The New Mexico
Marriages First Project.

The Greatest of things grow from the smallest of seeds

The Road to Enlightenment



What Husbands Wish Their Wives Knew About Men

Last week, we discussed What Wives Wish Their Husbands Knew About Women? Well, this week, we discussed the "flip side" of that question, "What do YOU wish your wives knew about you?" And so today is the "sequel," the "Part 2" to the first broadcast on this subject of husbands and wives understanding each other.

Today, we'll be dealing with the important task of understanding men. You know, a teacher once asked her class of elementary age students to tell her the difference between Mothers' Day and Father's Day. And one little boy raised his hand and said, "Well, they are just about the same....except you don't have to spend as much money for your dad's present!"


Now, as this little boy alluded in his comment, men and women ARE different. Some of the differences have nothing to do with gender - but others do. As we said last week, men and women ARE different both inside and out and the adventure of discovering your spouse's unique qualities and characteristics brings a great deal of joy to marriage.

Now, it is important to say, as we begin, that if we were to list our differences side by side, one list would not be right and the other wrong. These differences are complimentary. They can bring balance and depth and exhilaration to any marriage relationship. But, while it is exciting to try and understand each other, it can also be frustrating for women to understand men.


And the fruit of their frustration is often humor -- at men's expense. I read this week that if women were in charge of the world, all men would have to attend the following seminars: * “How to NOT Act Younger Than Your Children;” “PMS - Learning When To Keep Your Mouth Shut;” “Filling The Ice Trays 101;” “Parenting-It Doesn't End with Conception;” “Garbage-Getting It To The Curb;” “The Remote Control-Overcoming Your Dependence!”


And guys we have to admit that sometimes we deserve this kind of criticism. I heard of a 911 operator in Joliet, Illinois who received a frantic telephone call. A man was shouting on the phone, "My wife is trying to have a baby and the contractions are two minutes apart!" The 911 operator responded, "Is this her first child?" And the man responded, "NO, you idiot, this is her husband!"


But understanding our differences is also important because the secret of intimacy in marriage is in understanding each other's unique needs and committing to meet them. When we selfishly don't care about each other's needs, marriage is a painful thing instead of the blessing God intended.


So let's begin by reminding ourselves of some of the general differences between men and women: First of all, men tend to be more visually-oriented than women who tend to be more auditory.

I remember a pastor and his wife telling about a time the taught a seminar on the subject of sex and marriage. They advertised their class by saying, if you come to our seminar, we will show you our primary sexual organs. And when hundreds of husbands and wives showed up, the pastor pointed to his eyes and said, "Here are my primary sexual organs." and his wife pointed at her ears and said, "Here are mine!" Also, men are usually focused on one thing at a time while women can be multi-focused . . . which is why our wives expect us to be able to watch TV and engage in conversation at the same time! And then....here's another difference-Men tend to seem to care less about relationships than women. This showed up in a couple responses to a recent survey: When asked, "What do you wish your wives knew about you?" one husband said, "less" -- and another wrote, "She already knows too much." I think these men were using humor to say, "Relationships are hard for us to deal with. Let's just leave things be." And speaking as a man, I can say that it IS hard to reveal one's true self. It's risky to let someone inside so they see the real you. Like anything else that is worthwhile, meaningful intimacy comes with a price.


And then, here are some other unique characteristics of men....According to recent article in MEN'S HEALTH magazine the typical man.... * ...will produce about 25 feet of hair in his lifetime but one in five will go bald in their 20's. ...retains about 60 percent of his body weight in water and will produce up to a half gallon of sweat daily.


Even though man is not faster than any animal on earth, he can outrun any other species for long distances. He consumes 2,400 calories per day and his body is so efficient that if he ran on gasoline, he would get 900 miles per gallon. The typical male is married and would marry his spouse again. He cries about once a month, approximately one fourth as often as a woman and he usually tries to hide it. He eats his corn on the cob in circles rather than straight across-check that one out next time you serve that entre'!


In his book, Understanding the Man in Your Life, H. Norman Wright adds, "Men snore more...they fight more...they change their minds more often than women do...their blood is redder...their daylight vision is superior.....they have thicker skins and longer vocal chords. Their metabolic rate is higher...more of them are left-handed...they feel pain less than women.....They age earlier but wrinkle later....their immunity against disease is weaker...they talk about themselves less, but worry about themselves more."Dr. James Dobson says there is strong evidence indicating that even the "seat" of emotions in a man's brain is "wired" differently than in a woman's.

So -- men are different than women!

And I think that on the whole men want their wives to at least realize this difference. One husband wrote on his survey "I wish my wife knew how and why we are wired differently"


Another husband said on his survey that he wished his wife, "...would not just know me but better understand me." And these men are wanting the right things for misunderstanding each other causes so many problems when our marriages begin. What usually happens is that a husband, knowing HIS deepest needs, figures his wife has those same needs.


So he enthusiastically goes at it -- trying to meet the deepest needs he thinks she has. The wife knows HER deepest needs and she figures her husband must have the same needs and so with all her might she tries to meet the her needs in him. This only leads to frustration. They accuse each other of being selfish...and say things like, "You won't meet MY needs...You won't do what I need. You won't take care of ME." But often at the beginning of marriage it's not so much selfishness as it's ignorance.

So one goal in presenting these two broadcasts is to begin to build bridges of understanding between husbands and wives. Last week we hopefully built a one-lane bridge leading from husbands to wives and this week we hope to double it's size by adding a lane going the other way -- from wives to husbands.


So,what DO husbands wish their wives knew about men? Well, first off I think we would want to dispel the myth that says that a man's only needs are PHYSICAL. This misconception has led us to say things like, "the way to a man's heart is through his STOMACH." I believe that husbands would say that this philosophy expresses a very shallow opinion of a man. For, deep down in side we have the same types of needs as our wives. Last month I said that women have emotional, relational, and spiritual needs and I think husbands would have to say, "We do too." but in a different -- male-oriented way. Let me explain what I mean. Wives....just like you, we have...


1. ....EMOTIONAL NEEDS...

Now this may be hard to believe. Studies show that women tend to be more emotionally open than men....and I think women ARE more comfortable with their emotions. But REAL men do have REAL emotional needs. It is just that it is harder for most men to express them. Women tend to see feelings and behavior as the same. They act on their feelings.


If a woman is angry, she behaves in that way. If she is elated, it's expressed in her behavior. Usually a woman's behavior is an open window to her emotions. But most men are not that way. They tend to hide their emotions. Men tend to embrace the philosophy that says that real men....macho men...are MEN OF STEEL...always in control of their emotions. Hence the popularity of statements like, "REAL MEN don't cry." or jokes like "How many REAL MEN does it take to change a light bulb?" "Zero-because REAL MEN aren't afraid of the dark!"


For Better or Worse is one of my favorite cartoon strips in the Sunday funnies. And a couple years ago it featured the teenage son and his date. They were walking along the beach looking at a beautiful sunset. Thought bubbles from the boy showed him thinking things like.... "What an extraordinary evening...the sunset is brilliant...and I am walking with the most beautiful girl in the world. It's as if this night was made for us! I'll never forget it as long as I live..." That's what he thought but then he turned to his girl and said, "I'm hungry. Want to go grab a burger?" And in great feminine frustration she replied, "Oh Michael, you're so Unromantic!!!" Well, he wasn't unromantic....the sunset caused a great emotional, romantic response in this young man but he just didn't know how to express it...communicate it...


So, the truth is men are very emotional...we are deeply moved by music and beauty! WIVES, like you, we also have a deep need both to love and feel loved. And I think I speak for all my fellow husbands when I say that the love that is among the most precious to us is your love.

We can relate to ancient King Solomon who wrote to his wife in his and said "...your love is more delightful than wine." One husband wrote on his survey that he wished his wife knew..."That he loved her with all his heart and soul." Another said, it is important to him that his wife: "...understand how very deeply he loves her and enjoys it when she is happy and how sad he is when she is sad or hurting." We men may not admit it -- except anonymously on surveys -- because it is so hard for us to do so without tripping over our own feet, but we have emotional needs.


 One husband wrote I wish my wife knew "What makes me laugh....what makes me cry." The love of our wives is very important to us! In fact your love for us is a power source upon which we draw every day.

In the current issue of HOMELIFE magazine there is a story about Dr. Scott Beck, a survivor of an ill-fated Mount Everest ascent. As a result of his ordeal on the world's tallest mountain, Beck's nose had to be reconstructed and a metal prosthesis took the place of one of his hands.

His other hand is now web like-the lasting results of a frostbitten nightmare on that relentless, whirling mountain of ice. Several of Beck's friends died in that climb. But he says the thing that kept him going....the thing that made him get up when everyone else had pronounced him dead was the clear and sweet and poignant memory of his wife. He desperately wanted to hold her and his children in his arms again. That emotional need and the hope of it's fulfillment is literally all that kept him going.


In his book, Man's Search For Meaning, Victor Frankl shared the account of his time in a concentration camp during World War II. He says that one particularly chilling night he and the other exhausted prisoners were forced to walk through snow to work the frozen ground with pickaxes until morning. Though few words were spoken, one of the emaciated men whispered, "If our wives could see us now! I do hope they are better off in their camps and don't know what's happening to us."Silence followed the man's remark, but Frankl writes, "...each of us was thinking of his wife.....I looked at the sky where the stars were fading and the pink light of the morning was beginning to spread behind a dark bank of clouds. But my mind clung to my wife's image, imagining it with an uncanny acuteness. I heard her answering me, saw her smile, her frank and encouraging look. Real or not, her look was then more luminous than the sun which was beginning to rise. I understood how a man who has nothing left in this world still may know bliss, be it only for a brief moment, in the contemplation of his beloved."


Tragically, along with six million other loved ones, Frankl's young wife died under the Nazi's cruel regime. But Frankl broke the odds and lived (only 1 of 28 prisoners survived those death camps). He survived to share his insights about the things that give life meaning even when all human dignities and basic comforts have been stripped away. Next to an abiding faith in God, Frankl says the love of their wives gave men strength to rise from their crowded cots and face another pain-filled day. You see, contrary to popular opinion, men do have emotional needs....they need to feel loved by their wives if they are to go out and "slay the dragon" each Monday morning. We husbands may not face Nazi prison camps...we may not fight for our lives on Everest. But as Thoreau put it men live "...lives of quiet desperation" as they face the hopelessness and exhaustion and a hard-edged world week in and week out. We have emotional needs. We need our wives to love us so well that the memory of your smiling faces and your encouragement will keep us going in the face of adversity. An old Sanskrit poem sums this up well.

Although I conquer all the earth, Yet for me there is only one city.

In that city there is only one house; And in that house, one room only;

And in that room, a bed -- And one woman sleeps there,

The shining joy and jewel of all my kingdom.


So, wives....we want you to know -- what you probably already know, thanks to that wonderful intuition that you have....we want you to know that we have emotional needs. And we would also want you to understand that, believe it or not just like you, we have...

2. .....RELATIONAL NEEDS...

Now, it IS true that women tend to be better at relationships than men....someone once said, "women enjoy relationships while men enjoy results." We have relational needs....it is just that they are hard for us to deal with. It's like a conversation Tim Allen once had with his TV wife, Jill, on ABC's Home Improvement. He said, "Men have an extra 'Y' chromosome." "So?" replied Jill. "So.....men are always asking WHY do we always have to talk about relationships?" I think most men are like Tim. Relationships, and talking about them, is uncomfortable for us. Part of this relational discomfort stems from the fact that men aren't as vocally-gifted as women. I read this week that men use about 5,000 words in one day while women use 20,000.

Well, when a man reaches his "word limit" he stops.....it's like fishing!


And it is difficult to develop a relationship with this kind of communication handicap. One husband wrote, I wish my wife knew: "How deeply I desire to please her in every aspect of life; and how difficult it is without doing something irritating." Like this husband, many men tend to avoid relationships for fear of failure and when this happens the marriage suffers.


You know I think that wives tend to think, "The marriage is working as long as we can talk about it." But husbands think, "The relationship is not working if we have to keep talking about it." Husbands and wives are different in this way....one doesn't talk about feelings much and the other shares them easily and freely. H. Norman Wright offers a solution to this dilemma. He says, "A woman does not have to resign herself to living with an inexpressive male.....Men can change. But, challenges or reproaches do not work. Carefully worded invitations do. Men respond to questions which elicit factual responses. It's easier for a man to tell his wife what he does at work than how he feels about it....starting with the facts is an introduction to the feelings." But please hear this word of caution.


Wright also points out that a man may finally open up to a women only to find that what he reveals is shared with others, ridiculed, rejected, and even laughed at. And if this happens, he is not likely to be willing to talk about things like this in the future. Remember safety, acceptance, and support are essential if a man is going to let down the bridge of his castle and share his feelings.

Wives should also know that men develop relationships in a different way than women. Women tend to make friends based on shared feelings with another person whereas men do so on the basis of shared activities.


A man's best buddy is often the friend from work who loves golf as much as he does. They are friends because they enjoy doing the same things together.

So wives, if it seems like your relationship with your husband is a little rocky, I would advise making an extra effort to do things to BE WITH your husband. Learn to play golf or to fish or to crab or to play chess...find something you and your husband can DO together and I believe this will go a long way to help fulfill both of your relational needs. Just don't buy into the myth that says that men don't have relational needs. Nothing could be farther from the truth. In fact, men need relationships. We are designed to be incomplete without them. Remember? An ancient text of wisdom says: "Two are better than one, because they have a good return for their work: If one falls down, his friend can help him up.

But pity the man who falls and has no one to help him up!"


So men DO have relational needs....we need the affirmation and encouragement that relationships provide. We are designed to require a help-mate -- someone in life to believe in us....to encourage us. On husband expressed this need when he wrote, I wish my wife knew "...how important her affirmation is to me." Wives, husbands need you to be their cheerleader...their one-woman fan club....they need a relationship with you in which they feel your confidence and trust.

Now of course everyone needs to hear encouraging words....but men especially need this. Women tend to joke about the fragile male ego...but it is no joke....our egos are fragile and of all people, we need to hear words of encouragement from you. You see, since this is a broken down world, much of what men hear at work is not encouraging. Every day they deal with pessimism, anger, worries, and insecurity. Did you hear of the salesman who had been away from home an entire week? Homesick and worn out, he went into a café for some breakfast. The waitress came to take his order and he said, "I want two scrambled eggs, coffee, and a kind word." She brought him his eggs and coffee and he said, "Now, how about that kind word?" She looked at him and said, "Don't eat those eggs." Men need kind words...affirming words.


No man is an island. We need relationships. Where did we get this idea of "every man for himself"? This silly rugged individualism isolates a man from his spouse and friends who can provide the help and encouragement we all need.

So men, don't buy into the LONE RANGER philosophy that says, "Real men don't need anyone-except maybe their horse."

So, men have emotional needs; they have relational needs and then, they also have....


3. .....SPIRITUAL NEEDS..

We are not just physical beings. We are also mind and spirit.

So not only do we have physical needs....we have spiritual needs as well. It is part of WHO and WHAT we are! The problem with husbands....men....is that in an attempt to provide for their families they often get so busy in their careers that they forget this truth. Men tend to fall into the trap of drawing their identity and significance from what they DO. You see, to a man, what he does often determines who he is. When asked to introduce themselves men say, "I...am a fireman, or a doctor or an accountant, or a software engineer, or a carpenter, or a dentist, or a plumber, or a pastor." But tackling life in this way can be quite frustrating. For, each of us are so much more than what we do. One husband wrote on his survey, I wish my wife understood .".....The pain of trying to be a good family man AND a good provider. The guilt of trying to take care of priorities that are in conflict with each other."

Now, of course men should work...but our work should not define who we are.


Men need to learn that, as DCTALK used to sing, "It's not who you are...it's Who you know" that satisfies the real needs in our lives. You see, being task-oriented....career-oriented...can lead us to become self-oriented and that is not how we were designed! We have spiritual needs that are not met in a career.


So men need to learn to turn from living for self to living for and with others. You see, being career-oriented and the earthly success that often comes from this lifestyle choice can make a man think he doesn't need others or to connect with a spiritual life. Men who fall into this trap should avoid thinking you have all the answers! We don't have all the answers! We need the wisdom and guidance that comes from a spiritual life..


You know, perhaps this tendency to think we have all the answers and rely on self is why the suicide rate for men is two and a half times that of women. Maybe this is why the incidence of stress-related diseases such as high blood pressure, stroke, and heart disease is two to four times higher for men than women. One man, fearing burnout, went to his counselor who immediately urged him to do less work. "Furthermore," the counselor continued, "I want you to spend one hour each week at the cemetery." "What on earth do you want me to do that for?" the man replied incredulously. "What should I DO at the cemetery?" "Not much," the counselor replied. "Take it easy, and look around. Get acquainted with some of the men already in there and remember, they didn't finish their work either."


A great violinist once visited Houston, Texas, to hold a concert. The news papers used most of their available space to describe his original, and extremely valuable Stradivarius violin. On the morning of the concert, the papers actually carried a picture of the great instrument that he would use. That night the hall filled with people, and the violinist played extremely well. As he finished, applause thundered from every part of the concert hall. After it subsided, he carefully laid down his bow and carried a chair out to center stage. Then...raising the violin over his head with both hands, he smashed it across the back of the chair. It splintered into a thousand pieces. The audience gasped and sat stunned. Then, coming back to the microphone, he said, "I read in this morning's paper how great my violin was, so I walked down the street and found a pawnshop. For $10 I bought a cheap violin. I put new strings on it, and that's the violin I played this evening, the smashed one. I wanted to demonstrate for you that it isn't my violin that counts most. It's the hands that hold it."

Likewise, successfully living as a male depends less on the instrument (body) and more on the understanding of who holds us in high esteem.


Manhood is not found in physical abilities, personality, behavior, charisma, talent , intelligence, performance, or profession. Real manhood is found in the inner man who commits to his wife, children, community and religion. I love the response one husband had on his survey. I think he understood this truth. He said, 'I wish my wife knew that I want her to pray for me whenever she thinks of me.


So, after these two broadcasts I think we see that husbands and wives are similar and different. Both men and women have emotional, relational, and spiritual needs. But, due to their unique design, those needs must be met in different ways. I encourage you as husbands and wives to commit to understanding these differences. And I promise you....there is a great amount of joy waiting for husbands and wives who make this kind of commitment. Paul Tournier wrote, "He who loves understands, and he who understands loves. One who feels understood feels loved, and one who feels loved feels sure of being understood.....no one can develop freely in this world and find a full life without feeling understood by at least one person."