Stop Sabotaging Your Marriage: Ted Lowe
Are there ways you’re shooting your own marriage in the foot? Author Ted Lowe knows five bad habits that could stealthily undercut all the closeness you crave — and five ways to stop them.
Speaker 1
Okay. Let me ask you something.
Speaker 2
I'm a little scared. I don't know what you're gonna ask.
Speaker 1
Do you feel like you've ever sabotaged our marriage?
Speaker 2
Oh, my goodness. My first thought is I've sabotaged it countless times every year.
Speaker 1
Really?
Speaker 2
Oh. And things I've said or done. I mean, 42 now, 43 years.
Speaker 1
Yeah.
Speaker 2
I think I've sabotaged. I don't even have every couple of years. But I think you've sabotaged it more than I probably.
Speaker 1
Welcome to Family Life Today, where we want to help you pursue the relationships that matter most. I'm Ann Wilson.
Speaker 2
And I'm Dave Wilson. And you can find us at familylifetoday.com. This is Family Life Today.
I honestly think, man, if I had done better in year one and year five and ten, we could be. But here's the thing. I also, when I say that out loud, feel like the grace of God has been so good.
Here we are sitting, and I look at you, and I love you more than I ever have.
Speaker 1
And the good news is we've learned the hard way in so many different ways that we can maybe help other people not sabotage their marriage the way we have.
Speaker 2
Yeah. So today we're gonna talk about five way to stop sabotaging your marriage. And we've got the guy to do it. Ted Lowe is back in the studio with us. We're so excited.
Speaker 1
Ted, you're here.
Speaker 3
Hey, guys. I'm excited to be here. Thanks for having me.
Speaker 2
And you're over there thinking, what in the world are we really going to talk about?
Speaker 3
No, I kind of love it. Like, watching you guys talk to each other like this, it's super refreshing. It's not like, what I experience on a regular basis. Well done.
Speaker 2
How many years you been doing marriage ministry?
Speaker 3
Since 2001.
Speaker 2
So you are the guy to tell us how to stop sabotaging our marriage.
Speaker 1
And we've interviewed you before on your book Called Us in Mind. So maybe you've heard some of this. But I think these are going to be really good.
Speaker 2
Yeah. One of the things you mentioned in *Us In Mind*, how changing your thoughts can change your marriage, is five intentional thoughts. So I'm guessing you would say, and I agree that these will. If you do these, you'll stop doing these, because, like, the first one, remember who I am.
I think we often do the opposite. We don't know who we are. And that just destroys a marriage. How does that destroy a marriage?
Speaker 3
Yeah. Like we talked about the last time I was with you guys, our thoughts, they're not our actions or attitudes. I know I sound repetitive, but our thoughts are not our actions or attitudes, but they lead to both. And what I found after doing this for a really long time, and didn't even really do the math on it until a couple of years ago, is most of us aren't thinking about what we're thinking about. We just trust our thoughts as if they're going to always lead us in the right direction and as if they're always true and as if they're always helpful, as if they're always kind.
And so the book kind of revolves around that. It revolves around, okay, how do we become more intentional with our thoughts? How do we boss our thoughts instead of our thoughts bossing us? And so the first one was to remember who I am. I think one of the things that's been the most powerful for me personally and ultimately for my marriage is remembering whose I am. I think we can complicate Jesus and God in so many ways, but just to go back constantly, that we are his child, that we are his.
I feel like there's been a few times I feel like God has whispered things to me, not audibly, but just on my heart. He says, you'll become a man in your world as you become a child of mine. And so, you know, kids are always looking for approval, looking for worth, looking for value. But I feel like when I remember who I am, I'm already a man here. But I just, you know, when you're his child and you lean back and you trust him to be him and you to be you, and he's way bigger than us, and that's really, really good news.
And he adores us, right? And we listen to critical thoughts more than him. I think it breaks his heart, the thought I've had before, too. It'd be like our kids coming home and telling us what a bully had said to them all day, and then looking at us and going, hey, you know, all the things you've told me my whole life, I believe the bully more than you. That would break our hearts. So I know it's got to break the heart of God when he says, oh, why don't they listen to how much I love them? And so just the simplicity of that is somebody going, oh, I am so loved, I can breathe.
Speaker 1
There was a girl that I worked with. She came to my house. She had tried to commit suicide three times. It was after her freshman year of college when she had an injury and could no longer play soccer. She couldn't perform at the level that she once did.
She sat down on my couch, and I asked her, "Who are you?" She replied, "I'm a soccer player." I said, "That's what you do, but who are you?" She responded, "I have no idea. If I can't do that anymore, I don't know who I am."
I shared the gospel with her because that's what gives us our worth—what Jesus did for us. A few weeks later, she gave her life to Jesus. We often think that when we do that, we are free and can live in that freedom. However, for years, she had been believing the lies in her head, and it takes practice to overcome that.
I went to a conference with her, and she was amazing. She was beautiful, smart, and funny, adding so much to every group she was with. But during the conference, I noticed that although she was physically present, her mind seemed to be elsewhere. I pulled her aside and asked, "Where are you?" She said, "I don't belong here. I'm not good enough to be with these people. They don't understand who I am and what I've done."
I felt like that was a reflection of what many people experience. I lifted her head and said, "Jesus knows who you are. He knows that you're here. He loves you. This is who you are: you're a daughter of the King. The Holy Spirit lives in you. The God who created the universe lives in you. We need the fullness of who you are. I need the fullness of who you are."
I love what you said, Ted. If we don't know that, we can become lost in ourselves.
Speaker 3
I didn't know this show had music right now.
Speaker 2
It just comes in out of nowhere.
Speaker 1
It just. It's kind of amazing, isn't it?
Speaker 3
I kind of. I'm not really sure what's happening, but I'm sort of loving it. It's exciting, isn't it? It is. Are you guys breaking in puppy snacks?
Speaker 2
Like, I don't think I could be.
Speaker 3
Any happier than I am at this.
Speaker 2
Everything's better with music behind it, right? No, I mean, this is a chorus we've all probably heard that came out years ago.
And, you know, at church, I'd play bass. I didn't usually sing, but when the singer would sing this lyric, I thought I would tear up because it's our identity.
It's what you're saying. You know what it is?
Speaker 4
I'm no longer a slave of you. I am a child of God.
Speaker 2
I mean, it's just simple phrase. And yet, you know, I don't know if you remember the bridge.
Speaker 4
I am surrounded.
Speaker 3
Look at that.
Speaker 4
By the arms of the Father. I am surrounded by songs of deliverance.
Speaker 2
I mean, you can go up in there. The reason I would tear up is like, something in my soul. That's who I am. That's who we are. And that when you bring into marriage, you're right. That's not gonna sabotage a marriage that's gonna build.
Speaker 3
Well, that song is based off the verse that chapter is based off of. The spirit I give you is not that of a slave that lives in fear.
Speaker 1
That's good.
Speaker 3
How great is that? The spirit capitalists. The Holy Spirit. It's brought about your adoption into sonship. And so we say, don't. You're safe. You're adopted.
Like, I'm doing all the dad stuff. I remember, I'd say to our kids when they were little, that's a big people problem. You don't have to worry about that. You go be a kid. That's a big people problem. I got this. Especially our daughter. She was anxious.
No, no. And I think sometimes. No, no, no, Ted, this is a God problem. This is not for you. You just go. You feel loved and live loved.
Speaker 1
That's good.
Speaker 2
Yeah, that's good stuff. So that's this one.
Speaker 1
That's a good one. Because when we remember who we are, we bring the best of ourselves to the table with our kids in our marriage.
Speaker 2
And number two, if you want to sabotage your marriage or your family, see the worst, you say, see the best.
Speaker 3
Yeah. It's something that happy couples do. And I don't know if they do it because they learned it. I don't know if it's because their brains are naturally wired that way, but they see the best in their spouse.
But I do believe that we can all learn it and start to see it. Philippians 4:8 gives us a really great filter of thinking. Whatever's true, whatever's noble, whatever's pure, whatever's right, whatever's lovely, if anything is praiseworthy, anything, we gotta start there.
Is there anything? Because people will say to me, there's nothing.
Speaker 1
Oh, yeah, that's what I hear, too.
Speaker 3
Oh, yeah. Especially when they're. And they're fired up about it. No, no, that does not work. That works for everybody on the planet but me. And I get it. But again, verse starts with true. And you can deal with some really hard things when it's true. And then you know what you're dealing with, because you're starting with truth, not denial.
Okay, what is true about our situation, what's true about them? But just see the best. What I'll say to couples is, let what you love about your spouse block the view of what you don't. Like, start there. Like, what is you? And if you want to come back to those things, great. But what do you love about them? Because you love something about them at some point.
So you watch a couple, they're really frustrated sitting across from me, and when I can't get anywhere with them, I say, so, wow, you guys, boy, this is tough. Like, what? How'd you get together? Their body language will change, the way they start focusing. And they just. They did see the best in each other.
And the way they treated each other was so great. We get so. You know, life is hard. It gets going fast, and we stop seeing the things. We start going. We're just thinking our spouse becomes, you know, a hindrance to getting away, of getting the things we gotta get done. Done.
Speaker 1
And we start comparing our life compared to their life, thinking that we are doing so much more.
Speaker 3
100%. The number one time couples are fighting is when they reconnect at the end of the day. And I think part of that is they come in and they compare.
Speaker 1
Yeah.
Speaker 3
Oh, my day. Oh, my day. Oh, you think your day was tough? You know, I worked for an organization for a while. I would actually go in and speak a couple of times a year. It was an organization that worked with couples who had children on the autism spectrum. They would come in, and I would watch, and I would see some of them. All the things they were dealing with actually drew them together, while for others, it had totally pushed them apart. I think the divorce rate is pretty staggering.
I had done this retreat about 10 times, and I'm driving home, pondering the question: what is the difference between these two couples? What is the difference when it's pulling them together, where they're all sitting on, like, this sectional couch, and then there are others who couldn't even get close enough to each other? Some wanted to sit in the other room. It hit me that it really comes down to a mindset when they're reentering the home. They would fight, and they had pretty similar struggles.
It would be like, "Hey, I’m going to honor everything you've done today. You've been home, you've been with our kid all day. You've been researching all the treatments and therapies." And then the other one would say, "Hey, I'm going to honor the fact that you are out trying to make the finances work to make that happen, because insurance is not great in this regard." So it was like, "I'm going to honor what you're doing instead of comparing. I'm going to carry each other's burdens."
There’s this one lady who was such a great example of this. She said that when her two kids, both on the spectrum, were home, their days were really, really tough. She would hear the garage door open, and the kids would race to dad and wrestle with him. She thought, "I couldn't get a hug out of him; here he's been gone all day, and they want to wrestle with him." This made her so angry. She said she was mad at all three of them. And then she said one day, she...
Speaker 2
Said, you know what?
Speaker 3
I'm going to join in. And she said, she just ran and just dove on top of them, and she became a part of it. But it was just a mindset shift. It was something that was hurting her, and I could. It's totally understandable.
Speaker 1
Sure.
Speaker 3
I mean, of course that would break your heart. Of course it would. Of course. It's not logical. It doesn't make any sense. But she changed her mindset, and that was the difference. It was a mindset shift to see the best in them.
Because usually when we'll pull back, especially if somebody's listening right now, hopefully they're not in the middle of a fight, so their brains are kind of cool and calm. You can go. Okay. Let me just consider that for a minute. What do I love about them?
Speaker 1
Yeah, put in your phone. Like, I'd put it in the notes and then even send it to you. Like, hey, thanks for these things.
Speaker 2
Yeah, why don't you do that?
Speaker 1
I'm going to. Gonna do it tomorrow.
Speaker 2
I need to do that.
Speaker 3
Tomorrow's always a new day.
Speaker 2
And the truth is, like you said, it's intentional. Because if you don't do it intentionally, you'll default to the negative. You'll see the worst.
I mean, when Ann and I were dating and engaged, she could list all my great qualities. "He's this, this, this."
Six months later, she yells at me, "Marrying you is the biggest mistake of my life," she said.
Speaker 1
She said that there's not one thing I even like about it.
Speaker 2
Yeah, she said that.
Speaker 1
I love that.
Speaker 2
All the negative. And it was all there.
And so to flip that, because I think we default to the negative. We drive by a car wrecking. We all want to watch it rather than.
It's the same thing in our marriages. We want to see the worst rather than saying what you just said. No, I want to see.
Default to. I want to see the positive. It's there, but I have to choose it.
Speaker 3
Yeah.
Speaker 1
Okay, we need to move because we've got three more to go.
Speaker 2
Number three intentional thought to build your marriage is choose empathy. I guess to sabotage it is stop choosing what negativity.
Speaker 3
I think it's when you anger. Try to fix it. Fix them.
Speaker 1
Yeah.
Speaker 3
Because a lot of times we try to fix our spouse's emotions because we don't like their emotions or they're inconvenient, going, "Oh, here we go again." Or we don't like their emotions; it just doesn't make any sense to us. When we see someone being emotional, they’re not usually being rational or logical. They can be making exaggerated statements about things, and we want to fix that. Both men and women do it, but guys are more classic about it, often thinking, "Let me just fix this."
My wife told me one time, after a series of these situations not going well and me not being empathetic, "I don't want you to fix this. I want you to feel this." It’s so much easier just to feel it—just to sit there and look at her with a genuine expression on my face that mimics, not mocks, her feelings. I can just say, "I'm so sorry. This seems hard." She does the same for me, saying things like, "That's understandable. If I were you, I would feel the same way." Or simply, "God, I'm so sorry. That sounds terrible. That sounds so tough."
For instance, she used to go away with her girlfriends once a year; they still do. The four of them will go on a trip together, and they’ve been doing it for years. When she comes back, she talks about how they share experiences, and I often ask, "What did they say about it?" She replies, "Nothing." I used to wonder why they didn’t talk about it. But she loves that trip because they are so empathetic and don’t try to fix each other.
So, yeah, don’t try to fix it. This applies to both men and women. They appreciate the good stuff. Don’t try to fix that. They love something that you might not like. For example, during the holidays, you might have one spouse who loves to decorate and get everything ready, and I can tell immediately by the presents and the decorations.
Speaker 2
Too many presents. Too many presents doesn't stay within budget.
Speaker 3
And then you got the Grinch.
Speaker 2
Am I supposed to feel that or fix that?
Speaker 3
Well, I don't know. I'm not gonna go that deep with it.
But it is the thing of. There's typically one that loves all that, and the other one's like, are you gotta be kidding me again?
Why? I mean, why do we need multiple trees? Our house has multiple trees where you have to. I don't get it.
Speaker 2
I get it.
Speaker 3
Until Jesus takes me home. And then I'm gonna have some questions. But it makes her so happy.
Speaker 1
We've heard it said. How do they say that?
Speaker 2
Meet emotion with emotion and meet logic with logic. So if your spouse comes to you with an emotional issue, feel it, empathize it, don't fix so good she comes to you with a logical issue. And it might be a time to say, okay, let's talk. Right?
Speaker 3
I mean, just. I would say if you're giving homework for people, just say, that's understandable about three or four times this week and watch the look on their face.
Speaker 2
That's understandable.
Speaker 3
That's understandable.
Speaker 1
Yeah, I like that.
Speaker 3
Sincere.
Speaker 2
You're listening to Family Life Today. I'm Dave Wilson, and before we continue our conversation, let me just say this.
At Family Life, we really believe strong families can change the world. And when you become a Family Life partner, you help make that happen.
Speaker 1
And I don't know if you realize this, but your monthly gift helps us equip marriages and families with biblical tools that they can count on.
Speaker 2
Now, that's a pretty good deal. And we also want to send you exclusive updates, behind the scenes access, and an invitation to our private partner community, which is pretty cool. So join us in. Let's reach families and marriages together.
Speaker 1
And you can go to familylifetoday.com and click the donate button to join today. What's number four, guys?
Speaker 2
Number four, the way to sabotage your marriage would be react. The way to save your marriage is pause and respond. Is that a good way to say it?
Speaker 3
Well, and this is one of the things I land on in the research, and I thought, oh, this is why, me included. People who want to be great spouses find themselves saying and doing again that thing they swore they'd never say and do again or react in that way that, in their more logical moments, they'd go, I don't want to react that way. People can. You'll respond in a way, and they're so bewildered afterwards, thinking, I can't believe that I've done that again.
The research is really clear. When your spouse triggers you, it activates the same part of your brain called the amygdala that, if you were to accidentally put your hand on a hot stove, would make you immediately jerk it away. If you were to step into the street for just a second and hear something coming, you're going to jerk back. There’s no thinking about it; it’s purely reacting. At the same time, your frontal lobe is going a little bit out to lunch, which is where all your logic resides.
So it's great that the amygdala is there; we better be glad we have it because it does so many things when it comes to marriage. However, the amygdala is too efficient. You react, and people react in different ways, but you forget what you want for your marriage. If you're a reactor, we've all heard of fight, flight, or freeze. You know, if you're triggered, you step toward the tension.
Speaker 1
Oh, this is me. You wanna go.
Speaker 3
Oh. And if you're married to somebody, you wanna go, they go, hey, I need a minute. Oh, no. We're taking care of this right now. I have no logic.
Speaker 1
Don't avoid this.
Speaker 3
Yeah, you're avoiding. We're gonna air this out, and we're gonna air it out now.
Speaker 1
Yes.
Speaker 3
So what I love about what I've always done is scripture and science are not in conflict with each other at all. They just illuminate each other. Even the neuroscience coming up. So way long before I get geeked out on neuroscience, scripture was very clear, like, okay, so what do you do that your brain goes out to lunch and you're reacting? James 1:19-20 states, "You need to be quick to listen, slow to speak, slow to become." Look at that word: become angry.
For me, I'd say I had ADHD; I longed for it. It's cool to have it. We've been sharing stories about losing things, and that's part of it. I think for us, impulse control is a thing of ADHD. I'm not teasing about that. I know people tease about it. No, clinically diagnosed, you are this, Ted, if there's impulse. If I can learn this, and I'm not perfect by any means, anybody can.
So if you can start getting into the rhythm of when you get triggered, just talk at first. Some people are listening and going, "Oh, I don't talk. I don't talk for six weeks." I'm not talking about that passive-aggressive behavior. I'm talking about something else. I shouldn't have called somebody passive-aggressive; that's not kind. Okay, I'm talking about that. I'll call you a stuffer, someone who has files that you'll pull out later.
But for most of us, we need to take a deep breath, pause, and let our frontal lobe—the logical part of our brain—catch back up. This is the part of our brain that remembers what we want for our marriage, that remembers we don't want to react poorly, and most importantly, remembers who we are. Remember, this person in front of us is a child of God. Take a breath and say, "I'm going to respond versus react." I say the space between being triggered and reactions is where relationships are built or broken.
Speaker 1
Oh, that's good.
Speaker 3
It's right there in that space that we've got time. So I think for most of us, when we look back on those times where we regret turned into these nasty arguments, it is because in that triggered moment, we said something we should not have said.
And my wife told me one time, she goes, when you're angry, you find your words. When I'm angry, I lose them. And that's a gift I wish I could return.
But what I've learned is I'll just pause and I'll take a breath. And don't say anything with anything. Not with your body language, your face. I mean, you know, 80% of communication is non-verbal, right? If not more.
So just to take a breath and give it a second to remember how you want to be and how you want to respond. If you just start to listen, be slow to speak, and don't become the spouse you don't want to become.
Speaker 1
That's simple and yet hard. Something that we just need to start practicing. I need that one.
Speaker 2
All right, last one.
Speaker 3
All right.
Speaker 2
Love first. That's how you build a marriage. You sabotage by.
Speaker 3
I think you sabotage by scanning the relationship for what's fair and whose turn it is. You know, this is like. Like, you know, submit to one another out of reverence for Christ. Everybody goes straight to the love and respect verses, which are great. Back up a few verses. Submit to one another, you know, submit to. In other words, I'm going to put your needs ahead of my own in this moment. In other words, I'm going to go first. I'm not going to try to figure out whose turn it is. I'm not going to try to determine who's fair. I'm just going to go ahead and love first.
And it really makes sense from a spiritual perspective to say, you know, what do we do with the ultimate act of submission is when Jesus looks at Abba and says, if there's any other way, but if not my will, but your will. It was the ultimate act of submission that demands a response. And when you're married, it's these constant little reminders of if he can do that, then I can pick up my daughter when it's not my daughter to pick up my daughter. If he can do that, I can be kind when I don't feel like being kind, if he can do that.
And so it's this thing of I'm going to submit, I'm just going to love first. And people say, oh, I'm afraid I'll get taken advantage of. You might. But let me ask you something. When somebody loves you that way, is your knee-jerk reaction to take advantage of them or to see how you can leverage this to your benefit? Are you drawn to do the same?
And there's no promises. You know, I can't make promises your spouse is not going to keep. But I don't think there's anything that could draw your spouse closer to you than when you just go ahead and say, I'm just going to go and do this. I'm just going to love this verse. And I ask on social media, what's one way that your spouse loves you first? It apparently has a lot to do with coffee and dishwashers. I don't know what that is about, but it is about coffee and dishwashers for some reason.
Speaker 1
These have been so good.
Speaker 2
Yeah. And I can guarantee, I'm making a guarantee. You do these five, you will build a marriage.
Speaker 1
Ted Lowe has a book called Us in How Changing youg Thoughts Can Change youe Marriage.
Speaker 2
And you can find it by clicking the link in the show notes at Family Life Today.
We also wanted to let you know about a free guide we want to give you. It's filled with helpful marriage wisdom from real life couples who've been where you are.
You can grab your copy today at familylife.com.
Speaker 1
Marriage Help Again, go to familylife.com Marriage Help for your free guide full of marriage tips.
Speaker 2
Family Life Today is a donor supported production of family life accrue ministry. 50 years of helping you pursue the relationships that matter most.
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- College Ready
- Collin Outerbridge: Modern Romance
- Common Blessings, Familiar Miracles
- Compassion Without Compromise
- Confessions of a Boy Crazy Girl
- Co-Parenting Works
- Counter Culture
- Couples in the Bible
- Courageous
- Cover Her
- Crosstalk: Where Life and Scriptures Meet
- Cupidity: 50 Stupid Things People Do for Love
- Daddy Daughter Dates
- Date Your Wife
- Dating & Marriage Advice: Allen & Jennifer Parr
- Dating and the Single Parent
- Debra Fileta: The Art of Soul Care
- Defending Your Marriage
- Depression: A Stubborn Darkness
- Die Young
- Discover Your Gifts: Don Everts
- Discovering a Lifelong Love
- Do Christians Have it Wrong on Sexuality?
- Don Everts: What's it Look Like to Love My Community?
- Don't Let Me Go
- Don't Waste Your Life
- Dr. Lee Warren: Rewiring Your Heart and Mind
- Eight Important Money Decisions
- Elevating Easter
- Embezzlement
- End the Stalemate: Tim Muehlhoff & Sean McDowell
- Engaging the Culture
- Enhancing Your Marriage
- Enter the Ring
- Entertaining for Eternity
- Everyone a Chance to Hear
- Everything Sad is Untrue: Daniel Nayeri
- Experience God as Your Provider
- Facing the Blitz
- Faith Legacy
- Faithful Families
- Family I.D.
- Family Shepherds
- Fashioned by Faith
- Father Hunger
- Fear to Freedom
- Fearless
- Feelings and Faith
- Fierce Women
- Fight For Love after Porn: Rosie Makinney
- Finding Help for Your Troubled Teen
- Finding Holiness in Intimacy
- Finding New Life and Love in Christ
- First Time Dad
- Firsthand
- Five Days to a New Marriage
- Five Guidelines for a Successful Marriage
- Five Mere Christians - Jordan Raynor
- Flight Plan
- For Men and Women Only
- For Parents Only
- For the Love of Christ
- Forgiving Our Fathers and Mothers
- Forgotten God
- Four Pillars of Step-Parenting Success
- From Fear to Freedom
- From Santa to Sexting
- Gay Girl, Good God
- Generation Ex Christian
- Gentle and Lowly
- Get Lost
- Get Married: What Women Can Do to Help It Happen
- Get Outta My Face
- Getting Away to Get It Together
- Girl Defined
- Girls Gone Wise
- Glimpses of Grace
- Glorious Mess
- Glory Days
- God At Work Around The World
- God is Enough
- God Is So Good
- God Less America
- God Talk at the Mall
- God Who’s Over It, God Who’s In It: Rechab & Brittany Gray
- God’s Very Good Design
- Gods at War
- God's Plan for Marital Intimacy
- Goffs/Millers - Healthy Habits for Happy Marriages
- Good Boundaries and Goodbyes: Lysa TerKeurst
- Good Mood, Bad Mood
- Good Pictures, Bad Pictures
- Gospel Centered Mom
- Grace Filled Marriage
- Grace: More Than We Deserve
- Granny Camp
- Grieving a Suicide
- Growing Older without Growing Old: Dennis & Barbara Rainey
- Growing Together in Courage
- Growing Together in Forgiveness
- Growing Together in Gratitude
- Growing Together in Truth
- Having a Marriage Without Regrets
- He Is Enough
- He Is the Stability of Our Times
- Healing Your Marriage When Trust Is Broken
- Healthy Intimacy: Dave & Ashley Willis
- Heavenward: Cameron Cole
- Hedges: Loving Your Marriage Enough to Protect It
- Help For Anxiety in Parenting: David & Meg Robbins
- Help Wanted: Moms Raising Daughters
- Helping Orphans With Special Needs
- Helping Others Build Strong Marriages
- Helping the Hurting
- Hero: Unleashing God's Power in a Man's Heart
- Hidden Joy
- High Performance Friendships
- Holy Is The Day
- Home: A Man's Battle Station
- Homeless Men Stepping Up
- Hooked
- Hope After Betrayal
- How Churches Can Include Single Parents: Ron Deal and Gayla Grace
- How Do I Love Thee?
- How Empty is Your Nest?
- How Pinterest Stole Christmas
- How to Break the Cycle of Divorce
- How to Lead Your Wife: Rechab Gray & Ike Todd
- How to Listen So Your Kids Will Talk: Becky Harling
- How to Pick a Spouse
- How We Got Here: Luke and Kristina Middendorf
- How We Love
- Hymns for a Child's Heart
- Hymns in the Modern Day Church
- I Beg to Differ
- I Do Again
- I Like Giving: The Transforming Power of a Generous Life: Brad Formsma
- I Still Believe
- I Take You
- I Will Carry You
- If God Is Good
- If I Could Do It Again
- If My Husband Would Change...
- I'm Happy For You, Not Really
- I'm Not Good Enough
- Image Restored: Rachael Gilbert
- In a Heartbeat
- Independence Day
- Indivisible
- In-Laws, Mates, and Money
- Instructing a Child’s Heart
- Internet Safety 101
- Interviewing Your Daughter's Date
- Introducing Athletes to Jesus
- Is It My Fault?
- Is Your Marriage LifeReady?
- It Starts at Home
- It's All About Love
- Jackhammered
- Jeremiah Johnston: Unleashing Peace
- Jerrad Lopes - How to Become a Great Dad
- Jesus Continued
- Jill's House
- Joy to the World
- Jumping Through Fires
- Just a Minute
- Just Say the Word
- Just Too Busy
- Kathy Koch: How to Parent Differently
- Katie Davis Majors: Safe All Along
- Keeping the "Little" in Your Girl
- Kevin "KB" Burgess & Ameen Hudson: Dangerous Jesus
- Kiss Me Again
- Kisses From Katie
- Knowing God's Will for Marriage
- Kristen Hatton - Parenting Ahead
- Lasting Love
- Leaving a Legacy of Destiny
- Letters to My Daughters
- Letting Go of Control
- Liberating Submission
- Lies Men Believe
- Life in Spite of Me
- Listener Tributes
- Living on the Edge
- Living with Less So Your Family Has More
- Locking Arms, Stepping Up
- Loneliness: Don't Hate It or Waste It: Steve & Jennifer DeWitt
- Long Story Short
- Love is an Attitude
- Love Is Something You Do
- Love Like You Mean It
- Love Like You Mean It 2025
- Love Renewed After Shattered Dreams
- Love Renewed: Adam and Laura Brown
- Love Renewed: Clint and Penny Bragg
- Love Renewed: Hans and Star Molegraaf
- Love Renewed: Lance and Jess Miller
- Love Renewed: Scott and Sherry Jennings
- Love Thy Body
- Love to Eat, Hate to Eat
- Love, Sex, and Lasting Relationships
- Loving the Little Years
- Loving the Way Jesus Loves
- Loving Your Man Without Losing Your Mind
- Making Love Last
- Man Alive
- Manhood
- Mansfield's Manly Men
- Marking Memorable Moments
- Marriage and Family for God's Glory
- Marriage Forecasting
- Marriage Matters
- Marriage Tested in the Furnace
- Marriage Undercover
- Married to an Unbeliever
- Marry Well
- Mastering the Money Basics
- Mean Mom's Guide to Raising Great Kids
- Measure of Success
- Melissa Kruger: Parenting with Hope
- Men and Women: Enjoying the Difference
- Michael & Lauren McAffee: Beyond Our Control
- Michael Kruger: Surviving Religion
- Miller/Hudson: Sleeping On It
- Mingling of Souls
- Misled: 7 Lies That Distort the Gospel: Allen Parr
- Money and Marriage God's Way
- Money Saving Families
- Moral Purity in Marriage
- More Than A Carpenter (updated): Sean McDowell
- More Than a Wedding: A Closer Look
- More than Championships
- Moving from Fear to Freedom
- MWB Reaction: Collin and Stacey Outerbridge, Joseph Torres, Anna Markham
- My Life as a So-Called Submissive Wife
- October Baby
- On Pills and Needles
- One of Us Must Be Crazy
- One With My Lord: Sam Allberry
- Oops, I Forgot My Wife and Kids!
- Organic Mentoring
- Orphan Justice
- Our Adoption Story
- Out of a Far Country
- Out of the Depths
- Overcoming Emotions that Destroy
- Overcoming Lust
- Parent Fuel: For the Fire Inside Our Kids
- Parenthood: Adam and Chelsea Griffin
- Parenting Beyond Your Capacity
- Parenting by Design
- Parenting Heart to Heart
- Parenting is Your Highest Calling and Other Parenting Myths
- Parenting Panic: David & Meg Robbins
- Parenting With Kingdom Purpose
- Partner as First Priority: Ron Deal and Gayla Grace
- Picking Up the Pieces
- Planning for Oneness
- Planting Scripture Seeds
- Playing Hurt
- Politics--According to the Bible
- Practicing Affirmation
- Pray Big for Your Family
- Praying With Jesus
- Preach the Whole Gospel
- Preston and Jackie Hill Perry: Beyond the Vows
- Preston Perry: How To Tell the Truth
- Psalm 127
- Pure Eyes, Clean Heart
- Pure Pleasure
- Put the Seat Down
- Putting Christ Back in Christmas
- Putting Your Parents in Proper Perspective
- Raising Emotionally Healthy Boys: David Thomas
- Raising Emotionally Strong Boys - David Thomas
- Raising Unselfish Children
- Reaching Out to the Orphan
- Real Moms, Real Jesus
- Rebooting Christmas
- Rebuilding a Safe House
- Reclaiming Easter
- Reflecting on Twenty Years
- Reflections of Life: A Personal Visit With Bill Bright
- Refreshment for Families
- Rekindling the Family Reformation
- Rekindling the Romance in Your Marriage
- Relationships Done Right: Sean Perron and Spencer Harmon
- Remarriage After Loss: Ron Deal and Rod & Rachel Faulkner Brown
- Reset: Powerful Habits to Change Your Life: Debra Fileta
- Respectable Sins
- Restore the Table - Ryan Rush
- Rethinking Sexuality
- Rich in Love
- Richer by the Dozen - Bill and Pam Mutz
- Rid of My Disgrace
- Road Trip to Redemption
- Romance for Dummies
- Romance in the Rain
- Ron and Nan Deal: Mindful Marriage
- Runaway Emotions
- Ruth Chou Simons: Now and Not Yet
- Ruth Chou Simons: When Strivings Cease
- Sacred Home: Jennifer Pepito
- Sacred Influence
- Sam Allberry - Gospel Sanity in a Weary World
- Same Sex Marriage
- Say Goodbye to Survival Mode
- Say it Loud!
- Screens and Teens
- Season of Change
- Secret Thoughts of an Unlikely Convert
- Secrets
- Seeing the Power of God Among Us
- Set-Apart Femininity
- Setting Up Stones
- Seven Reasons Why God Created Marriage
- Sex and Money
- Sex and the Single Christian Girl
- Sex and the Single Girl
- Sex, Dating and Relationships
- Sexual Problems in Marriage
- Sexual Sanity for Men
- Sexual Sanity for Women
- Shame Interrupted
- Sharing Christ with Word and Deed
- Sharing the Love and Laughter
- Shattered
- She Still Calls Me Daddy
- Shelterwood
- She's Got the Wrong Guy
- Shift: Building a Spiritual Legacy for the Next Generation
- Simple Truths
- Single and Free to be Me
- Singleness Redefined
- Sis, Take a Breath: Kirsten & Benjamin Watson
- Six Conversations in an Isolated World: Heather Holleman
- Sleeping Giant
- Smart Phones for Smart Families
- So You're About to Be a Teenager
- Something About Us
- SOS: Sick of Sex
- Soul Surfer
- Speak Life to Your Husband When You Want to Yell at Him - Ann Wilson
- Speaking Your Spouse's Love Language
- Special Kids with Special Needs
- Spiritual Life Coaching
- Spiritually Single Moms
- Start Your Family
- Starting Your Marriage Right
- Stay at Home Dads
- Stay In Your Lane: Worry Less, Love More, and Get Things Done: Kevin A. Thompson
- Stay-at-Home Dads: A Passing Fad or a Choice That's Here to Stay?
- Step Parenting Wisdom
- Stepfamilies and Holidays
- Stepfamily: Blender or Crockpot
- Stepping Up
- Stepping Up to Manhood
- Steps to Manhood
- Stories Behind the Great Songs and Traditions of Christmas
- Strength in Softness: Redefining Success for Women - Allen and Jennifer Parr
- Strong Fathers, Strong Daughters
- Stuart Scott: When Children Lose Their Faith
- Stumbling Souls: Is Love Enough?
- Surprise Child
- Surprising Secrets of Highly Happy Marriage
- Surrender
- Symphony in the Dark
- Talking Smack
- Tea Parties With a Purpose
- Teaching Generosity to Your Family
- Teammates in Marriage
- Tech Savvy Parenting
- Technical Virginity
- Ten Questions Every Husband Should Ask His Wife
- Ten Urgent Steps for Spiritually Healthy Families
- Teresa Whiting: Overcoming Shame
- The "Anything" Prayer
- The 10 Habits of Happy Moms
- The 7 Hardest Things God Asks a Woman to Do
- The Accidental Feminist
- The Anatomy of an Affair: Dave Carder
- The Art of Effective Prayer
- The Art of Parenting: Identity
- The Art of Parenting: Mission and Releasing
- The Art of Parenting: What Kids Need
- The Best Gifts for Wives and Husbands
- The Book of Man
- The Bullying Breakthrough
- The Busy Mom's Guide to Romance
- The Christian Lover
- The Color of Rain
- The Complex World of a Blended Family
- The Connected Child
- The Controlling Husband
- The Creator’s Guide to Marital Intimacy
- The Dad I Wish I Had
- The Dark Hole of Depression
- The Dating Manifesto
- The Early Seasons of a Woman's Life
- The Emotionally Destructive Relationship
- The Enticement of the Forbidden
- The First Few Years of Marriage
- The Forgotten Commandment
- The Fruitful Wife
- The Gentlemen's Society
- The Good Dad
- The Good News About Injustice
- The Gospel Comes With a House Key
- The Grace Marriage: Brad & Marilyn Rhoads
- The Grace of Gratitude
- The Heart of Jesus: How He Really Feels About You: Dane Ortlund
- The Jesus Storybook Bible
- The King of Kings
- The Leader's Code
- The Life Ready Woman: Thriving in a Do-It-All World
- The Love Dare for Parents
- The Marriage Prayer
- The Masculine Mandate: God’s Calling to Men
- The Missional Marriage
- The Mission-Minded Family
- The Mother-Daughter Duet
- The Mystery of Intimacy in Marriage
- The National Bible Bee 2009 Winners
- The Neighborhood Café
- The New Passport to Purity
- The Passionate Mom
- The Pastor's Kid
- The Person Called You
- The Poverty of Nations
- The Power of A Wife's Affirmation
- The Power of God's Names
- The Power of New Covenant Love
- The Profound Power of a Legacy
- The Protectors
- The Realities of Remarriage
- The Refuge of Faith
- The Reluctant Entertainer
- The Resolution for Women
- The Respect Dare
- The Ring Makes All the Difference
- The Road to Kaeluma - Landon Hawley and Perry Wilson
- The Sacred Search
- The Season of Gratitude
- The Second-Half Adventure
- The Secret Life of a Fool
- The Secret of Contentment
- The Shepherd Leader at Home
- The Smart Stepdad
- The Smart Stepmom
- The Soul of Modesty
- The Sticky Faith Guide
- The Toxic War on Masculinity: Nancy Pearcey
- The Unveiled Wife
- The Upside Down Marriage
- The Very First Christmas
- The World's Largest Neighborhood Easter Egg Hunt
- Things That Go Bump in the Night
- Things We've Learned from Dennis and Barbara Rainey
- This Changes Everything
- This Is My Destiny
- Three Essentials for Every Married Woman
- Three Gospel Resolutions
- Three Marks of A Covenant Keeper
- Thriving at College
- Tips for Smart Stepoms
- To Have and To Hold: Tommy Nelson
- To Own a Dragon
- Tongue Pierced
- Transcending Mysteries
- Transformed
- Treasures in the Dark
- Treat Me Like a Customer
- Trent Griffith: Do You Hear What I Hear?
- True Success: A Personal Visit With John Wooden
- Trusting God While Treating Cancer
- Turn Around at Home
- Turning Your Heart Toward Your Children
- Twenty-Five Ways to Lead Your Family Spiritually
- Two Hearts Praying as One
- Undaunted
- Undefiled
- Understanding and Honoring Your Wife
- Understanding Your Child’s Bent
- Unfavorable Odds
- United
- Unraveling the Messiah Mystery
- Unshaken
- Upon Waking: Jackie Hill Perry
- Us In Mind: Change Your Thoughts, Change Your Marriage: Ted Lowe
- Waiting for His Heart
- Walking by Faith, Not by Sight
- War of Words
- Warrior in Pink
- Water From a Deep Well
- We Still Do: Michael and Cindy Easley
- Weekend to Remember Getaway Sampler
- Wellness for the Glory of God
- We're in the Money ... Now What?
- What Did You Expect?
- What Do You Think of Me?
- What Does the Bible Say About Homosexuality?
- What Every Husband and Wife Needs to Know
- What God Wants for Christmas
- What He Must Be
- What Husbands Wish Their Wives Knew About Men
- What I Want My Children to Know
- What If Parenting Is the Most Important Job in the World?
- What is the Meaning of Sex
- What To Do About Motherhood Guilt: Maggie Combs
- What's God Think about My Anxiety? Ed Welch
- What's in the Bible?
- Whats's Best for Children
- When Faith Disappoints: Lisa Victoria Fields
- When Sinners Say 'I Do'
- When Sorry Isn't Enough
- When the Bottom Drops Out
- When the Hurt Runs Deep
- When Your Husband is Addicted to Pornography
- Why Do We Call It Christmas?
- Why God is Enough
- Why I Didn't Rebel
- Winning the Drug War at Home
- Winsome Persuasion
- Women of the Word
- Woodlawn
- Word Versus Deed
- You and Me Forever
- You Are Not Who You Used to Be
- You Are Redeemed: Nana Dolce
- You Are Still a Mother - Jackie Gibson
- You Paid How Much for That?
- Your Child and the Autism Spectrum
- Your Interculturual Marriage
- Your Kids at Risk
- Your Marriage Matters
- Your Marriage Today and Tomorrow
- Your Mate: God's Perfect Gift
- Your Presence Matters
- Your Stepfamily: Standing Strong
- Youth Sports Pressure: Brian Smith & Ed Uszynski
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About FamilyLife Today®
FamilyLife Today® is an award-winning podcast featuring fun, engaging conversations that help families grow together with Jesus while pursuing the relationships that matter most. Hosted by Dave and Ann Wilson, new episodes air every Tuesday and Thursday.
About Dave and Ann Wilson
Dave and Ann have been married for more than 40 years and have spent the last 35 teaching and mentoring couples and parents across the country. They have been featured speakers at FamilyLife’s Weekend to Remember® since 1993, and have also hosted their own marriage conferences across the country.
Dave and Ann helped plant Kensington Community Church in Detroit, Michigan where they served together in ministry for more than three decades, wrapping up their time at Kensington in 2020.
The Wilsons are the creative force behind DVD teaching series Rock Your Marriage and The Survival Guide To Parenting, as well as authors of the recently released books Vertical Marriage (Zondervan, 2019) and No Perfect Parents (Zondervan, 2021).
Dave is a graduate of the International School of Theology, where he received a Master of Divinity degree. A Ball State University Hall of Fame Quarterback, Dave served the Detroit Lions as Chaplain for thirty-three years. Ann attended the University of Kentucky. She has been active with Dave in ministry as a speaker, writer, small group leader, and mentor to countless women.
The Wilsons live in the Detroit area. They have three grown sons, CJ, Austin, and Cody, three daughters-in-law, and a growing number of grandchildren.
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