and a good leader. But when I truly began to give him the respect he needed, it gave him room to grow even more into that role.
And I learned something about myself too.
Following well isn’t about shrinking. It’s about strengthening the bond between us.
In a very real way, our marriage works best when we are connected like two parts of the same body—moving in the same direction, supporting each other, and trusting the roles we each have.
Going through Love & Respect together helped us see that more clearly than ever.
I thought I understood respect before.
Now I’m still learning what it really looks like, every single day.
Hi Lisa, beautifully written, but more so. the beauty is in the way you live it. This is the professional woman speaking. Thanks for putting a new perspective on love and respect. I’m was raised that spankings / discipline is given and accepted out of love. Which is still very valid. With regard to respect, while growing up I could be disrespectful so I was “taught” respect! A lesson that I had to learn over and over again. Given your commentary, I will work much harder to show my respect in a relationship. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteAwe thank you so much Professional woman. on of the biggest things I learned he desires respect more than love. If I said to him, "I love you but can't respect you" that would be as devastating as if he said to me, "I respect you but can't love you". Mind Blown!
DeleteWise Lisa, that definitely says a mouthful! R.E.S.P.E.C.T. … and LOVE. They go hand and hand! Blessings!
Deleteoh my gosh yesssss.... did you know that R.E.S.P.E.C.T. was written and sung originally by..... Otis Redding not Aretha
DeleteYou’re absolutely right! It would make a great trivia question! Aretha made it her own by adding in the R.E.S.P.E.C.T. .… not unlike Dolly’s “I will always love you” made even more famous by the one and only Whitney!
ReplyDeleteGosh I love this conversation.
DeleteAlthough I generally consider myself very respectful (especially, given the way I was raised and my professional career,) I am going to have to continue to be mindful and work on R.E.S.P.E.C.T.. You think that after reading your commentary I would be more conscious of my actions. But nope! Not sure why but I came home yesterday evening with a bad temperament. Work was fine so not sure where it came from. Made it worse by Inappropriately dismissing his lecturing (warning) me and even became pouty with attitude. I know better! So to the corner to think about it. Honestly, I was thinking more about what I was going to get than my disrespectfulness. Didn’t think this - beside the expected hand spanking was given lines, stripes that is and sitting bare afterwards writing lines! Lesson learned so I thought but I’m expected to come home earlier tonight for a refresher! Today, but more so tomorrow, sitting in the office, oh my!!
ReplyDeleteohhh girl jeeze what were you thinking? Hugsss.
DeleteThat was the problem .. I wasn’t!! My mouth and brain were not in synch. Happy I got through the work days and the weekend is here!
DeleteEnjoy!
Actually Girl, I get it. Either I don't think or I react to fast for my brain to engage. I have not had my spanking yet. Yesterday evening was in possible. Maybe today!
DeleteHugs! I hate waiting! The anticipation, tingling, … But understand sometimes it can’t be helped. Especially with children at home. Hugs!
ReplyDeleteLisa, I love this book, too! You’ve inspired me to go back and read it again soon. I read it originally when I first began to see that my desire for discipline was not a shameful sexual kink, but a real, feminine need that could be met through Christian marriage to a man who practiced headship. I didn’t really know how to go about making that happen, but when I began dating my husband, I challenged myself to show him the unconditional respect outlined in the book, leaning into the wifely submissiveness I knew I wanted to embody in our (I hoped!) future marriage. He was impressed by my efforts, and I think it really set me apart from other girls he had dated. The more I offered him loving gestures of respect, sought out and actually followed his advice for my life, and showed him my willingness to accept his leadership, the more he seemed to acknowledge how much he wanted these things in a wife. I cannot agree more with your observation that your respect gave your husband more room to grow into that role! When a woman who offers a man her genuine respect, his leadership abilities naturally grow, gaining more and more strength as he sees the positive effect it has on their relationship. I felt like by offering my man my respect and, yes, my obedience early on, he came to believe that he actually deserved it for the first time in his life. In turn, he took a more active role in leading me, gratified by my easy reliance on his wisdom. I saw real changes in him during that time, and he was able to become more of a leader in the workplace, expanding his business and gaining more clients. The confidence he gained in learning to lead me, first as his shy girlfriend, and later as his well-disciplined wife, has spilled over into every aspect of his life. He has truly become the amazing man God always intended for him to be! Thank you, Lisa, for this reminder of how important it is for a woman to root out the small sighs, the slight resistance, or distracted inattentiveness which, while not overtly disrespectful, nevertheless can undermine our husbands, especially when our children are watching.
ReplyDeleteBlessings,
Sophia
Sophia,
DeleteI love what you shared about choosing to live out that respect while you were dating—almost like you were practicing the kind of wife you hoped to become. That is awesome.
Also, What you said about your husband growing into his leadership because of your respect is so true. I’ve seen that same thing in my own marriage. When I stepped back from subtle resistance and truly leaned into trusting him, it was like something shifted. He didn’t have to prove himself or push for authority—it just naturally strengthened. And like you said, that confidence doesn’t stay contained in the home. It spills over into everything.
I really appreciate you sharing your journey so openly. It’s encouraging to see how these principles have shaped not just your marriage, but your husband’s growth as a man and leader in all areas of life.
Blessings to you as well,
Lisa