The Multitude of Ways I Love My Wife

A blog about my wonderful & beautiful wife, and ALL the ways I love her.

Thursday, September 30, 2004

I love that my wife constantly tries

My wife is so wonderful. She is constantly trying to fill my "Love Tank" or "Love Bank". She'll buy me little things (yesterday she bought me Laura Secord dark chocolate chocolates... and anyone who knows me knows that I love chocolate... hmmm, that's an idea for another blog :)

She also takes things I say, remembers them and then tries to plan a special event for us. She once took me to a Montreal Expos baseball game, because she knew I love baseball, and I would love to go with her... even though she knew nothing about baseball, nor does she particularly find it interesting.

She even took me to a night of wrestling... we saw Raw when it was in town this summer. That was fun. And she definitely has no like for wrestling.

And the best part, even if I don't necessarily react in the way or with as much enthusiasm as she might have expect, she still keeps trying to find that one thing that will send me to the moon and back with love for her.

Wednesday, September 29, 2004

I love my wife's perserverance and hard working attitude

I'm so amazed by my wife. She never gives up, never quits, and just keeps pushing on. And all her hard work and perserverance does pay-off. My wife finished her BA with a specialization in Applied Human Sciences (or Relations, I forget the exact title) just this past August. What a specialization means is that she did more courses, i.e. more work, than someone doing just a major. She also finished a minor in French. On top of all that she was working between 15-25 hours a week, sometimes full-time in the summer, she took full-time summer courses, which usually means about 4 courses, she served and volunteered at church, heading our welcome/follow-up team, leading a small group Bible study, singing with our church band, and mentoring tons of people. And the kicker, with ALL that on her plate, including family and household responsibilities, she graduated with a 3.8 GPA, got on the Dean's list, and received membership into the International Golden Key Society, which is only offered to those who finish in the top 15% of their faculty!

And my wife did all that in spite of suffering from fibromyalgia. She lost one year in university, because this disease/illness robbed her of her strength and ability to walk without a cane and caused her insufferable pain. Yet she did it!

If you also consider where she came from... she came to Canada from India when she was 13 years old. She did not know any French. She had an abusive childhood (not from her parents). And she is where is is today... that amazes me. I honour that, and I respect that. And I love my wife for that!

Tuesday, September 28, 2004

I love my wife's body

I'm not going to go into details. I love my wife's physical appearance. It is important for spouse to find one another attractive. And I most definitely find my wife beautiful!

Monday, September 27, 2004

I love my wife's name

I love my wife's name... Cindy. It has a greek origin meaning "moon." She also has a middle name, Louise, which has a german origin, and means "famous in battle."

However, my love for her name does not seem to have any reasonable or logical origin. I just love her name. There's something in the name Cindy that stirs something in me. And when I meet other people with the same name, my thoughts go straight to my wife... and I find it very awkward and weird to be calling someone else Cindy (especially guys :) ) . It seems wrong and unnatural, like only my wife should have that name.

I remember before we started dating, and some people might think this is weird... like I was some kind of stalker... but I used to do web searches on the name cindy hoping to land on some page about my wife or a page with some info on her... maybe a picture. I never did though. (FYI, a search for cindy mostly produces sites dedicated to Cindy Crawford, and I for one never really found her attractive).

It's obviously a subjective thing, but just as the moon brings light to a dark sky, my wife, Cindy, brings light to my life. She is my moon, while Jesus is my Sun. (Wow, poetic, eh!?)

Be blessed.

Friday, September 24, 2004

I love my wife's joy and happiness

This, I think is straightforward, and if it is not true in your relationship... actually, if this is not true in any of your close relationships, then maybe something is wrong.

But, I love it when my wife is full of joy and happy. When she is happy, I'm happy. When she is joyful, I am joyful. It doesn't mean that if she is not joyful or happy that I cannot be happy... nor does it mean that I do not sympathize or mourn with my wife. There is just something there, when my wife smiles, it fills my heart with joy and love.

When there is that look of joy on her face, my heart is filled with love.

Last night, when my wife called from Red Deer, after the evening meeting of the conference, there was so much joy and happiness in her voice, which made me happy even though I had just come home from a 19 hour day (includes 14 hours of work and getting up early to take my wife to the airport). I was ready to go to bed, but after talking to her, I was refreshed and encouraged. Having a happy and joyful wife is great!

Thursday, September 23, 2004

I love my wife's heart coming alive

I will probably come back to this one a number of times, since there is so much to the human heart, however, I want to ponder how my wife's heart became even more alive this week.

Today, I took my wife to the airport, because she is going to a conference in Red Deer, Alberta. This has been a conference she has been wanting to go to for a while... actually, probably since last year's conference, which she was NOT able to go to. Anyway, our finances say that we cannot afford a $500 plane ticket, plus registration, plus food, plus hotel room. SO I am working extra this week and week-end so that my wife can go. And why would I do that? Because I love her and I love her heart.

Her heart is totally sold out to Jesus. She wants nothing more than to fulfill her destiny as a woman and as my wife in this world for God's glory. When I told her that she was going to this conference, her face and her joy was ALL the payment I needed.

I don't know if I can even fully understand the depths of why this was important to my wife. But I know that it lifted her heart and spirit. I know that it told her that I absolutely love her. And I know it told her that God has great plans for her. To see her heart come more alive is my joy!

Wednesday, September 22, 2004

I love my wife's eyes

"How beautiful you are, my darling! Oh, how beautiful! Your eyes are doves." -
Song of Solomon 1:15
What more is there to say. I find my wife's eyes absolutely beautiful. She is 1/4 Nepalese, 1/4 Chinese, 1/4 French, 1/4 Ukrainian, so her eyes have a sliglt almond shape to them, and they are a deep brown colour. There's nothing more beautiful to me!

Her eyes are like doves. Doves often represent peace and purity... And that is what my wife's eyes bring me... peace and purity. When I look into her eyes, I have peace and I see a purity of love and care.

The dove also represents the Holy Spirit. And to know that my wife walks by faith and not by sight, that she walks in the spirit rather than by her flesh, makes me so happy. One of the few criteria I had growing up was that my wife would go to church with me. Well, that vision has grown to having my wife serve with me... And she does!

I want to share another verse, but it doesn't have that much to do with my wife's eyes:

"Your neck is like an ivory tower. Your eyes are the pools of Heshbon by the
gate of Bath Rabbim. Your nose is like the tower of Lebanon looking toward
Damascus." - Song of Solomon 7:4
I spoke this verse to my wife a few years back before we were actually dating. I kind of said it as a joke... well, really, in our modern language this is downright weird poetry. However, there is something there that speaks of beauty, peace, strength, endurance, resilience... and my wife has them all.

Tuesday, September 21, 2004

I love my wife's respect and honour toward my parents

It's been a few days since I last posted (I normally won't be posted during the weekend... I'm not usually near a computer). However, it gave me a lot of time to think about what else I love about my wife... so I have a head full of ideas, but the one I want to talk about is how my wife honours and respects my parents.

We always hear the "in-law" jokes and it seems that having a good relationship with your extended family is always difficult.

However, my wife goes the extra mile to honour and respect and love my parents. We went to my parents place just last night, and I was so blessed to se my wife greeting my parents with a kiss and a big hug. Then, she helped in the kitchen, without anyone asking her. She washed the dishes. She cleared the table. And maybe most importantly, she constantly tells my mom to sit down (my mom comes from a typical Eastern European background, where thw men and guests sit, and the wife of the house spends most of the time in the kitchen and on her feet serving the party), while she and I help with the serving.

She has never spoken ill of my parents. In fact, I can't think of one negative word she has said about my parents. She praises them for their hard work. And she takes an interest in their lives. She is possibly the perfect daughter-in-law!

I am so blessed that the in-law issue is not an issue I have to worry about. And I am sure that my parents love the respect and honour they get from her.

Friday, September 17, 2004

I love my wife's walk

This is one of those more "superficial" ones... but it is true.

For some reason, I always notice people's way of walking. Always have!

There are people who walk on their toes, almost like they are walking on their tip-toes. Then there is the "Charlie Chaplin" walk... toes turned outwards... and there is varying degrees of that one. Then there is the toes turned inwards... of both feet or of one foot. People walk on the balls of their feet, the inside part of their soles, and you can tell by the wear on their shoes. People also walk on the outside part of their soles. Some people bounce with every step. Others sway various parts of their body. Some people "jiggle". Others are super rigid.

My wife has a sweet straight walk. Nothing out of the ordinary. Nothing that would make people take notice of her because of her walk. And I love that. She's also a brisk walker, which I love as well. There's nothing in her walk that would distract me from noticing other things about her that I love (but that's for another day :)

I love my wife's walk!

Be blessed!

Thursday, September 16, 2004

I love that I need my wife

Need... That is often a dangerous word in our society. Thoughts of codependency come to mind. And, what, with our whole women's lib movement, equality, self-sufficiency, and "me-me-me-" attitudes, "need" is almost a curse word. (OK, so I'm being a little melodramatic, but hopefully you get my point)

However, as I thought about what I loved about my wife yesterday, this is the idea that kept coming back. I need my wife. Now, before you think I'm some spineless, momma's boy who can't even dress himself in the morning (which btw I did do all by myself today, thank you :), let me explain what I mean.

It is a fact that in North America about 50% of all marriages end in divorce. That's some serious stats looming over you as you decide to marry someone. Of course, no one plans to fail; no one plans to get divorced. But, it happens. What many marriage counsellors, psychologists, and whoever else studies this stuff have found is that, at least part of the problem, comes from our cultural view that independence and self-centeredness is important to you becoming a normal productive person. Now, you are probably saying to yourself that independence and self-centeredness are not the same thing. And, yes, I know that when you use the word self-centeredness, it seems so negative, but independence seems to be positive... but really, they are essentially the same thing. Here are dictionary definitions of the two words, and yes, though we try to give independence that positive spin, they both essentially mean that you do what you want to do (Emphasis added).
Independence = The state or quality of being independent; freedom from dependence; exemption from reliance on, or control by, others; self-subsistence or maintenance; direction of one's own affairs without interference.
Self-centeredness = Engrossed in oneself and one's own affairs; selfish

When we enter that marriage relationship--and in fact any relationship really, though most other relationships do not have the same intimacy or reprecussions after a break-up as a marriage does--we are essentially saying that I am putting aside my own agenda and my own wants, so that our relationship can grow. That does not mean that we never get our way. Neither does it mean that we must serve the other person to the point of abuse. Of course not. But it is a mystery of life that when we willingly give ourselves to someone else, and serve their needs first, it WILL and it DOES come back to us.

What triggered this thought was an article I read by Dr. W.F. Harley Jr., a leading marriage counsellor and author of "His Needs, Her Needs." The funny thing is, I didn't get through the whole article... yet it got me thinking about this whole idea of need.

Whether we like it or not, we do need each other. Society could not function without one another. Our communities could not function without other people. No matter how much we want to be left alone, we really do need other people in our lives. I, personally, would go crazy if I had to cook and prepare three meals a day AND go to work for 8 hours AND wash my clothes AND clean my house AND maintain my car AND cut my grass AND trim my hedges AND take out the garbage AND setup my own server so that I can use the internet (which actually makes no sense without other people anyway) AND build and design the computers that I use at work AND... I think you get the point. Without other people, we couldn't do much.

"But that's just our materialistic-consumer-oriented society." OK, what if we were "self-sufficient" farmers of old. We would have to plant, tend and harvest our crops. How many could you handle? How much would you have to plant to feed yourself for a year? Would we keep animals for milk? for meat? for eggs? What about the winter? Ultimately, I don't know many farmers who do all the work themselves.

Now, I'm not saying that if you built a shack in the woods that you would die of starvation. Yes, there's plenty on God's green earth for us to eat. But our lives would feel empty and unfulfilled. This is getting to the point!

The Bible often describes the Church as a body, with Jesus Christ as the head. To Christians, God, Jesus, is our ultimate source, yet we still need each other, like a body needs all its parts. A finger cannot live on its own apart from the rest of the body, nor can a heart survive separated from the rest of the body (modern technology aside :).

I don't know why God made it that way, but we need each other. We are not all talented and gifted in the same way. Horror to everyone if I had to sing opera or develop Windows. We would be in very big trouble... and our ears would bleed with pain! We do need others to help us through some of our problems. We do need others to give us wise counsel when we are making major decisions for our lives. We do need others to comfort us when we are in pain. We do need others to sharp and challenge us to continue growing into the people we were always meant to be.

And how much more is this true than with the person you marry. I don't believe in coincidences. I believe that when you go to marry a person, it is NOT just because you love them, but you see something in them that you need. Sure there are people that can fill certain needs at various times and circumstances. But there is only one person who can fill the most essential needs in your life... and that is your spouse!

And when I look at my needs (Dr. harley lists 10 needs that seem to be the most important ones to most couples: Affection, Sexual Fulfillment, Conversation, Recreational Companionship, Honesty and Openness, Physical Attractiveness, Financial Support, Domestic Support, Family Commitment, and Admiration ) I know that my wife is the only one that can fulfill all these needs. Though we are still growing, and we've been married for only two years, I see already that only she can fill these needs to overflowing in our lifetime. There may be other people who can fill in a need here or there, but never to the full extent that my wife can. And this means, that as long as I need her (which I do every day), we will hold true to our marriage vows to be together until "death do us part".

I love that I need my wife!

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Wednesday, September 15, 2004

Reason for starting this Blog

As I witnessed this blog phenomenon occurring, I realized that it was a good thing. What a great way to put your thoughts into a journal and share it with others. So I've been looking for some topic to use for my first blog. And I found it:

The Multitude of Ways I Love My Wife

With life being so busy and with so many things that tug at us for our attention, if we are not careful with the one relationship we vowed to keep for a lifetime, we run the risk of losing that love of our life, our soul-mate, our spouse!

So this is why I want to keep this blog. I want to take time every day to think about one thing that I love about my wife (irregardless of how trivial or deep it may be) and ponder that trait or characteristic for that day, and then share it here.

This is really for myself; for my growth as a man and husband; for my healing of past hurts and pains, and possible future wounds; and maybe most importantly, for my mind, to fill it with a positive, thankful and joyful attitude.

The Good Book says, "For the rest, brethren, whatever is true, whatever is worthy of reverence and is honorable and seemly, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely and lovable, whatever is kind and winsome and gracious, if there is any virtue and excellence, if there is anything worthy of praise, think on and weigh and take account of these things [fix your minds on them] ... and the God of peace (of untroubled, undisturbed well-being) will be with you." (Philippians 4:8-9, AMP) So I want to focus on the good, the great, the amazing in my wife, for it is much too easy to focus on the smallest tiniest little flaw, fault, or mistake.

And so if this helps you with your spouse, well then I was super blessed to have been given something to write that was an aid to you.

Be blessed brothers and sisters!