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Home › Advice › Married Life › Improve Marriage Communication
The Importance Of Communication In Marriage

Sylvia Smith
14.3k Reads8 minsUpdated: 7 Aug, 2019

The Importance Of Communication In Your Marriage

Let’s play a game. If you found yourself in a crowded public place and began to ask strangers what they felt the most important factor of a marriage was…what do you think they would say?

Love? Trust? Honesty? Of course, these are all important. But one factor that seems to be talked about much less is communication (ironic, right?). The way a married couple discusses their issues, or if they discuss anything at all, is crucial to a sustained and fulfilling marriage. If you are still wondering why is communication important in a relationship or how important is communication for a married couple, read on.

Why is communication important?



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The importance of communication in marriage is often not taken seriously as many couples tend to think that the daily banter or the lack of it doesn’t affect them on a day-to-day basis. But communication is the vehicle through which all other important parts of marriage are performed. If you love someone, but you don’t use your words and your actions to communicate it, you’re not doing right by your partner. If you trust someone, let them know. Communicate it to them. If you can communicate honestly, your marriage has a good chance of being happy and healthy. In fact, the importance of communication should be considered right from the courtship days as it sets the right foundation of the relationship.

Open husband and wife communication is the cornerstone of any and every long and loving marriage. The problem is that some people just aren’t good at it. Let’s take some time to understand the importance of communication in marriage and see what forms of marital communication will create the atmosphere of a strong and caring marriage.

Communication as a cornerstone
Love, trust, honesty, and every other important characteristic of a strong marriage aren’t meaningful in themselves. It is the expression of these things that produces a marriage worth envying. Showing that love, showcasing your trust, and acting honestly is where the magic is. Being able to communicate how much your wife or husband means to you is where your marriage goes from good to great.

Communication is more than just speaking, though. There is verbal communication, nonverbal communication, and physical acts that can be placed under the umbrella of communication. Let’s have a look at these different types of communication which will help you understand the importance of communication in marriage in a better way.

Related- Great Connections: How to Communicate Respectfully with your Spouse
Types of Communication in Marriage
Verbal communication
Everyone likes to hear that they look nice. Everyone likes to hear that they are loved. Verbal communication, being able to express how you feel to your spouse through the words that you speak, is essential to effective communication.

If you love someone with all of your heart, but you don’t say it enough, the other person may never understand just how deeply they are loved. If you appreciate your spouse, but never speak up about it, that appreciation holds less value. Being able to tell your spouse how wonderful they are will make them feel loved, appreciated, and in touch with how you feel. Such type of communication is key to a long-term relationship. So if you understand the importance of communication in marriage, you will not take verbal communication with your partner lightly.

Along with expressions of pleasure, you have to be able to speak up about what you’re not happy with. Communication between married couples is imperative to marital happiness. If your spouse is doing something that bothers you to your core, but you’re silent on the subject, your lack of communication and trust will only allow the action to continue. You can’t go through life with your wife or husband holding all of your dissatisfaction inside. Letting it out is necessary and healthy for your relationship. This should be done in a tactful and warm manner, but don’t wait until it’s too late to say something that you need to. The lack of communication in marriage, especially verbal, can take a huge toll on the mental health of both partners.

Related- Communication Skills for Couples: the Basic Element for a Successful Marriage
Verbal communication

Nonverbal communication
We’ve all said something to a friend, family member, or spouse that was met with an unpleasant facial expression. That person didn’t have to say a word, but they told a story with their face. It’s not just facial expressions, either. Us humans say a lot more with our bodies than we give ourselves credit for.

When we talk about the importance of communication in marriage, we cannot underplay nonverbal communication. Be aware of how your body language is communicating with your partner. If you’re hunched over and closed off while trying to have an important conversation, your partner will subconsciously feel that lack of vulnerability. Face your husband or wife and keep your body language open when having difficult conversations. No leg crossing. No arm crossing. Your body should show your spouse that you are open to hearing what they have to say and are willing to work through it.

There are plenty of nonverbal cues similar to a closed off posture that are communicating either negatively or positively to your partner without any words being exchanged. Be more conscious and thoughtful about how your body expresses your feelings. The importance of effective nonverbal husband and wife communication cannot be underlined enough. To say the least it can be a major pivot in de-escalating a lot of conflicting situations.

Physical acts
Making dinner. Going to the grocery store. Taking out the garbage. Going on an ice cream run for your pregnant wife.

All of these aren’t things that you say; they are things that you do that show your spouse that you care about them. In doing these small and thoughtful acts, you are communicating your love for them without saying much at all. When we talk about importance of communication in relationships, such physical acts go a long way for couples who may not be that great with verbal communication.

The phrase “actions speak louder than words” fits appropriately with this form of communication. You could tell your wife you love her until you’re blue in the face, but it won’t resonate as much as cleaning the house or changing the oil in her car. You could shower your husband with compliments, but making dinner for him, is maybe even more powerful than an “I love you”.

The importance of communication in marriage cannot be stressed enough. The open channels of communication ensure less misunderstandings and help in developing the relationship in a well-rounded manner.

Related- How to Deal With Silent Treatment in Marriage
Communication is essential to any successful marriage, but you can’t rely on just one of the three ways listed above. It will take a good balance of the trio to show your spouse how much they mean to you as time passes.

Tell your spouse what you love about them, but also don’t be afraid to voice your opinion if something is bothering you. That open and honest verbal communication will become an investment with a vast return as the years go by.

Show your spouse, through your body language, that you are being honest and open with them. Closing yourself off, covering your mouth when you speak, and making negative facial expressions are red flags to the observant eye. Be conscious of what your body is saying, and make the proper adjustments so that your wife or husband knows that you’re being genuine.

Use your actions to communicate your love, trust, and honesty with your partner. Buy them a thoughtful gift, give them a massage, or help them with a troubling task. Words don’t have to be spoken; your actions will speak for themselves.

So now that you understand the importance of communication in marriage and why is effective communication important between couples, start reaching out to your partner as a habit. Communicate early and often in your marriage. Make it an intentional practice between the two of you. Without an open and genuine husband and wife communication, your marriage will meet more obstacles than otherwise.

11/17/2019

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Home › Advice › Married Life › Relationship Advice and Tips
Self-Esteem Makes Successful Relationships

Darlene Lancer Marriage & Family Therapist | Practice License Verified
4k Reads5 minsUpdated: 7 Jan, 2019

Self-Esteem Makes Successful Relationships

In This Article
How self-esteem affects relationships
Solutions
Research has well-established the link between good self-esteem and relationship satisfaction. Self-esteem not only affects how we think about ourselves but also how much love we’re able to receive and how we treat others, especially in intimate relationships.

A person’s initial level of self-esteem prior to the relationship predicts partners’ common relationship satisfaction. More specifically, although happiness generally declines slightly over time, this isn’t true for people who enter a relationship with higher levels of self-esteem. The steepest decline is for people whose self-esteem was lower, to begin with. Frequently, those relationships don’t last. Even though communication skills, emotionality, and stress all influence a relationship, a person’s past experience, and personality traits affect how these issues are managed and therefore have the greatest bearing on its outcome.

How self-esteem affects relationships
Self-esteem suffers when you grow up in a dysfunctional family. Often you don’t have a voice. Your opinions and desires aren’t taken seriously. Parents usually have low self-esteem and are unhappy with each other. They themselves neither have nor model good relationship skills, including cooperation, healthy boundaries, assertiveness, and conflict resolution. They may be abusive, or just indifferent, preoccupied, controlling, interfering, manipulative, or inconsistent. Their children’s feelings and traits and needs tend to be shamed. As a result, a child feels emotionally abandoned and concludes that he or she is at fault–not good enough to be acceptable to both parents. This is how toxic shame becomes internalized. Children feel insecure, anxious, and/or angry. They don’t feel safe to be, to trust, and to like themselves. They grow up codependent with low self-esteem and learn to hide their feelings, walk on eggshells, withdraw, and try to please or become aggressive.

Attachment style reflects self-esteem
As a result of their insecurity, shame, and impaired self-esteem, children develop an attachment style that, to varying degrees, is anxious or avoidant. They develop anxious and avoidant attachment styles and behave like pursuers and distances described in “The Dance of Intimacy.” At the extreme ends, some individuals cannot tolerate either being alone or too close; either one creates intolerable pain.

Anxiety can lead you to sacrifice your needs and please and accommodate your partner. Due to basic insecurity, you’re preoccupied with the relationship and highly attuned to your partner, worrying that he or she wants less closeness. But because you don’t get your needs met, you become unhappy. Adding to this, you take things personally with a negative twist, projecting negative outcomes. Low self-esteem makes you hide your truth so as not to “make waves,” which compromises real intimacy. You may also be jealous of your partner’s attention to others and call or text frequently, even when asked not to. By repeated attempts to seek reassurance, you unintentionally push your partner away even further. Both of you end up unhappy.

Avoiders, as the term implies, avoid closeness and intimacy through distancing behaviors, such as flirting, making unilateral decisions, addiction, ignoring their partner, or dismissing his or her feelings and needs. This creates tension in the relationship, usually voiced by the anxious partner. Because avoiders are hypervigilant about their partner’s attempts to control or limit their autonomy in any way, they then distance themselves even more. Neither style contributes to satisfying relationships.

Communication reveals self-esteem
Dysfunctional families lack good communication skills that intimate relationships require. Not only are they important to any relationship, they also reflect self-esteem. They involve speaking clearly, honestly, concisely, and assertively, and the ability to listen, as well. They require that you know and are able to clearly communicate your needs, wants, and feelings, including the ability to set boundaries. The more intimate the relationship, the more important and more difficult practicing these skills becomes.

Codependents generally have problems with assertiveness. At the same time, they deny their feelings and needs, due to the fact that they were shamed or ignored in their childhood. They also consciously suppress what they think and feel so as not to anger or alienate their partner and risk criticism or emotional abandonment. Instead, they rely on mindreading, asking questions, caretaking, blaming, lying, criticizing, avoiding problems or ignoring or controlling their partner. They learn these strategies from the dysfunctional communication witnessed in their families growing up. But these behaviors are problematic in themselves and can lead to escalating conflict, characterized by attacks, blame, and withdrawal. Walls get erected that block openness, closeness, and happiness. Sometimes, a partner seeks closeness with a third person, threatening the stability of the relationship.

Boundaries protect self-esteem
Dysfunctional families have dysfunctional boundaries, which get handed down through parents’ behavior and example. They may be controlling, invasive, disrespectful, use their children for their own needs, or project their feelings onto them. This undermines children’s self-esteem. As adults, they too, have dysfunctional boundaries. They have trouble accepting other people’s differences or allowing others’ space, particularly in intimate relationships. Without boundaries, they can’t say no or protect themselves when necessary and take personally what others say. They tend to feel responsible for others’ stated or imagined feelings, needs, and actions, to which they react, contributing to escalating conflict. Their partner feels that he or she can’t express themselves without triggering a defensive reaction.

Intimacy requires self-esteem
We all have needs for both separateness and individuality as well as for being close and connected. Autonomy requires self-esteem – both necessary in relationships. It’s an ability to stand on your own and trust and motivate yourself. But when you don’t like yourself, you’re in miserable company spending time alone. It takes courage to communicate assertively in an intimate relationship—courage that comes with self-acceptance, which enables you to value and honor your feelings and needs and risk criticism or rejection in voicing them. This also means you feel deserving of love and are comfortable receiving it. You wouldn’t waste your time pursuing someone unavailable or push away someone who loved you and met your needs.

Solutions
Healing toxic shame from childhood takes working with a skilled therapist; however, shame can be diminished, self-esteem raised, and attachment style changed by altering the way you interact with yourself and others. In fact, self-esteem is learned, which is why I wrote 10 Steps to Self-Esteem and Conquering Shame and Codependency. Both books contain lots of self-help exercises. Sharing at 12-Step meetings is also very beneficial. Because assertiveness can be learned and also raises self-esteem, I wrote How to Speak Your Mind – Become Assertive and Set Limits, which guides you in learning those skills.

Couples therapy is an ideal way to achieve greater relationship satisfaction. When one partner refuses to participate, it’s nonetheless helpful if one willing partner does. Research confirms that the improved self-esteem of one partner increases relationship satisfaction for both. Often, when only one person enters therapy, the relationship changes for the better and happiness increases for the couple. If not, the client’s mood improves and he or she is more able to accept the status quo or leave the relationship.

09/24/2019
12/11/2018

HealthPrep
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The Best Advice For A Healthy Marriage
By HealthPrep Staff

Often, we hear shocking things that discourage marriage. For example, in the past couple of decades, the divorce rate in the United States increased two-fold for individuals over fifty and tripled for those over sixty-five. However, the fact remains, marriage, when done correctly, can be a rewarding union. But, let’s look past the negative and focus on what makes successful marriages so healthy. If you are inclined to take the leap or if you already have, here are five things that keep marriages healthy, happy, and lasting.

Make Time For Each Other And For Yourself

Dreamstime


Many abilities can help a marriage succeed, however, the best ability is availability. When you make time for each other, the relationship will naturally get stronger. How many of your close friends have you stayed close with despite not spending time around each other? Likely, not many. If your desire in life is to do live life on your terms, marriage may not be for you. But, if you are willing to make time for each other, you’ve taken a significant step toward success. With that said, you still need time for yourself. We’ve all heard “absence makes the heart grow fonder.” When you have a little time for yourself, it gives you the opportunity to enjoy what makes you, you. How much time you spend together versus apart will vary from couple to couple and should be discussed openly and honestly before making a commitment.

08/22/2018

HomeAdviceExpert Marriage Counseling
6 Reasons to Get Professional Marriage Counseling AdviceMARRIAGE.COMOctober 20th, 2015 3 min read
Professional Marriage CounselingA man by the name of John Steinbeck once said “You know how advice is. You only want it if it agrees with what you wanted to do anyway.” There’s some sarcasm in that quote but you know what? There’s also quite a bit of truth in it too.



And honestly, that is one of the reasons why some married couples are hesitant about getting marriage counseling advice from a professional counselor or therapist. It’s because they have not received the greatest advice from family members and friends and they’re “afraid” that they’ll only receive more of the same. Or it’s because one or both of them feels like their spouse is totally in the wrong while they are mostly in the right and they don’t want to hear a counselor telling them differently.



Yet the reality is that there are all kinds of good things that can come from getting marriage counseling advice. Advantages that you may not have thought about before reading this article. Ones that hopefully will change your mind about the marriage counseling process and how it can ultimately benefit you, your spouse and your marriage.



1) It’s more than just “advice”

The first thing to keep in mind about going to see a marriage counselor or therapist is that you’ll be getting more than just someone’s advice. Professional counselors have qualifications that have earned them a license to practice in their field. From books to tests to exercises, there are all kinds of things that marriage counselors are skilled in that can help to make your marriage better.



2) They are not biased

You might have heard someone say that you should never talk about the problems within your marriage to your family members because they will remember them long after you’ve forgiven and forgotten. The reason why is because they are emotionally attached to you. But a marriage counselor comes into your marital situation unbiased. They are not rooting for one person more than the other. Their ultimate objective is making sure that both parties are pleased.



3) You can get consistent assistance

Even if you have a close friend who you like to talk to, the reality is they have their own life and schedule. This means that they might not always been available. But with a marriage counselor, you can schedule your appointments. And being that you’re paying for them, you can be assured that your counselor will take your time and financial investment very seriously.



4) There’s someone present to mediate arguments

Sometimes people go to marriage counseling because they don’t know how to resolve arguments any other way. And so, in the presence of a trained professional, both spouses are able to convey their needs and concerns without the other cutting them off or demeaning their feelings. When a husband and wife are able to really listen to one another, that alone can do wonders for their relationship.



5) What you say remains confidential

Out of all of the reasons shared, perhaps one of the best reasons to get professional marriage counseling advice is because they are legally bound to keep information confidential. This means that no matter what you share in your sessions (short of threatening your own life or the life of someone else), they have to keep to themselves. That’s not always or necessarily guarantee when you decide to share your marital issues with others.



6) They are committed to making things better

When you get advice from other people, oftentimes it’s simply that. They share with you what they think and they move onto something else; whether your situation gets better or not. But with a marriage counselor, so long as you’re fully committed to the marriage counseling process and finding a way to make your marriage healthier, so are they. If that means working together for three months or three years, they are willing to stick it out. Having a marriage counselor means having a professional advocate for your relationship. And honestly, every married couple deserves receiving that kind of assurance and support.

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