Sunday, December 1, 2013

Finish Line vs. New Journey

Two and a half years have passed since this blog was updated.  I look back now and see the fun times shared between Torrie and me.  I lot has changed since then.  We are no longer married and never in my wildest dreams did I imagine that we would not spend the rest of our lives together.  
As I look back over the last two years, anything that could happen, did happen.  My outlooks on marriage in the beginning led to our demise.  I saw marriage as the finish line, when it was actually suppose to be the beginning of a new and exciting journey.  My outlook was off, but I still felt like I was marrying my best friend.  And from the looks of this blog, we had a great life until reality arrived.  
There were three areas in which I failed as a husband.  These faults include:
  1. I never gained the confidence of my wife 
  2. I let the romance die
  3. I didn't protect my mind 
Trust is a powerful tool.   As Christians we proclaim to God that we love, trust, and honor Him.  In Matthew it states, "For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh".  Prior to our wedding, there were exchanges that took place between my mother and Torrie.  In my mind, they were things that I felt were being taken out of context.  I handled this situation very poorly and I was never able to recover from this situation during the marriage.  Because of this, my wife did not trust me to be her protector.  

As I stated earlier, I saw marriage as the finish line.  Therefore, I allowed our lives to become routine.  Routine meant that we were doomed without excitement.  I failed to make her feel beautiful inside and out.  And as you can tell from the photos, she's a gorgeous woman.  She asked me once “what did I do before her when I wanted to have sex with women".  I did not understand the question and I thought it was very out of line.  However, she was trying to tell me that she was not being fulfilled in our relationship.  

What you put into your mind will determine how far you will go.  I put poison into my system mentally, and it was the final act that made my wife leave.  I hurt her will selfish actions and pushed her into a corner that caused her to question life and her purpose.  Because of what I allowed in my system, it affected the woman that I had sworn to protect at the altar. 

Everything wrong in our relationship did not start and end with me.  However, I feel that if I were more proactive in understanding my roll and being a better leader, we would not have experienced most of the problems we encountered.  Over the next few weeks I will detail how I failed as a husband.  Hopefully, it will help someone else not make the same mistakes.  And eventually, I'll go through the grief stages of divorce and what it means to lose your best friend.