Manforher
Manforher
by LEO J. KINSELLA
Published by VALIANT PUBLICATIONS 421 South Halvey Avenue Oak Park, Illinois
PREFACE
Many wives who read "The Wife Desired" felt that their husbands had been neglected. They would
like to see a book for them. "Wouldn't work," I always said. "They would never buy or read a book for
self- improvement as husbands."
"I'll bet you mine will read," one wife replied. "I'll get the book, say not a word to my husband, and
read a chapter or so each night. Occasionally I'll burst out into laughter. Soon he'll wonder what's going
on. I'll leave the book lying around. If I know my husband, curiosity will have him into it in not time."
So that is the reason why there is "The Man for Her." I could not run forever from all the wives who
had read "The Wife Desired."
My gratitude goes out ot so many for their help and suggestions, especially to Zita Smetko for her
help on the manuscript.
CONTENTS
Introduction
1. Husbands Treated Like Dogs 2. Inspiration 3. Mister Fix It 4. Town Spendthrift 5. Eschewing
Thistles 6. Mouse Trapped Husbands 7. Understanding 8. Humor 9. Positive Listening 10. Masterful
Man For Her 11. Adventure, Romance, Enthusiasm 12. Make Believe 13. Tit For Tat 14.
Companionship 15. Love 16. Sex 17. Religion
INTRODUCTION
Doctors, lawyers, and other professional men study and train for years before they practice. Likewise,
tradesmen of all sorts must slowly learn their trade. But who needs any preparation to be a husband?
He is fitted by nature to be the answer to any discerning maiden's prayer. All he has to do is pop the
question to the fluttering girl, stand before the altar, and he has it made.
"Oh, yes?" all the ladies sing out in chorus. There do seem to be a few dissident voices raised to the
statement that all males, just because they are males, naturally slip into the groove of the perfect
husband. Some never seem to hit the groove. Others, after brief success, jump out of the groove and
wobble all over the family lot.
For women marriage is a full time job. For men it is a part time job. A big part of his time and energy
is spent in making a living. No doubt that is why most of the advice found in magazines, Sunday
supplements, and so forth, is for wives. In fact, most of the women's magazines devote a considerable
amount of space to the end of improving m'lady. How to wear clothes more elegantly, how to make
better use of "make up," how to be the best Cook on the block, how to be a successful and happy wife--
these are the topics which help to sell magazines to ladies. Has anyone heard of a man's magazine
devoted to his self-improvement?
Even the Bible in its numerous references to husband and wife gives much more advice to the wife.
So, perhaps, husbands should be let go blissfully on their way. After all, what wife would wish to
destroy her husband's self-confidence? I certainly do not intend to trifle one bit with that male ego.
The only effort in subsequent chapters will be to observe successful, happy husbands in action. How
does a husband manage to have the wife desired, and in having her, reach the pinnacle of earthly
happiness? We hope to find the answer to this question as we read on.
The most miserable people in the world are those who bring unhappiness to others. Contrarily, the
happiest of all are they who make others happy. Has anybody ever seen a miserable, cantankerous wife
with a joyful husband in tow? So, husbands, if you would escape a fate worse than death, cultivate a
happy wife. The Man For Her is smart enough to keep his wife purring. And should he stumble into the
doghouse he knows the way out.
One day three golfing companions and I were witnesses to a very amusing situation. A real duffer or
"hacker," as we used to say in caddie parlance, was manfully swinging away on the first tee. These
were not practice swings. He had blood in his eye, and had his golf ball been a living thing it would
have been in danger of being hacked to death. Finally he dribbled the ball off the tee. As he stalked
down the fairway he pulled out of the caddie cart a nationally read picture magazine. In that particular
issue there was an article by a famous professional giving away the secret of his long domination of the
pro tournament tours.
"If somebody else can drive two hundred and seventy-five yards down the fairway, why can't I?" was
written all over his face as he glared at the magazine. We were skeptical of the results of his determined
reading. Only an experienced student of the game of golf could understand the article, much less put it
into practice. Yet, the duffer was reading it avidly as he trudged over to the rough after his ball. The
incongruity of the situation made all of us chuckle.
Many tens of thousands of men, many of whom are husbands, do wish to improve their golf game,
otherwise there would not be so many books on the subject. Hardly a season passes without one of the
leading professionals coming out with a book on how to play better golf.
Everytime a person goes to school or reads a book to learn something it is an act of humility. It is a
healthy admission that he does not know everything. We have humble golfers. Can't we have humble
husbands?
Countless happy marriages are mute testimony that there are humble husbands. However, divorce
courts, marriage counseling services, family relation institutes, and aggrieved wives are testimony (and
not so mute) that many husbands could learn a thing or two. Here I must be allowed the indulgence of a
word or two to the wise. My own experience as a marriage counselor is that failures seldom indicate
any realization that there is anything to learn about playing the role of the successful husband. At best,
if the light ever came, it came too late. The wife was through, gone.
The purpose of this book is not to attempt to revive dead marriages. If, however, through the grace of
God, the reunion of one husband with his wife is accomplished, all this ink would be justified. Yet, I am
not appealing to hopeless, psychopathic "duffers." I am not capable even if I wanted to deal with them.
The hope in these pages is that some young men may become more aware that, as there are a few tricks
to every trade, there is something to be said for preparing to be a husband. Also, perhaps some
husbands could pick up a tidbit here and there whereby they could bring a little more happiness to those
wonderful girls they married some years ago.
Once I heard a wife say that her husband was the most wonderful man in the world and that she
adored him. What husband is there who could be indifferent to such praise from the one he loves? What
husband worthy of the name would not literally stand on his head to merit such esteem?
Full happiness can come to a husband only through his wife. Success in business and the social world
are as ashes in his hand, if he fails to win the love and admiration of his chosen partner for life. The
unsuccessful husband is sometimes the successful business man. Frustration at home drove him to find
his niche elsewhere. And it is a niche he would gladly vacate were not real happiness denied him in his
own home.
So many happy husbands and so many miserable husbands. What is the reason? Different wives, of
course! The reader who thinks that to be the only answer should drop this book and go quietly to sleep.
On the other hand, if he knows this ungallant answer is at least an over-simplification, in subsequent
chapters he may find many different types of happy husbands and how they were successful.
During the months I spent collecting the material for this book I asked quite a number of young ladies
to give me, in a few hundred words, their picture of a real husband, a flight of fancy, if they so desired.
I have come to realize that the task was far from easy. Not one of the young ladies produced a thing in
spite of several reminders. One, upon being asked by her mother why she had not begun writing,
replied that if she could get down on paper the things in her soul people would think she was looking
for God, not a husband.
I had heard that honeymoons were an ecstatic interlude, so I should not have been too disappointed
that life with Grace had settled down into a humdrum affair. After five years, I had an uneasy feeling
that our marriage was getting threadbare like our first parlor carpet, which would not take many more
brushings. It hurt my pride to sense that my wife was not in seventh heaven either. The baby and four-
year-old Bill gave her quite a time along with the household chores.
Grace was beginning to take on that expression of weariness tinged with self-pity. We were budgeting
like mad for our own home, and I guess both of us felt that we were not having much fun. Life was all
work and no play.
What really began to tee me off was Grace's attitude of resentment over my taking it easy around the
house after work. Gradually I developed a deaf ear to her requests and commands. The order from the
kitchen, "Jack, come here," no longer brought me to instant action. "Jack, bring the paper in from the
porch" was like an anesthetic. Even if her mentioning of the paper made me want to see the sport page,
I stalled around before getting it.
Guess I never had been a fireball around the house, but these orders were making a shirker out of me.
What I considered a tone of command in her voice made it more difficult for me to do what I knew had
to be done.
Then one day a change took place. I was reading the newspaper and trying not to hear Grace calling
from the kitchen.
"Jack, dear," her voice was different, "please come here for a minute."
I took my sweet time, finally getting to the kitchen as though I had some business there. After a
moment I grumbled, "Well, what do you want?"
Grace turned and threw her arms around me, kissing me warmly and repeatedly. Then she gently
scratched me behind the ear.
"That's all. I just wanted to be with you. I spend too much time in this kitchen away from you."
As I hugged her again, my eyes landed on the window she gave up struggling with the minute I
entered the kitchen.
"Wait a minute, dear," I said with some strength coming back into me. I jerked the window up with
five times more force than was necessary.
"Anything else I can do?" By this time I was walking around the kitchen like the Strong Man of the
Circus, with my chest out dangerously far.
And this was just the beginning. Grace was a different person. She had a winning, confident charm
about her. The command in her voice was gone. No longer did she have to ask me two and three times
to do things for her.
The milkman hardly had let go of the half-gallon bottle of milk when I scooped it up. As I made for
the refrigerator, Grace intercepted me and tickled me in the ribs.
"Taking unfair advantage of me," I reproached her, as I struggled to get away like Mohammedans
fighting to get away from Mecca.
When I caught the evening newspaper on the first bounce, I returned to be trapped by Grace. She
usually hid behind the front door, as I pretended to think that she was in far-off Tibet. When she
pounced upon me, I got the message. I didn't spend three years in the Signal Corps for nothing. The
newspaper dropped to the floor and sometimes remained there.
When Uncle Ed left me a few thousand, I spent little time trying to figure out why he singled me out
in his will. I was too busy spending the money. Likewise, I was having too grand a time with Grace to
bother too much over the reasons for our new attitude toward each other. For two weeks or so I went
merrily along on my dumb way. Then the day of awakening came.
I had to stay home from work with a terrible cold. Really it was a blessing in disguise, as so many of
my imagined ills turn out to be.
Late in the afternoon, being alone, with the children asleep and Grace having run out to shop, I
became restless and picked up one of my wife's magazines. It was one of the well-known women's
magazines. "Treat Your Husband Like a Dog" was a challenge to read on. It became clear to me,
sentence after sentence, what had happened during the past weeks. Grace, I was convinced, had tried
the article out on me. She had treated me like a dog.
YOUR PUPPY, the article said, MUST ASSOCIATE THE COMMAND, COME HERE, WITH
SOMETHING PLEASING. AFTER HE COMES, PET HIM, AND SCRATCH HIM BEHIND THE
EAR. YOU'LL FIND THAT HE'LL WANT TO COME AGAIN FOR SUCH REWARDS .
"Well, I'll be darned!" I almost woke up the children. I could almost feel her fingers behind my ear as
I thought back over a number of pleasing experiences of recent days.
The article continued: DON'T FORGET, PRAISE GOES A LONG WAY IN THE TRAINING OF
YOUR PUPPY.
The magazine dropped to my knees and memory carried me back to the kitchen. "My, Jack, what
tremendous strength you have in those arms of yours." I laughed out loud as I recalled that, if I had had
a tail that day, I would have thrashed the kitchen with it.
Then an angel of light gave me a brilliant idea. Why spoil the game and the fun? Continue to be--
ahem--to play dumb--it takes little effort for you and you are so good at it.
Just to check, I then bolted out to the kitchen and tried the window. Sure enough. I smiled knowingly
like Sherlock Holmes. A baby could lift it. I pulled my bathrobe off one shoulder and held my arm up
to the light of the window. I made a fist, and my muscle looked like a knot in a cooked string of
spaghetti. And Grace had made me feel like Hercules.
I hurried back to the parlor, replaced the magazine, and turned on the TV. Thank heavens, the angel of
light got through to me and gave the angel of darkness no chance to get in his digs. I felt no resentment
that Grace had been treating me like a dog. On the contrary, I was glad to know that my wife was
making a studied effort to make ours a happy marriage.
Several happy weeks, the like of which we had not experienced since our honeymoon, attested to her
finesse. Grace was a clever girl, God love her. Not many women could have put over her game so well,
I prided myself.
When Grace returned, I was seized by a little imp and by the desire to further test if I was on the right
track. I gathered up all the magazines in sight and said, "Grace I'm throwing all these out."
Wouldn't I have been crazy to squelch a game like this? I thought that I could detect a faint quiver in
her voice as she said, "Besides, I want one of those magazines. It has an interesting recipe for Zucchini
squash. And I bought some this afternoon."
As I sat in the parlor, I formulated my strategy. If Grace could plot, so could I. If she could maneuver
me into jumping all over the place for her like a puppy--and what is more, like it--couldn't I play a
game of my own? Don't women also have a few week points in their armor?
As we sat down to dinner, I decided to make my first move. I gingerly led off with, "Grace, this
Zucchini casserole is out of this world." It really was delicious, and perhaps that fact helped me. I
hadn't said a word of praise like that for ages.
What a boob I had been for so long! Grace came up like a hungry bass for my plug. "You like it?"
"I was afraid. First time I tried the recipe." She struggled to be nonchalant and keep the cooing out of
her voice.
"First time or not," I said, "it really hit the spot, and I didn't have an appetite when I came to the
table."
As I ate dessert, Grace jumped up and got a long untouched bottle of blackberry cordial. "A glass of
this will be good for your cold," she coaxed.
As she handed me the glass, her eyes never showed more solicitude--even when she gave our baby its
bottle. Although I had forgotten about the cold, I managed a cough. "Wonderful stuff. Throat feels
better already."
My quickly formulated strategy was working like a charm. My first play had scored a touchdown.
One word of praise, and I had her ready to serve hummingbird wings on toast. No question about it, she
had me eating out of her hand like a big, brown-eyed cocker spaniel. The spaniel was not going to stop
eating out of her hand either, but he was going to pick and choose what would be on that hand.
The next morning at breakfast, I was hoping that the egg would not be completely hard-boiled. My
wife had heard me grouse often enough about my egg. Up till that wonderful cold, it always had been a
mystery to me why my egg could not be a three-minute egg once in a while. It had exasperated me why
the egg had to be a half-minute or a ten-minute egg.
Those days are gone forever. A master stroke put an end to those detestable hard-boiled eggs. Socrates
could not have carried the field before him with a more brilliant statement. "Grace, this three- minute
egg is done to perfection. Just right," I said enthusiastically, smacking my lips in true Indian style.
I never said a word the next morning nor thereafter about the egg- timer perched on the stove. Now
my eggs get stop watch attention. No Olympic racer ever had his time clocked more accurately.
As I pretended to hurry more than usual that morning, Grace sprinted ahead of me to the door. She
threw her arms around me and kissed me. She kissed me. And not a little peck, either. There actually
was a look of gratitude in her eyes. "Hurry home, Jack, dear; I miss you during the day."
I walked out of the house without touching the steps, and sold three cars that day. I had the world by
the tail as never before. My game was clicking like Hogan's tee shots. Life was getting exciting. Here I
was playing two games at once and did not know which I preferred.
In fact, when I got home that evening I hesitated whether to pursue my game or let her get in a few
licks. I was warming up to the possibilities and with recklessness come of success wanted to rush Grace
off her feet.
During dinner I held back from extolling everything on the table and kept the conversation rolling
along about my luck in selling the cars.
I had not finished the paper after dinner when I heard Grace calling from the basement. "Jack, dear,
could you come downstairs for a minute?"
"Ah," I grinned to myself, "wonder what lesson in the training program she wants me to exemplify
tonight?" Happy that she had not forgotten about her own game, I held back from rushing downstairs.
After a respectful delay, I sauntered down like any unsuspecting cocker.
"What do you want?" I managed as best I could in my unenthusiastic tone of yesteryear. Grace was
well into her act, tugging at a large box.
"Just was wondering what you thought about this arrangement," she replied.
She was developing fast as a charming animal trainer. Indeed, I felt that even wild lions would have
had a time of resisting her. With effort I held back from taking her in my arms. She rattled on about
what I thought about this and that regarding the arrangement of a section of the basement. All I could
see was a pile of junk.
As I began to help her with the box, she asked, "shall we put it in the coal-bin?"
I resisted looking into her eyes for the mischief they must have contained. She knew the coal-bin was
for coal as well as I did. The whole plot was to gct me to decide where to put it, and then, of course, I
would be the one to put it there--just where she wanted it.
It takes two to play at most games. So I began swinging at everything she pitched up. "No, Grace, this
box should go over here. And watch out for those old boards. They have nails in them."
"MAKE YOUR PUPPY THINK HE IS HAVING HIS OWN WAY WHEN HE IS DOING JUST
WHAT YOU WANT. REWARD HIM REPEATEDLY AND HE WILL CONTINUE TO ENJOY
DOING WHAT YOU WANT."
I could see what lesson she was teaching her puppy and I was curious to see her technique in making
the fitting reward for my cooperation. She pretended to stumble over a board and fell right into my
arms. With her head on my chest, she looked at me. This was always the best part of the lesson and I
carried it off like a prize-winning cocker spaniel.
"Grace, do you think it possible a woman's eyes can grow more beautiful with the years?"
"What do you mean?" she asked, snuggling closer. She definitely was interested in my line of thought.
Her eyes told me to rave on.
"Well, lately I have been wondering about it," I said as I looked into her eyes. "Must sound awfully
foolish."
"Of course not, darling," she purred softly, as the light in her eyes raced up toward one-million
candlepower.
Her eyes were becoming more beautiful with each expectant heart- beat. Manfully I resisted saying
more. Grace was already limp in my arms.
"Well, Grace," I broke in upon our reverie, nodding to the junk on the floor, "guess I better get back to
this debris."
"You are in a lovable mood, Grace. It would be cruel of you to expect me to turn from you to these
boxes. In fact, I prefer carrying you around tonight." The thought was no more suddenly expressed than
the action followed.
She felt so cozy in my arms as I walked slowly up the stairs, not wanting the experience to end. What
a dullard I had been so long for not having done it before!
On reaching the kitchen, we became aware that we had two children needing a little attention. We
smiled knowingly at each other as she said, "It won't take long, Jack, to get them to bed."
2. INSPIRATION
Since inspiration is the most important contribution a woman can make in married life, one might
expect that young men on the prowl for a wife would be alerted for the presence of inspiration in their
dates. Your steady date may be a slick little chick of good character and background. But does she
inspire you? Does she arouse in you a desire to do big things for her? Does thinking and dreaming
about her make you a better person, a less selfish person?
You may be spiritually and physically attracted to her. Well and good. But do you lose sleep planning
all the things you are going to do to make her happy? The thought never enters your mind how you are
going to be happy. You have forgotten yourself completely. She is all that matters. If you think of
yourself at all, it is only as to how you can improve yourself to make her happy and proud of you. She
is precious to you. To protect her you would wrap her in cellophane. To glorify her you would clothe
her in spun gold and crown her with jewels.
You would stoop to nothing base. A glance of pain and disappointment from her would kill you. A
smile of love and appreciation from her would act like strong wine and sends you off vibrating with the
joy of being alive.
One moment you are in an agony of frustration because vou cannot provide her with all the things she
rightly deserves. The next moment you could break telephone poles for her. Her presence or her image
in your mind gives confidence that you can do anything for her. No obstacle can prevent you from
laying the world at her feet.
It does seem that you are in love, that the girl inspires you. Marry her if you want to live. If you want
only to go through the motions of living the rest of your life, let her slip away from you. The girl who
not only can step up your pulse, but also can inspire you is a pearl of great price.
Many a young gallant marries unaware that such a word as inspiration is in the dictionary. During
courtship days he never thinks to look for the faculty of inspiration in his future wife. After living
together a few years the same man wonders what is lacking in his marriage.
Unfortunately, too many young ladies know nothing about housekeeping and cooking before
marriage. Happily, many of them rise to the occasion and become good cooks and housewives.
Similarly, many a girl finds herself after marriage and becomes a truly inspirational wife.
Why should young men gamble their whole future happiness? Because, I am afraid, so many young
men do not realize how important it is to look for a wife who will be an inspiration to them. Beauty,
personality, and all the virtues may lose much of their luster without inspiration. As a marriage
counselor I have no recollection of a single unhappy failure as a husband who was the recipient of
inspiration from his wife.
The best TV in the world cannot produce a picture without electricity. Most husbands present a sorry
picture without inspiration. Turn on the electricity, and the TV comes to life. Turn on inspiration, and
the husband sparks up and catches fire with the will to do big things for his wife.
Husbands merit inspiration by actively responding to their wives' effort. Few women are able to
continue a course of action in the face of constant failure. No woman can inspire a lump of dough. The
object of her inspiration must be receptive, must want to be inspired. Every teacher has experienced
great differences of reaction to her efforts. Some students will respond at once, for example, to the
teacher's effort at a witticism. Others will sit in their seats like cabbages. A teacher could stand on her
head and juggle six text books with her feet and get no reaction other than stupid stares from some
pupils.
Many of these listless little boys become husbands. How often has a wife looked at her husband with
a glow of love in her eyes; but, because he was not in the mood for sex, there was no response. Normal
routine for him was to go into suspended animation or hibernation. From his lethargic state he sprang
forth once a week or so for an hour of love-making. Then he spent the following days back in his shell.
An exceptionally gifted and energetic wife might, with all her inspirational faculties in high blower,
lead a husband of this type to a semblance of animation. However, less clever and less determined
wives become discouraged. Dissatisfied and confused they frequently degenerate into shrewish and
nagging wives.
Many a husband has only himself to blame, if he finds little incentive in his wife to make something
of himself. It takes two to tango. Husband and wife react strongly upon each other. Even an enthusiastic
wife soon runs out of gas if she is constantly presented with the spectacle of her husband curled up on
the sofa like an over-fed hound dog.
There is nothing spectacular about a young blade flexing his muscles before his wife of a Sunday
afternoon on some beach. Full of pep and virility he cannot resist "showing off' for the one whose
esteem he prizes above all else. What is spectacular and wonderful is to see a dumpy little balding
middle-aged husband "showing off." Surrounded by his children and wife on some beach he cavorts
like the young colt he is not. In danger of rupturing himself he enters a high jump contest with his
growing children. I love to see a display of this nature for I believe that it is, conscious or not, a play
for his wife's admiration. Years of marriage have not dulled his anxiety to win the attention of his wife.
He is not too mature? Who wants to be too mature? That can be senility, an affliction very common in
many husbands grown old before their time. The urge to "show off" is characteristic of children and the
young of heart in love.
Our high jumping husband is reacting to a definite stimulus, the presence of his wife. "Now, George,
be careful," or "Watch out, George, you'll hurt yourself," are well-meant, solicitous admonitions. But
they only spur him on to greater heights, because he has her attention and concern.
I feel sorry for a husband never inclined to "show off" for his wife. He is either a sad sack to begin
with and incapable of being stimulated by his wife's inspiration, or he has been so deflated by his wife
that he drags his weary bones along a dull road with no horizons.
The husband is our subject, and we must resist sounding off on the wife. Yet, we yield to the
temptation to comment on some wives. Any wife who ignores, or ridicules, or spurns her husband's
"showing off" for her benefit on the beach or anywhere else is a dumb bunny. The spirit which leads
her husband to high jump for her on a beach is the same spirit that will carry him to the heights in any
field of endeavor.
Is not bringing home a Cadillac or a mink coat "showing off" on the part of a husband? Many wives
like this type of "showing off" much better than high jumping. Seldom is George admonished for this
kind of display. Yet, getting the Cadillac was a greater strain on his cardiac muscles than his exercise on
the sand. Well, men, I guess all that we can say is that some women are funny and hard to figure.
Husbands should be warned that "showing off" is often regarded by wives as egotistic. Obviously, it
does not have to be. Husbands are not so inhuman as not to want a little attention. Wives have their
little methods of attracting attention; and nobody accuses them of being egotistic.
Any form of inspiration is fundamentally a building up of the husband's ego. If a wife wants her
husband to bounce she cannot deflate him. Deflated balls do not bounce. Yet, many a wife is restrained
from "blowing up" her husband, because she feels that his head is already swollen to the breaking
point. At least a hundred wives have complained to me that they find it going against the grain to flatter
husbands already evidencing exalted ideas of themselves. Although I have no proof, I always have felt
that many of these wives were not very inspirational. An inspired husband is spared the ignominy of
trying to raise himself by his own boot straps. His wife does the job for him. On the other hand, a
"blow off" generates his own steam. He does not get it from his wife.
Since a conceited man is difficult for all, it is no wonder he presents a special problem to his wife. She
knows that inspiration is one of her principal contributions to the man she married. Yet, she cannot be
blamed if she feels that it is like carrying coals to Newcastle or shipping beer to Milwaukee to promote
the ego of an egotistic husband.
A conceited man is so full of himself that it is hard for any one else to get inside him. I tried once and
failed. I once worked with a young couple whose main marriage problem was the husband's towering
conceit. The man had no particular accomplishment to his credit, nor did he evidence more than normal
abilities.
Perpetually obsessed with himself, his first concern toward his wife seemed to be that she always
realize how lucky she was to have captured him. Relentlessly in devious little ways he never let her
forget how empty her life would have been without him. Humorless and deadly serious, he kept his
wife in a dither lest she wound his vanity. Needless to say, she frequently failed to measure up to the
demands of his pride. The resultant recriminating outbursts were distressing to her refined and sensitive
nature.
Because the world did not appreciate him and lay honors and material rewards at his feet, he became a
bitter young man. He could not suffer the loss of his grandiose image of himself. Others were to
blame--his dumb boss, the incumbent political party, the governor, the President. Critical of everyone,
he could tell exactly what was wrong with everything from the local dog pound to the U.N. Eking out
an existence on a subsistence salary, he could blame no one but the whole world. Finding fault with
everyone, his wife included, he hoped by this defense mechanism to ward off censure of himself.
This unhappy husband came to see me not to seek any advice about his marriage troubles but only to
prove that his wife was sadly wanting. She was no inspiration to him. She never showed appreciation,
never complimented him, never made him feel that he was tops for her money, never sparked for him.
To no avail I tried to point out how difficult it was for his wife to set on fire what already was a 3-11
blaze.
His wife admitted that she was incapable of inspiring him because of his repelling conceit. It is
interesting here to speculate on what might have been the reaction of the proud husband had his wife
been able to overcome her repulsion. Would her wifely praise and admiration have brought him the
beginnings of humility sufficient to destroy or mitigate his conceit? Would he have begun to enjoy her
attention to the extent of forgetting about himself? Would he have noticed that the less he strained his
own arm, the more she patted him on the back?
Here it is important to note how husband and wife react to each other. A conceited husband may so cut
the ground from under his wife that she is unable to fulfill her duty of inspiration. A humble husband
invites admiration and praise. The more she builds him up the more he responds with love and deeds
performed to merit such an inspirational wife. Evil begets evil and good begets good.
An unhappy husband always finds the cause of his unhappiness in his wife. This or that is wrong with
her. So often he is too ignorant or self-centered to realize that he is greatly to blame for his wife's faults.
Once a wife admitted to me the truth of her husband's accusation that she didn't put her heart into her
cooking. "Wasn't he asking just a little too much?" brought a sad smile from her.
"Well, I'm not putting my heart, I'll admit, or much else into cooking for him now. I once did. I gave it
everything I had. When we first married I was dying to win a little praise from my husband for my
cooking. For awhile I felt that I was too much of an amateur to merit any praise. As time went on I
became a good cook. I learned to appreciate good food well prepared. The better the meals became, the
more he took them for granted. About the only comment I ever heard was 'The meat is tough' or 'The
soup is too hot.'"
"Aren't wives ever supposed to receive a little nod of appreciation from their husbands? Is this
business of inspiration a one-way street? Am I supposed to buzz with enthusiasm about my work
around the house and with the children just because he doesn't beat me? Wouldn't a little positive
encouragement and appreciation help? I realize that I'm supposed to inspire him, to send him off to
work with his head back and tail up. But what about me? I'm human too."
The woman we have listened to at some length was not a bad wife. She loved her husband; but she
wanted to love him much more. She felt that his lack of interest in her work and problems was sapping
her enthusiasm and making it difficult to be a good wife.
Most people pay back in kind, love for love and neglect for neglect. This wife was paying back
neglect. Her husband long had neglected to encourage her efforts over the stove. He had no right to
complain. He was getting back from his wife what he merited, the baloney blue plate special. He was
getting the can opener treatment and wondered what had happened to the boiled dinners, casseroles,
and home-made pies.
Consideration of this sad husband's plight brings up the subject of the husband's obligation to inspire
his wife. So far we have dealt with the way a husband responds to his wife's inspiration, how he avoids
placing obstacles in her path as she tries to be an inspirational wife.
I have never met a wife who denies her duty of inspiration. Also, I have met few who have failed to
remind me that inspiration is a two-way street.
Married people make a mistake when they become so casual or careless that they flaunt human nature
in their dealings with each other. We like to know that people do things for us because they want to, not
because they are duty bound or feel that they have to pay a debt. They enjoy exerting themselves for us
and this brings us the happy knowledge of their love. No master ever receives happiness from the
servitude of his slave.
When a wife says, "My conscience bothers me because I haven't sewed the buttons on your coat,
dear," she intends no hurt, but she is being pretty dumb. Her concept of inspiration is minus zero. Her
words might be paraphrased thus: "Sewing buttons on your coat is a pain in the neck. I know it's my
duty and I must do it. Because I've been putting it off, my conscience annoys me."
The husband tingles with excitement and, inspired by his wife, rushes off to work to set the world on
fire for her. Like Fun!
Love manifests itself by wanting, not having to do things for another. Christ did not have to die on a
cross for us; He wanted to because of His love.
Inspirational husbands give the unmistakable impression that they are eager to do things for their
wives. The kitchen sink drain is leaking, and the lady of the house is not happy over it. Her husband
wants to fix it, not because he loves to tinker with plumbing but because he wants to do things for her.
He derives pleasure from fussing for her, not from messing with old pipes.
The Man for Her does not look upon a broken electric switch in the basement as a duty to be faced. It
is an opportunity to evidence his love and care for his wife.
To ignore completely the switch is smarter than to acknowledge it is an onerous job for her to which
he will get some day. Giving excuses repeatedly for not fixing it can leave his wife with no other
impression but that he is avoiding a distasteful job.
It is no boost to the wife's ego to realize that her husband does things for her because he must. Sadly
she remembers the time he looked for excuses to perform little services for her.
Once a wife told me that the greatest joy in her marriage probably came from her acceptance of her
husband's kind deeds and tokens of service. "He wants to do little things for me and derives a real
pleasure in the performance. It's evident in his every action. There are times I could bite him I love him
so much. He has never indicated any sense of obligation. I think that would kill me. Maybe he has
spoiled me; but I love it."
3. MISTER FIX IT
"Listen, dearie," Mabel said to Margie in familiar, friendly tone over the back yard fence, "What are
you moaning about? The only difference in my husband on week days and on Sunday is that on Sunday
he rests with a clear conscience. My husband really takes to heart the Sunday rest. No servile work on
the Sabbath is one Church Law he goes for in a big way. I think he goes to Church every Sunday just
hoping to hear something about keeping holy the Lord's Day. If his ass fell into a pit on Sunday, he
wouldn't draw it out."
Not to be out-done, calorie loving Margie holds up a plump arm and keeps the conversation rolling
along by saying, "My husband does so little around the house to help me with the heavy work, that I'm
getting muscles where I shouldn't have them."
Mabel took a discreet glance down at Margie's full and rounded hips and declined to make any
comment on the local muscle situation. After all, neighbors do have to be friendly and get along.
After another half hour of small talk, both Mabel and Margie agreed that their automatic washers and
dryers had long ago run their cycles and needed attention.
Let us turn our attention to Mabel's and Margie's husbands. After all, the husband is the subject of this
book. Both neighborly wives might have thought that their husbands were relaxing down at work,
building up a reserve of energy to be let loose on some home chores. Quite the opposite was true.
Mabel's husband, a foreman in a nut and bolt factory, was having a time of it trying to get the men and
machines to turn out bolts to fit into the nuts. Margie's husband was up to his ears in paper work,
getting out a statistical report sufficiently involved to baffle the other departmental heads for hours.
As both husbands fought their separate ways home through the rush hour traffic, the same thought was
upper-most in their minds- -a good dinner and a quiet evening of relaxation at home.
Mabel and Margie had other ideas. Both had given some thought during the day to several home
projects for their respective husbands. Any husband is familiar with the ability of his wife to maintain a
good backlog of schemes to keep him busy around the house.
At the most unsuspected moment, when he is comfortably seated with the evening newspaper, or is
watching his favorite TV program, then she pounces upon him. The kitchen sink is leaking. The front
door-bell does not ring. If nothing is out of order, the husband still can not be too sure of his evening
rest. Ladies like a change. All day, week after week, they look at the same arrangement of the furniture.
Any husband unsuspectful of what is coming now, should step to the bottom of the class. Sure enough,
the furniture must be rearranged. And who can do that unless it be the big, burly husband?
Down through the ages, husbands have been meeting, with varying degrees of success, these inroads
of their wives upon their fireside comfort. How can husbands successfully resist these onslaughts?
Believe it or not, there are some proven methods which should fit your own particular circumstances.
Ingenuity will enable each to modify or add embellishments to enhance the effectiveness of the system
chosen.
The simplest and least painful method is one followed by my brother. Some years ago, my sister-in-
law informed me that my brother would not do a thing around the house. "Why," she said, "he will not
try to fix a thing. In fact, he won't even drive a nail." Ostensibly this was in the nature of a complaint.
Yet, there was a wifely pride in her voice. "He says that he doesn't know about these things. Call a
plumber or an electrician. They have the proper tools. It's their business."
Her pride was not too secret that her husband was very successful in business and could easily afford
to call in the tradesmen to take over.
This is the most relaxed method of playing Mister Fix It. We might name it, the method "Fix It By
Proxy." There can be some procedures by proxy in domestic relations not too satisfying. But, in this
instance, little can be said against the system.
The incredulous may think that they detect a weakness in the method of "Fix It By Proxy." Before
mentioning a criticism of the system and the devastating answer, I must drop a caution. Any method of
keeping the wife happy, proven though it be by the past experience of innumerable ideal husbands, can
be muddled up by a stumble bum. Finesse is the watchword and can never be laid aside in dealing with
the wonderful little lady.
About the only trouble with the method of "Fix It By Proxy" is that the wife might begin to think that
her husband has an "in" with the Treasury Department. She orders new fixtures at random. She toys
with the idea of remodeling the bathroom. The kitchen sink ensemble is the latest creation; but the unit
does not escape her effort at improvement or change. A new type of faucet advertised in one of the
"Home Beautiful" type of magazines catches her eye. She must have it. (Incidentally, this class of
magazine has done more to disturb the rest of husbands than can be imagined. Husbands should take
them off to work, never failing to leave them on the train or at the office.)
The well-heeled husband can tell his wife to call the usual plumber, the one whose children he is
practically putting through college, and then forget all about the matter. Or he may decide to have a
little fun in the process of slowing down his wife with her projects. He takes the plumber aside, slips
him a few dollars, and hatches a plot. (If men do not stand together in this world of women they will
fall separately.) The plumber is to make an awful mess of the kitchen and slop around the place to a
fare-thee-well. The husband then trots off to work and in mid-afternoon phones the little lady that a
sudden business dinner engagement will prevent him from coming home that evening.
When he arrives home that night, his wife has had enough improvements around the house to last her
for a while. She is definitely out of sorts and needs a little comforting.
"I'll tell that plumber a thing or two when I call him in the morning," the old boy assures his wife.
"What can you expect of workmen these days! You must have had a terrible day. Why don't you call up
Susan in the morning and run out to the club for a swim?" By the time the lights are out in their
bedroom he has his wife purring with contentment and the assurance that she has the man for her.
"All this sounds just peachy," swells the chorus, "but what if you haven't that kind of money?" Fear
not. There are methods of avoiding the slave role of Mister Fix It, suitable for even the ne'er- do-well
crowd.
Everyone should know that the best defense is an offense. This truism has application in other phases
of marriage, as well as in the problem at hand. No husband should come home from work on the
defense with his guard up, hoping that he can sneak through the evening without his wife presenting
him with some reconstruction task on the house. This attitude invites attack.
The man for her keeps one jump ahead of his wife. He senses what projects she might stir up. For
example, if the roof is leaking like a sieve he can, with reasonable certainty, foretell that his wife will
be after him, ere many rainy seasons come and go. If the back door falls off its hinges and every stray
dog in the vicinity looks upon it as an invitation to take up residence, the wife will probably become
unreasonably demanding and ask that it be fixed.
The second method of playing at Mister Fix It could be called "Fix It With Wife." The motif of this
method revolves around the truth that if a job is worth being done it needs a superintendent. Does
anybody have to guess very long who is better qualified to fill this role?
Let us see how the method works by taking an example at random. The wallpaper in the children's
room is peeling badly. The husband knows that the wife would prefer a washable paint. So, let us face
it, a job has to be done. But who says the task has to be done by the husband alone?
The husband bounces into the house after work and suggests to the wife that they get after the
children's room after supper. "We'll have fun working together, dear. Remember the time of it we had
getting our first flat ready when we were married?" With a gentle hug and kiss he continues, "And if
you get up on the ladder with those dark blue shorts I once saw you in, don't blame me if I pinch you."
After the work gets under way in earnest, anv husband could be tempted to wander quietly off to the
TV. To succumb thus is fatal. The wife will be screaming for him in five minutes. The best method of
escape has been found to have a reason to run out to the store for some item to carry on the work. For
this reason, it is the biggest mistake in the world to have all the materials and tools on hand necessary
to finish the job.
After a quick purchase, the husband can drop into the tavern and watch the TV fights for half an hour
in perfect comfort. It is best not to overdo the pleasant excursion. He can rush back into the house
muttering something about traffic and parking difficulties.
A careful search through my notes discloses no suggestions about the next hour or so. It does look as
if the husband may be in for a little work at this juncture. The man for her is a good sport and knows
when he is temporarily licked; so he makes the best of it. However, he does not abandon ship. He has
humility enough to admit that his wife knows much more about removing wallpaper and painting.
"I'm afraid, dear, that you better get up on the ladder and do that part. You know how you want it to
look." With similar self- abasements he keeps his wife running up and down the ladder. This can be
tiring. Before it gets too late, he executes the master stroke of the evening. Suddenly he lifts his wife
off the ladder and says, "we've done enough tonight. I'm going to carry you upstairs to bed like my little
baby girl that you are."
This maneuver is devastating. It is the coup de grace to an evening's campaign brilliantly executed, he
thinks. Moreover, the sudden departure leaves the room in a mess with pails of dirty water, sponges,
and mops strewn around. Next morning a survey of the scene by the wife brings misgivings that she
had ever mentioned the wallpaper's bad condition.
As she lingers over her second cup of coffee and has time to reflect on the gyrations of her husband
the previous evening, it is possible she may realize that she was taken in by a Casanova. As her
temperature mounts with the task of cleaning up the mess she savs to herself, "wait till I see him
tonight."
This is a very possible reaction on the part of a wife to the manner in which the husband of our
example played his part in "Fix It With Wife." It looks as though he made it a one night stand.
If too much space has been given to illustrating the several methods of having fun playing at Mister
Fix It, the indulgence of all husbands is implored. However, it is my feeling that the problem merits
much attention. How many serious quarrels and open fights; how many hurts and strains on the family
tie have been brought about over this business of the husband doing or not doing work around the
home. Indeed, the inability of the husband to steer a happy course in this regard has scuttled many a
marriage. So bear with me if I seem to drag out the examples of preferred husbands having a barrel of
fun playing at Mister Fix It.
By way of parenthesis I must inject the thought that I designedly keep repeating the expression of
playing at Mister Fix It. This particular phase of marriage under discussion must be kept in the nature
of a game, as all of marriage should be. When husband and wife lose the concept that marriage is
something of a game to be played with the exuberance of children, then that marriage becomes a drab,
hangdog affair. Keeping marriage something of a game keeps a marriage tingling with life. The only
difference between many married people is that some of them have had formal obsequies performed
over them at the graveyard.
Now that this observation is off my chest, let us get back to the consideration of a few more methods
of playing at Mister Fix It.
A visitor to the Holy Land may frequently observe an Arab man and wife making their way along a
road. The wife is literally loaded down from the top of her head to her heels. The husband walks along
unimpeded. Should he, in a moment of tender regard for his wife, help her in the least, he invites other
male Arabs to yell out at him, "coward, coward."
At most, the Arab husband tends his flock of goats, while the wife does all the household, or
"tenthold," chores. Since the Arab husbands have never even heard the expression "Mister Fix It," we
are at a loss what to call this method other than the Arab Method, which does not seem to be any
method at all, but more a lack of it.
One result of the Arab's attitude is easily observed. All the Arab wives look as slim and lithe as a
fawn. However, we are afraid to recommend the Arab Method. In a Christian country, husbands simply
could not get away with it for a moment. In fact, now we regret that we ever mentioned the Arab
Method.
Another method with numerous happy and satisfied followers is known as "Let the Neighbors Fix It."
As with the other systems this one requires finesse, perhaps more so, because more people have to be
involved.
Suppose that the wife has had enough of climbing up and down the double decker beds of the children
and demands that the attic be finished off into a bedroom or two. The husband is about as able to do the
job as he is able to create a formal evening gown. The wife does not seem to realize this sad fact. She
hints at the project, begs, cajols, and even nags the husband about the much needed bedroom space.
This is the only period of pain for the husband during the whole operation. It is a necessary time of
"taking it on the chin." During this period the neighbors are becoming aware of the attic bedroom
project. Friends and relatives are brought into the picture.
Some advocates of the method are of the opinion that this is the time for the husband to get started by
himself. The less he accomplishes, the more the neighbors and relatives itch to get into the picture, and
show how clever and handy they are. Because the wife wants the work done, she beams upon these
helpers and sparks them on with compliments. The huband evidences no jealousy. After all, he wants
the work done too--by someone else. His magnanimity will pay off later with the wife, as we shall see.
As work progresses the husband steps more and more into the background. He lets the neighbors take
over. Pride in their work keeps them banging away at every opportunity.
The wise husband does not turn these work periods into a beer party by plying his friends with drinks.
He keeps all liquid refreshment out of sight--under lock and key, if necessary. Only when a worker
drops from exhaustion should the husband revive him with alcoholic stimulant, sufficient to get him out
of the house and on his way.
At this point the clever husband is sitting pretty. These well- intentioned helpers begin to get on the
wife's nerves. They come at inopportune moments--when she is busy with guests, or a child is sick, or
she wants her husband to take her out. Some of the helpers get too earnest in their work and become
cranky and ill-tempered when things go poorly. Conceit in their handiness is in glaring contrast to her
husband's humility. The more she imagines that the helpers are looking down their noses at her
husband, the more she wants to take them down a peg or two and rush to his defense. At this stage of
the game, the husband is well over the hump. He has the work nearing completion and he has his wife
looking for good points in his make-up. What husband could wish for more? He has scored a grand
slam. He has his wife magnifying the strong and minimizing the weak features of his character.
All because he could not fix up the attic, the clever rascal has educed from his wife a greater love.
There is no surer sign of a growing love, than the effort to find and magnify good qualities in another.
The tell-tale death rattle of a dying love is the opposite inclination to find fault.
Once two old friends were sitting in a row boat discussing the problem one had in getting along with
his boss. It was dusk and both were in a jolly, expansive mood. The pre-dinner martinis were sitting
well. Some friends of theirs decided to have a little fun with them and almost swamped the row boat
with the wake of their speed boat. As the wave hit the small boat broadside, one became momentarily
alarmed and grabbed on to both sides of the boat. This action elicited from the other the advice, "don't
fight it, roll with it."
Over his sudden surprise, the second gentleman countered, "don't fight it, don't even roll with it, play
with it."
This sage bit of advice has never been forgotten and has helped one of these men through a number of
tight spots.
In applying the above advice to the husband in his role of Mister Fix It, obviously he should not "fight
it." By fighting it, he produces little more than an unhappy home. To roll with some irresistable
physical force like a wave is common sense. All familiar with the operation of small boats know this
fact. Merely to roll with a problem of human relations may be an easy and relaxed method. It may also
be a weak method. Rolling with the impact of a problem of human relations may connote surrender
rather than solution.
There will be times when the husband may have little choice other than to "roll" with the problem of
working around the home on major projects. Yet the wise husband is on guard lest this become
habitual. In always merely "rolling" with it he is in danger of becoming just his wife's "Man Friday"
around the house. He is much more. He is her husband. Etymologically even, he is head of the house.
Because he is head of the home, every house-wife within sight of this page, no doubt, is reminding us
that his is the first responsibility in the home. Conceding that point, husbands have all the more reason
for they themselves choosing whether they will fight at, roll with, or play at being Mister Fix It.
Although we have been joshing the husband some in our examples of how to play at Mister Fix It, yet
we are most serious when we say that the best method of dealing with the problem at hand is to play
with it. Playing with a problem does not signify running away from it. To play with a task means
staying with the job, not letting the job stay with the husband like a black demon on his back. In other
words, the husband is master of the job, not its slave. For example, he can play a game of golf over the
week-end before the attic is finished without the roof caving in, or the wife having cause for apoplexy.
The job of being Mister Fix It does not master him; he masters it by playing with it. He brings a little
ingenuity into the picture, as did the husband in the example of "Fix It With the Neighbors."
In playing at Mister Fix It, the husband is conscious that his ultimate purpose is to bring happiness
and contentment to his wife. In succeeding, he will be a happy husband. Happy husbands have a way of
going with happy wives. Any desired wife worthy of the name will give her husband credit for having
enough sense and integrity to discharge his responsibility in manner best suited to his abilities and
opportunities. A hen-pecked husband is an intolerable disgrace to his calling as well as a fitting reward
for the wife so degrading him.
Being head of the home, it is the husband's responsibility to bring home the bacon. The wife, as queen
of the home, has the obligation of looking after the multitudinous little tasks about the house. Although
the large, overall demarcation is clear, the specialized duties of husband and wife overlap at times. It is
in this area where misunderstanding and consequent trouble arise.
Who should put up and take down the screens and storm windows? Unless he was an invalid, no self-
respecting husband would shunt this job off on his wife.
I remember a case in which husband and wife were close to a parting of their ways. Other difficulties,
besides dispute over home chores, were in the picture. Yet, their squabbles over this matter had
contributed greatly to the alienation of their affections.
"If I take down the screens then she wants me to wash the windows. Then it's take out the garbage or
wax the kitchen floor. For a while she even had me in the kitchen sink. What the devil does she do all
day? Seems to me she springs into action only when I get home from work."
From the other side of the desk came the rebuttal, "Is that so?" (Any wife can supply the remainder of
her response.) Both these people were immature and not capable of much love. The husband used a
pretty weak excuse for not doing a thing in the home. The wife expected him to do everything, so he
did nothing.
This husband and wife were trying to out-loaf each other. Neither would do one iota more than the
other. What a contrast to the happy, because unselfish, couple always trying to out-do each other about
the house.
How many girls have married a young blade never known to help his parents with the care of the
home? To him home was a convenient place to eat, sleep, and have fresh laundered clothes. Is a
pampered person of this type supposed to change character after marriage? Most do not. The main
function of others in his little orbit is to wait on him. The over-hopeful wife is in for double duty.
The husband truly in love wants to identify himself with his wife, to lose himself in her. She is
precious and all he has. No wonder he desires to protect her. He will not see her tug and strain at heavy
objects.
When I was hardly more than a boy, I witnessed a mischievous wife deliberately drawing out her
protective husband. She began to lift a heavy bushel basket of fruit from a table. The husband rushed
over and grabbed the basket, all the while angrily scolding his wife. As she stepped aside her eyes
betrayed her plot. The indignant husband turned to face her and was met with twinkling eyes softening
with love. They ended in a fervent embrace. The husband did not have a chance. What man would want
a chance?
4. TOWN SPENDTHRIFT
"How about another beer on me, fellows?" is a familiar refrain heard at the local tavern or at the
nineteenth hole rendezvous of has-been golfers. The cheerful invitation to further conviviality emanates
from the local joy boy and town spendthrift. He never gets tight himself because he is too busy getting
tight the free loaders of his friendly group. A regular fellow, he is found in and adds color to most every
community.
The only shame of it is that he is broke by the time he arrives home. A lad of this type should never be
out of pocket, for then he is not himself. This bankrupt condition ill becomes him, and he appears to
great disadvantage in the home circle. In his cranky mood he may even be heard to snarl at his poor
little wife, "What did you buy that for?" or "Where do you spend all the money?"
He just simply is not himself. The four walls of his home seem to crowd in upon him like a debtor's
prison. Some people become mean when they have a sore throat or a sin-vexed conscience. Not our
Charlie. Nothing really annoys him except this lack of cash around the house.
The town spendthrift never worries about money matters while out with the fellows. He needs the
quiet of home to concentrate upon such an intricate subject as finances. Even trained economists have
wandered astray in their theories about money. How then can a person be expected to grapple with such
a knotty problem in the hubbub of a tavern? Curiously the tranquility of home provides the best
environment.
"Why the devil does it cost so much to feed this family? Wonder how others manage," he moans out
loud as he stares off into space with just a wee little side glance at his bewildered budgeteer.
As he frets his way off to bed he racks his brain for a solution. If only old Ed, his bachelor uncle,
would die. He is loaded and does not even know what to do with his money. It sometimes happens to
others. Why could not he or his wife be left a regular income from some trust fund?
After he runs the gauntlet of these far-fetched escapes from the damnable financial straight jacket, he
ponders over a more realistic entry to the land of solvency. Maybe he could hire his wife out where she
could grapple with the world of commerce in some bargain basement and bring home a few dollars.
Charlie had a busy evening at the club hustling those beers and cocktails to his buddies, so he soon
slips off into the land of dreams.
Charlie's wife tiptoes into their bedroom and gently kisses the troubled forehead of her husband. Why
not? She had just come from the children's room where she had kissed her other little boys.
Charlie is no cad. The spectacle of his wife wrestling with a mob of women over economy-priced
ladies' apparel brings him no joy in his dream.
Every marriage counselor can remember numerous cases of the type described above. So often he is
of a generous nature and a likeable person. His gyrations from the sort of Dr. Jekyll--town spendthrift,
to the Mr. Hyde--house "tightwad," provide the background for much humor. But tragedy lurks in the
shadows, the tragedy of a suffering wife with ill-fed and shabbily clothed children.
It is as normal as breathing to want to be held in high esteem, to be loved and to be considered
generous. No one wants to be hated, to be despised as stingy and selfish. Stingy and selfish people
resort to all sorts of stratagems to hide their shame.
The trouble with the town spendthrift is that he seeks his high regard in the wrong place. He should
look for it from his wife and children. These fast friends he is regaling will drop him like a hot potato
when the flowing liquor dries up. These good time pals will come and go, forget and be forgotten very
soon. His wife and children remain the real part of his life. They merit his attention and will provide the
love and respect he much wants and needs, if he but give them a chance.
Years ago I walked into the washroom of a Pullman. The car porter sat there alone looking dejected. I
struck up a conversation with him by asking if things were as bad as his face indicated.
"You saw that car, didn't you? Well, it's half empty. You are the only man in it. All women. Lots of bell
ringing and no tips."
From past experience the porter knew that he was on a dry run. Women, of course, are notorious for
little or no tipping. It is difficult for a woman constantly to marshal nickels and dimes in order to stay
within a restricted budget and then turn around and hand a porter a dollar tip for a night on a Pullman.
Similarly she senses no great elation at observing her husband handing out an over-generous tip.
Before marriage he might have impressed a few of his dates in this manner. Now his wife considers it
evidence of softening of the brain. Nor does his easy manner with money spur her on in the everlasting
search after bargains in shopping. Why should the wife spend an hour of time and energy saving a half
dollar in her grocery shopping only to see her husband flip it away to some stranger in a moment of
human respect.
I knew a husband, a preferred one for sure, who kept close tab on his tips. For every tip he put aside
an equal amount in a little secret fund of his own. As the dimes and quarters accumulated he got a little
gift for his favorite waitress, as he used to say.
Once his wife tried her hand at home-made bread. He was so tickled over her effort that he, with mock
pomposity, bestowed upon her a cash prize and blue ribbon as the cook of the year. His wife entered
into the game and struck a pose holding a loaf of her prize winning bread.
That little family episode was the beginning of a new era for another family. Home-made bread came
back into its own and replaced the store-bought chaff and straw facetiously called bread.
I am fully aware that this lucky husband had a wonderful wife. Strange, is it not, that wonderful wives
have a way of going with wonderful husbands?
5. ESCHEWING THISTLES
A minister in the hill country was giving a Sunday sermon. During the discourse he used the
unfamiliar word "eschew." A hand went up in the congregation and a voice asked for the meaning of
the word.
"Well, brother," explained the minister, "we all know that Jones sitting next to you has a fine pair of
mules. We also know that Jones feeds his mules hay. Hereabout thistles have a way of growing with the
hay. The mules chew the hay and eschew the thistles."
Each human being has his own little garden of life in which he reaps what he sows. The wife is no
exception. In her garden there are roses pleasing to the eye and peaches delectable to the taste. Because
she is human she will scarcely avoid producing a few thorns and thistles.
Her husband saw her garden, liked it, walked into it, took her unto himself as his wife, and settled
down for life. In the beginning he so liked the roses and peaches that he ignored the thorns and thistles.
Like the mule he wisely chewed the peaches and eschewed the thistles.
Then, as the all too frequent story runs, time and fallen nature began to take their toll. His wife
brought forth neither less peaches nor more thistles. The imperceptible change was in the husband's
failure to distinguish. He became more conscious of the thistles which always existed. Only now he
began to chew them. Perhaps we should say that they began to eat on him.
Little idiosyncrasies and foibles, present but ignored in his wife during courtship and early days of
marriage, can grow into mountainous aggravations. This change can take place if the husband falls into
the stupid habit of concentrating on the faults of his wife. Once he centered his attention on her virtues
and good qualities. Such an attitude brought him love and happiness. Vexing himself over her
imperfections brings him nothing but a diminution of love.
In the early days of marriage counseling I was surprised to learn many marriages came to an end or
were unhappy because of petty things. For a time I misjudged fault-finding as a minor nuisance to be
handled with dispatch, until I found it to be the only real difficulty between many couples. Mulling
over the imperfections of a partner has destroyed many a marriage.
A case comes to mind as an illustration of how not to be a happy husband through fault-finding. The
couple had been married only a year and a half. The husband was in his middle twenties. Of a serious
nature and already on his way to success in business, he found his marriage was not working out as
planned. He was prone to label as a fault any activity of his younger wife that did not fall into his
preconceived plan of action for her.
Evidently he had spent many hours day-dreaming before marriage as to how his wife should behave.
He had envisioned his saintly wife kneeling in evening prayer with him at bedside. The actuality after
marriage was a shock. His wife knelt on the bed above him. The astonishing sight was not conducive to
successful prayer. Quite the opposite. He continued to talk but not to God. Something had come
between him and God. It was about a foot in front of his eyes.
Get down on the cold, bare floor with him she would not, especially after he had excoriated her.
From her narration of the episode there was an indication that she merely had been trying to be
mischievous. She resented his rebuff at her effort to be coquettish, became stubborn, and would not
kneel with him on the floor then or any other time.
He accused her of being an immature, brainless, little glamor girl. Glamor girl she was, as well as very
young, gay, and immature. Yet, of the two he was the more immature in spite of all his efforts to make
their marriage a serious, business-like affair.
He was the more immature, if for no other reason, because he set upon a definite program of fault-
finding. He had not matured to the extent of realization that life is a give and take affair. Little faults
have to be overlooked, forgotten. Neither overlooking nor forgetting real or imagined imperfections of
his wife, he magnified and nursed them along in his brain.
Her singular posture for prayer was not his only complaint. He rattled on for half an hour narrating his
wife's shortcomings. When he stopped for breath, her only comment was, "you make me sick."
I could not say in their presence that she took the words out of my mouth; but I felt a little sick too.
Seeing love die always makes me sick. And her love was dying.
Although he wanted to keep his wife, her love was far gone--more than he realized. He was not only
too observant of her faults; but he was also on the watch for them. When a husband begins looking for
reasons to criticise his wife, it is a far cry from the days when he looked for excuses to praise her.
The husband in this case once recognized many virtues and fine qualities in his wife. Because of them
he was attracted to her. He was eager to praise her, and his effort was rewarded with a happiness no less
than hers. If he was at all aware of any thistles in her garden before marriage, he sensibly eschewed
them. Only when he foolishly began to chew on them did his marriage develop a big stomach ache.
Will Rogers once said that he had never met a man he could not like. There are, after all, very few
Fagans and Sykes in real life. Most people have some attractive, because good, qualities. Habitually,
reflecting on the favorable side of a wife's personality makes for peaceful, contented living. Stewing
over the failings of his wife puts the husband on an expressway to unhappiness. The road is broad and
well-traveled.
The sooner a husband makes up his mind to dwell on his wife's attractive features both in the natural
and supernatural order, the sooner is he guaranteeing himself happiness. Besides, if a husband must
ponder over flaws, errors, and blemishes then let him turn his thoughts in upon himself. He should be
able to discover a few of his own. Confession is good for the soul because, among other reasons, it
makes us more forgiving and tolerant of others. Seldom will a husband do a good job in the
confessional only to return home and snap at his wife. The best psychiatric treatment in the world for
most of us is a little self-examination. And it does not cost ten dollars a visit. For many a husband five
minutes a day spent regarding the beam in his own eye would lessen his pep for finding the mote in his
wife's eye.
When people live in close proximity to each other for a considerable length of time, they learn of each
other's shortcomings. After a few years of married life a husband, unless he is completely blinded by
love, knows only too well that his wife is human and has her faults. There is a danger that he begins to
compare the wife he knows with the women he hardly knows. Because he is ignorant of any defects in
the woman of casual acquaintance, his wife may fare poorly in comparison.
Little Susie Q may be a neat trick down at the office, but how does she look in the privacy of her
home? She always looks very fetching with her well-kept hair? Yes, but most husbands would cry to
high heaven were their wives to spend on their personal appearance the money Susie Q lays out each
month. All the girls at the office seem even-tempered and agreeable? But they are among comparative
strangers, aren't they? Besides, they have a job to keep. If they were partners, wouldn't they talk up
once in a while?
The way some husbands vex themselves with the minor faults of their wives, one might think that
they would prefer living with an artistic plaster of Paris concept of sanctity. A man of sense prefers a
real, living human being for his wife. If she is alive with blood coursing through her veins, she will
have her share of human imperfections. He accepts her as she is and loves her for herself. Indeed, her
very peculiarities may become, to the husband in love, endearing charms.
I am acquainted with a couple happy together today because a wonderful man "carried" his wife
through a few rough years. Their troubles developed gradually and reached a peak after fifteen years of
marriage. Both were well-educated, intelligent and social minded. Gifted with winning ways they were
a popular couple in whatever circle they moved. His business prospered along with a considerable
amount of entertaining. Since both liked a good time their lives, if hectic at times, were happy.
Then the shadows began to fall. Her social drinking got out of hand. Things went from bad to worse
until she became a borderline alcoholic. Before she stumbled into the bottomless abyss her husband
rescued her. He saved her by his patience and kindness. He dearly loved her for all she had been and
still was in so many respects. He never lost sight of her many virtues. Unlike so many of us, he would
not let one defect hide from him numerous excellent characteristics.
During those dark days he would have been surprised to have been thought noble. Her aberrations
must have caused him much suffering. Yet, as she told me later, his utter unconsciousness of the martyr
role gave her no choice except to quit drinking. "My husband never condemned me. He protected me
and continued to praise me for the things he loved in me. He should have lashed me. I knew I was a
worm. He made me want to be an angel. How could I fight a man like that?"
When I hear husbands complaining of petty faults in their wives and making mountains out of them, I
always think of the above case and the contrast.
To paraphrase St. Paul's famous words on love, this husband's love for his wife was patient, was kind,
was not ambitious, was not self- seeking, was not provoked; thought no evil. Love is not always
rewarded in this life, but seldom is this true of love between man and wife. Not being deceived by a
self-love, this husband truly loved his wife. Today he reaps the reward of his loyalty to her. Because he
stood beside her as a strong and understanding man, now he revels in her wifely adoration. Once again
they are walking on air.
A Notre Dame fan yelled, "Watch out for the mouse trap."
My wife edged a little closer to me on the bench and asked, "Bob, what is the mouse trap play?"
Between us the mouse trap play was a standing joke. So, when Mary asked the question with the mock
innocence of a little girl not knowing what was going on at a football game, I knew that our spat was
over. I put my arm around her and almost missed the third quarter.
To see the game we had driven almost two hours hardly on formal speaking terms. For nearly an hour
before we had left home I was the fretting husband desperately trying to get the show on the road. Mary
was like a cat on a tin roof running in circles not knowing where to put down, whatever it was she had
in her hands.
When I figured that we were already too late for the kickoff, I began to sulk. "Don't you think that you
ought to scrub the kitchen floor before we go?" was my opening thrust for our little fight.
In a huff Mary ran upstairs and began banging drawers. After eons she came down, now I remember,
looking like a million dollars. At the time she did not make sense to me. In as sweet a manner, God
love her, as she could manage under the circumstances she asked, "Now what is your honest opinion of
this hat?"
I am positive that my wife had no intention of setting a mouse trap for me, and I was just as unaware
and off guard. Of course, I rushed right into the trap with the answer, "It looks kind of queer to me." No
one needs to be told why our conversation on the way to the game was monosyllabic. I was more
irritated with myself than I was with her for making us late. My opinion of her hat was not an effort to
get even with her. It was a quick, honest opinion given in a moment of preoccupation over the necessity
of driving like a mad fool in order to be on time for the game.
"Now what is your honest opinion?" has led many a husband besides me into the mouse trap. Even a
husband initiated to this type of mouse trap can make a fool of himself, besides irritating his wife. Off
guard and very pleased that his wife wants his considered opinion of her hat, his ego bounds into the
stratosphere. Leaning back in his chair and imagining himself another Dior he studies the hat being
hopefully modeled by his wife.
Expectancy is written all over his wife's face. Does this put the husband on the alert? Only one guess
allowed. The new-born hat stylist criticizes the hat. His wife flounces out of the room sputtering
something about blindness and stupidity.
Her husband was not blind, but he did act stupidly. He could see that the hat was queer, but he had no
suspicion that his wife was fishing for a compliment.
Whenever a wife asks for an "honest" opinion about herself, her clothes, her cooking, let all husbands
be on guard. The mouse trap play is coming up. Give a quick, honest opinion and nine times out of ten
the husband will be slapped down.
The wife is not looking for an "honest" opinion. She expects a compliment. Now that she is married
six months she has to maneuver to wheedle a compliment out of her stingy husband. Back in courtship
and honeymoon days compliments came spontaneously. For the rest of her marriage she must angle for
most every compliment doled out by her husband.
No wife should be expected to beg openly for a little inexpcnsive praise. Are wives supposed to ask,
"Isn't this hat stunning?" or "Don't I look just peachy?" or "Isn't this the tastiest apple strudel you ever
chopped into?"
"Now what is your honest opinion" has got many a husband into a jam simply because he did not
tread warily. Apparently the word "honest" is their downfall. Any wife would be surprised at being
considered dishonest for the wording of her question. Has not a wife the right to her husband's full
flattery and praise? Then why should any husband be misled by, or balk at, the word "honest?"
When a husband gives his "honest" and favorable opinion about his wife's hat, appearance, or
cooking, she knows that he is all for her. She needs and has a right to that assurance from time to time.
This is no time for him to cavil over objective truth. Moreover, how can there be any question of
objective truth when there is question of only an opinion?
Another mouse trap many of us husbands rush into could be called the "News Bulletin." Before we
discuss the manner in which we get into trouble over the "News Bulletin" one fact should be
mentioned. Wives do not consciously set these mouse traps. Indeed, their allergy to mouse traps is well-
known. Few women know what to do with the mouse once it is caught. So the closing of the mouse
trap on us brings no more joy to our wives than it does to us.
The "News Bulletin" works something like this. Dinner is about to begin. Mary pauses at the table on
her last trip to the kitchen stove and gives out to me an exciting news release. "Did you hear that Mabel
had twins?" Many bulletins are released by our wives in the form of a question. In fact, the outstanding
scoop of the year would likely be couched in the form of a question.
If Mary would merely announce the news, I might grunt some response and stay on safe ground. It's
not likely I would rush into the trap. "Did I hear? Sure, I heard about it a week ago," I usually reply
casually, as though the news is ancient history.
The last time I bit on the "News Bulletin" Mary considered for a moment plopping the mashed
potatoes on my head. The children might have been alarmed and made to feel insecure over this
procedure, so she did a slow burn instead. A caustic, "Well, thanks for telling me," was about all she
could manage for the time being as she stomped over to the stove. Several hours later in the evening I
wondered why Mary was so sour and uncommunicative. Perhaps she had an upset stomach or one of
those mysterious female quirks?
"This is your favorite dessert" usually indicates that Mary has made a special effort to please me. It is
possible that she had a brain storm that particular afternoon and made Uncle Roscoe's favorite dessert.
However, the odds would be against such a mistake. We must assume that she did make a dessert for
which I had expressed a weakness. She can well remember me extolling the cherry tart of the last
birthday dinner over at my mother's.
Imagine the charge she got out of my comment between gulps. "Cherry tarts aren't my favorite
dessert. It's strawberry parfait." All can see that I was a clown for saying so. I had blundered right into
the mouse trap. The "favorite" was my undoing.
"So . . . you don't like them? Well . . . you liked them at that last birthday dinner over at your
mother's."
"I didn't say that I didn't like them. Besides, liking cherry tarts doesn't make them my favorite."
Thinking of all the mouse traps I had charged into distracted me somewhat during the rest of the
game. Thank heavens Mary was just as expert in extracting me from the mouse traps as she was in
getting me into them. That day at the football game was a good example. She pounced upon the excited
fan's yell to the linemen to be on guard against the mouse trap play.
The complete innocence of face fading into arched eyebrow over mischievous eyes as she asked what
the mouse trap play might be turned a sour day into a glorious one. We left the stadium like high school
sweethearts kindly teasing each other about past mouse traps.
On the way home we stopped off at a good restaurant and had one of the best dinners out I can
remember. During the dinner I could not tell Mary often enough how beautiful she was. The more I told
her the more beautiful she became. By the time dessert arrived I was ready to jump upon the table and
proclaim her beauty to the world.
As we walked up to our car in the parking lot Mary at first puzzled and then alarmed me by her
actions. She appeared to be pushing with all her might the car ahead of ours. No sooner had I grabbed
her and begun to scold her for endangering herself than I realized it was a game. As she relaxed happy
and triumphant in my arms I accused her, "This is the second mouse trap today. I like this one."
As I held her close to me and nudged her ear with my nose, she whispered, "I wish we were home."
7. UNDERSTANDING
Years ago the newspapers carried an item about an eminent psychologist. The man had published a
study on the understanding of women. His work was well received by the universities and intellectual
circles. One day in utter frustration he strangled his wife to death.
We are on dangerous ground, for who can understand a woman? But, men, let us get on our knees and
in all humility submit the proposition that we may come to understand a few things about women.
Further we dare not propose.
We cannot hold brief with those who regard a woman as a complete enigma. Mysterious, yes, in her
moods and at times as incomprehensible as God. Today she can be cajoled to sit on her husband's knee
and purr as a little kitten. Tomorrow is another day, and it may not work. So what? The wind does not
always blow south. And we would get mighty tired if it did.
A great deal of the agnosticism in the world is due to a failure to see through God. The individual
made an effort to understand the workings of God. He expected it to be as simple as two and two equal
four. Perhaps he could not get through high school geometry. Yet, because he could not see right
through God, he became indifferent and shunned any practice of religion. The idea never seemed to
enter his cranium that if he could see through God, He would not be much of a God.
Husbands do not have to be able to see through their wives. They would be pretty shallow wives were
that possible. If all wives were an open book, how could there be any curiosity about the format?
Although human nature is the same, each husband has a different type of wife to figure out. If there
were no mystery about her, she would be much less intriguing. Has anyone ever read a mystery story
twice?
Life can become as mysterious as the dark night. We are encouraged to keep playing the game of life
for we know that the night will be followed by the noon-day sun. Yet, light without shadow can grow
tiresome. A husband can be thankful that his wife is not all light, that there are a few dark corners
where he can easily get lost. Getting lost can be fun. Many little children get lost frequently with great
glee. When we know all the answers, or worse, when we think that we do, life loses its fascination; and
we lose our charm. When a husband knows all there is to know about his wife, or worse, when he
thinks that he does, marriage can lose its fascination.
Furthermore, just when he thinks that he has his wife all figured out, she jolts him with the
unexpected. There is something for the theory that a husband should face every day with his wife like a
wide-eyed six year old. Each day is a new day with unexplored horizons. The football is played the
way it bounces. Now it may bound right into out-stretched arms. Then again the ball may fly out of
reach.
Realization of the woman's unpredictableness guarantees the husband against disillusionment. If she
bounces into his arms today, he runs with her for a touchdown. If she bounds away from him tomorrow,
he knows that is all part of the game. There will always be another tomorrow. Besides, too many
touchdowns can spoil the game.
So, if a husband leads off with the realization that he cannot know everything about his wife, he is on
sound ground to explore what he might be able to understand about her.
One of his first concepts should be that she is different from himself. Most of us have the tendency to
judge others by ourselves. If we react thus and thus to such and such stimuli, we suppose that others
will follow the same line of action. Often we are fooled. One boy, on being told by his teacher that he is
a dumb idiot, goes home fighting mad with the determination to return to class the next day with proof
to the contrary. Another boy will be beaten down deeper into despondency.
Many young husbands are surprised and disappointed to find that their wives differ from themselves
in so many respects. The alarming realization actually should be cause for satisfaction. Identical gears
would clash. Different gears mesh together and constitute a unit. Man and woman were made different
by God that they might mesh together and bring fulfillment of their natures in close partnership. So,
men, take it easy. God knew what He was doing when He made woman. Do not try to make her over
after your pattern. Accept her as she is and she will dovetail into your life in as perfect a harmony as
will be found in this life.
Once launched on the sea of matrimony a husband wiIl be assured of happier sailing, if he has a chart
of the hidden reefs. For certain, he will have to learn much the hard way, simply because marriage is a
personal, individual experience. Yet, unless he is armed with fundamental truths he will be in danger of
floundering.
Most of us get our necks in a wringer by ignoring or trifling with obvious pitfalls. God, His justice,
His Providence are obvious realities. Yet, how many are, to their ultimate misery, oblivious of these
basic facts. There is nothing startlingly new about the observation that emotionally woman is different
from man. Nevertheless, countless young husbands come to grief by ignoring the woman's emotional
nature.
A woman's emotions generally are stronger than a man's and invariably are closer to the surface.
Sudden frights will cause her to take off like a bird. A mouse scampering across the kitchen floor can
energize her into an athlete of no mean ability. At the mere sight of "wee tim'rous beastie" she can pass
the current champion sprinter.
He wastes his time who tries to reason with her about the silly fear of a harmless little mouse. Her
reaction to mice is entirely on the emotional plane. Cold logic leaves her just as cold. A husband
expecting his wife to be rational about mice is himself most unreasonable. She ticks the way she does
because the great Watch Maker so designed her. She is twenty-one jewel, and runs smoothly and
unerringly--in her own element. Husbands unwilling to have their wives remain all woman should be
herded into some Trappist monastery. There they could stew with pure reason to their hearts' content.
A man cannot begin to understand a woman unless he keeps in mind that she is designed by God to be
a mother. As a little child she plays mother to dolls. She never really arrives as a woman until she is a
mother. Her emotional nature is so ordained by God to enable her to fill the role of mother. Because
babies and little children must have constant love and affection manifested to them for their proper
development, a woman's emotions are close to the surface. She is as well equipped to care for babies as
she is to bring them into the world. A sense of security and well-being is given the baby by outward
signs of love--kisses, hugging, cooing, and so forth.
Is it any wonder then that the wife is emotional, intuitive, and herself in need of affection? Yet, some
husbands are either so stupid, callous, or incompetent, that they never give their wives a show of
affection, unless it be through sex.
Unless a woman has warped her nature by some phobia such as, for example, fear of children, she
accepts affection as the sun flower accepts the sun. During pregnancy this is all the more true. A
husband alert to the needs of his wife will promote her contentment and happiness during this period by
extra solicitude.
Even though she has no particular difficulties such as morning sickness, backache, and so forth, she is
receptive to added attention. Indeed, it will do no harm to baby, to even spoil her a little at this time.
How a husband can love his wife and be indifferent to her needs at any time is not clear.
It becomes all the more difficult to understand the husband neglectful of his wife during her
pregnancy. Selfishness is the sin of myopic idiots. The self-centered and often lazy husband brings no
happiness to his wife. Consequently, he is miserable himself, because it is an inexorable law of our
natures that we attain happiness only through others. A person absorbed in doing things for another is
never discontented and unhappy.
Some wives are more affectionate than others and are themselves in need of much affection.
Obviously husbands also by nature vary in this respect. Yet, unless he be completely lifeless, any
husband can make an effort to fill the emotional requirements of his wife.
A kiss, an embrace, a tender word, a show of interest in her and in any problem she may have in
carrying the child--these and a dozen little efforts reassure his wife that he is all for her. In this matter
of affection little things count so much. It does not harm any wife to realize that her husband thinks of
her outside of moments of sex.
I have heard all sorts of excuses from husbands why they show, even, during pregnancy, little or no
affection toward their wives. These husbands never acknowledge the real excuse-- preoccupation with
themselves.
"It's like living with a pregnant woman." I have heard several good husbands make such a statement.
The tone of voice indicated that it was not always so easy. Without doubt his wife's pregnancy is an
opportunity for a husband to be patient and loving. Should it be any wonder that a wife's thoughts and
concerns turn in upon herself when she is with child? Indeed, she becomes more self- centered as the
baby grows. How else? Where would a husband expect his wife to carry the baby?
Much frustration in marriage is due to husband and wife having divergent emotional natures. An
affectionate husband has a cold wife; a warm natured wife has a frosty husband. Any student of married
life who has had the opportunity over the years of close contact with married couples has observed
various adjustments and solutions to the problem.
First of all, the husband of an affectionate wife should be grateful to God for his good fortune. It has
always been one of the mysteries of life to me why any husband will shrink from his affectionate wife.
Perhaps by nature I am incapable of understanding them and therefore unable to offer suggestions. The
only thought which comes to mind is to give them a good kick in the pants.
For those eager, wrestling minded husbands leading a most unathletic life with a prim, brittle, and
cold wife more sympathy is in order. Usually I feel that these husbands are their own worst enemies.
Their technique is generally very poor or non-existent. They are no sooner home from work than some
referee should blow a whistle lest their wives find themselves wrestling before they have a chance to
put up guards. Admittedly, at times the direct approach has its merits. But these eager beavers should
learn from past bitter experiences the existence of indirect and more subtle approaches.
Few human beings, cold women included, are impervious to attention, admiration, kindness, and
tender regard. A wife assured that her husband loves her for herself will naturally reciprocate. Unless
she is an abnormality, her love will readily manifest itself through affection.
Some wives demand a great deal of understanding and patience. When they are not in the mood for
affection it is best not to force the issue. This is the time for bowling or a long walk. The husband
aware that his efforts to be arfectionate on some particular occasion will be rejected, is only punishing
himself by persisting in his actions. By living with her he should learn the signs indicative of a
receptive mood. I take my hat off to the husbands ingenious enough to thaw out their wives sufficiently
for a normal married life.
A marriage counselor frequently encounters husbands with the complaint that their wives give all their
attention and affection to the children. The accusation is true usually only in cases where the wife is
keeping her husband at a distance because she wants no more children or because she seeks domination
over her husband through sex.
Much more often than not the husband's complaint is unreasonable. The wife must shower her
affection on her babies in caring for them. The husband keeps as far from the babies as the limits of the
house permit. In his lazy loneliness he sulks as a jealous child. He develops a childish tit for tat
attitude--receiving little attention, he will give none in return.
If he pitched in with the care of the babies he would not be out in the cold. How often husband and
wife, in playing and smooching with their baby, end up smooching themselves. Nothing brings man
and wife together better than their baby, unless the husband keeps far away from the baby, its diapers,
feeding, and so on. The wife cannot by her nature stay away from the baby. Besides, somebody has to
care for the child.
A woman lets details often assume momentous importance, and lets her emotions rather than common
sense guide her actions. In an understanding husband she will find strength and calmness. A
bewildered, or annoyed, or exasperated husband fails his wife when she needs him and his patient
understanding.
At times a woman may be more sensitive to hurt, more subject to uncertain temper, tired and
depressed. The husband not all wrapped up in himself will come forward with love and compassion to
ease her through her difficulties.
The mother of the bride has always been a great distraction to me during marriage ceremonies. The
mother is dry-eyed now. How long will she keep back the tears? Will the handkerchief appear during
the vows or will she hold off until her little girl presents a bouquet to the Blessed Virgin? Few get by
the presentation and the hymn "On This Day, O, Beautiful Mother."
Asking her why she cries at her child's marriage is like asking why it rains or why the sun shines. She
is made by God to feel poignantly. Tears come easily. A husband need not look upon these emotional
releases as great problems with which he must cope. These tears dry quickly if he but fill his required
function of comforting her, of sympathizing, of merely being near her in companionship. The husband
evidences lack of understanding if he is irritated by her, or ignores her, or makes fun of her, unless it be
done with kindness and accepted good grace. Stupidity causes almost as much mischief in the world as
sin.
Many husbands are utter flops in appreciating the emotional needs of their wives. It is natural for a
wife to experience fear when she is alone at night. If her husband is unusually late or out all night, she
is bound to worry and imagine all sorts of things.
An extreme case comes to mind typical of many others. The wife told how her husband frequently
absented himself for several days at a time, mostly over week-ends. He never gave warning that he
would not return home from work Friday evening. He might show up Saturday or as late as Sunday
night. Often she had no idea where he had been or what he had been doing. Occasionally she learned
that he had been fishing or just out drinking.
The only advice I could give her was to wait for him with a rolling pin and hit him over the head as
hard as she could. How else can a wife deal with a savage? His head was solid bone, and the hurt
would be only temporary. If she did not love him, what mattered the hour? But she did love him, her
life depended on him, and she worried when he absented himself without explanation.
Husbands who leave their wives in the lurch for hours wondering what happened to them, evidence
stupidity or lack of love. To my amazement some of these peculiar men have naively expressed surprise
that their wives complained to me on this score.
Women by nature operate to some extent in cycles. Now they are easily depressed, now elated. Many
husbands miss the boat because they are off in their timing. When a wife is in one of her mysterious
depressed moods, it is expecting a lot of her to be the life of the party. To criticize her then for being a
poor sport is unfair. A husband who learns to recognize these moods and realizes that his wife is not in
complete control of them will himself be able to stay on more even keel.
"In the morning she will, in the evening she won't. You're always thinking she will when she won't."
The wisdom of this once popular song is recognized by wise husbands.
Young husbands are often thrown for a loss during their wives' first pregnancy. An expectant wife may
seem to begin acting a little queer. She is in what we could call the Nest Building Stage. During the last
months of pregnancy no one can blame her for getting restless waiting for the baby. Indeed, she decides
to do something about it and springs into action by rearranging the furniture and getting sundry items
ready for the coming baby. She knows that the baby will take a lot of her time. In trying to get ahead of
the housekeeping game she may even begin painting rooms her bewildered husband must finish. In
general, she throws the house into an uproar.
Some of this activity stems from a reluctancy to have another woman enter her home and find it
poorly kept and dirty. If she becomes unreasonable in these prenatal projects her husband will weather
the storm much better if he understands what is doing with her.
Another emotional mystery for the young husband to solve may come soon after the baby's birth. For
no reason apparent even to themselves young mothers become depressed. They cry easily. They have
the "baby blues." It should not be surprising that the young mother is in high gear emotionally at the
arrival of her baby. At this time her feelings are especially close to the surface. It may not take much to
open the flood gates. A sensitive husband instinctive responds to these sensitive needs of his wife with
tender love and care.
Best intentioned husbands often fail in supplying the needs of their wives simply because of the great
differences between the sexes. A man is body conscious and therefore interested in things. A woman is
soul conscious and therefore interested in people.
The other day a young mother was speaking of her daily trip to school with a car full of first graders.
She told of how the girls kept chattering away. The little boys sat sober and silent. Because the girls
were interested in people, in themselves, they no doubt were talking all at once to each other. The boys
had nothing to interest them, so they merely sat and looked out the window.
Little boys and old boys are more concerned with things, with toys, with sports, with tools, the
automobile, fishing and hunting gear. Men have their "bull sessions" of course, but their talk usually
turns to things, not people. Women are often unfairly accused of gossip because they talk about people.
They do so because they are interested in people. Whether their talk is malicious or innocent depends
on their characters.
Some husbands do not understand their wives' need for adult conversation with other women. It is
considered a big waste of time. It is just dandy for him to tinker around in the basement all evening
with various things. It is a great nuisance for her to have the girls over for an evening. All day she has
fussed with things-- food, dishes, clothes, and so forth. Once in a while she needs release. Yet, some
husbands are tyrannical enough to object to her having a night out with her friends.
Speaking of tyrannical husbands tempts us to drop a caution to young ladies seeking a husband. A
healthy woman is attracted to a masterful man. Let her not, however, mistake the tyrannical for the
masterful man. The latter admirable type will merit our attention in a subsequent chapter.
How many a young husband has got himself in the doghouse by bringing home for supper
unannounced a buddy of his? "Ann will be glad to see you, Pete. Wait till you see how she can throw a
meal on the table," the proud but not so smart husband informs his bachelor friend. It is three in the
afternoon, but does our boy friend phone his wife? Of course not. Why upset her?
To the male way of thinking she can take an extra place at table in stride. No need to make a big deal
out of having a friend home for dinner. Why suggest by phoning her that she go to extra fuss? Another
potato and a couple of chops will do the trick.
So reasons the man because he is projecting himself into his wife's position. He imagines that her
nature is the same as his. He would not get excited over having a friend of his wife come to dinner.
The episode can be all the more interesting if the unannounced guest had known the wife previous to
her marriage and was visiting her home for the first time. This makes for a cozy evening.
The front door is hardly closed on the heels of the departing guest before the wife berates her
husband. "How could you do that to me? I was never so mortified in all my life. My hair was a mess. I
had been straightening up the basement and was just filthy! I knew Pete pretty well before we married.
What must he think of me now?"
The wife desired wants to be able to show her home to best advantage. As queen of the home she was
justifiably proud of it and her position in it. The husband in our case had the best intentions--to save his
wife any extra effort. Good intentions are not always enough. Because he did not think of her feelings
his good intentions missed fire. Actually his wife felt that he was inconsiderate. The husband in turn
resented the imputation, being unconscious of inconsiderateness. Husband and wife became annoyed
with each other because they approached a situation with different viewpoints.
The wise husband wants his wife to feel that she is queen of the home. He will help her maintain this
position. Bringing home a guest to her surprise is cutting the floor from under her. She cannot be
blamed for feeling that she is being treated as a mere housemaid.
Life is less vexing for those who accept others even though they cannot understand them. Any
husband will spare himself many upset moments and injured feelings if he accepts what he is unable to
understand about his wife.
Many wives are callous about keeping their husbands waiting. How many an evening out has been
spoiled by the wife unconscious of time? The curtain rises at the theatre at eight-thirty. They should
leave the house at seven-thirty. The husband has the choice of dragging his wife out of the house by the
hair, or of patiently waiting and being reconciled to being late. These wives always late for
appointments can find fifty details to take care of before joining their husbands. I for one do not
understand them and desist from saying more about them because the comments would not take to
print.
Any husband saddled with a chronically late wife has the choice of either killing her or of accepting
her. He cannot be asked to understand her. The only choice seems to be to accept her. No husband can
accomplish this except through love. For his own peace of soul he must concentrate on her good
qualities and accept her as she is. Moreover, his humility will be strengthened by quietly suffering her
inconsiderateness. Without love no one can long abide the faults of another. With love, shortcomings
are accepted or even swallowed up as straw in a blast furnace.
Good natured "ribbing" or razzing" has its place in marriage as well as in friendships. Those in love
enjoy teasing each other. It is a healthy sign of closeness and familiarity. Teasing may evidence a
winning, mischievous spirit. It is often used by a clever person to bring another out of himself. It can be
a good method of breaking down barriers, of preventing too much standing on ceremonies.
However, the practice can be dangerous and even destructive of love. Everything depends on the spirit
behind the "ribbing." If the teasing is done to hurt, then it becomes the weapon of a person being mean.
Obviously, no husband can stoop to such a practice without doing harm to his marriage.
Husbands should be cautioned to exercise care even about their good-natured "ribbing." If it is
overdone or ill-timed, the wife may be hurt. Common sense, good taste, and above all, an abiding love
and gentleness should guide a husband in teasing his wife.
The husband given to "ribbing" his wife about something he knows she is sensitive, is like a prize
fighter hitting below the belt. He may think that he is winning the round, but the final verdict will show
he has lost. Moreover, there is nothing clever about harping on the same tune. Most people will accept
kind "razzing" about their acknowledged peculiarities. However, constant repetition can become
irritating.
A husband too prone to "rib" his wife should stop and ask himself where he is heading. Does he think
he is promoting love between himself and his wife? Did he overdo teasing when he was courting and
winning his wife?
Excessive "ribbing" may become a poor camouflage for a critical spirit. A person in love seldom
criticises the object of his love for the simple reason that he can see nothing but good. Love does not
feed on criticism.
The husband who understands his wife knows her faults and shortcomings and must accept her as she
is. She should not be too brittle to take a kind and loving teasing occasionally. Yet, he must be sure of
himself and never let his teasing be an expression of criticism, spite, or vindictiveness.
A husband does nothing for his wife by reminding her constantly through "ribbing" that she has faults.
She knows that she is far from being perfect; but she does not expect to hear that repeatedly from the
one who is supposed to love her.
Many a husband has found himself way back in the doghouse because, in a thoughtless moment, he
compared his wife with another woman. First of all, comparisons are odious. Then too, the wife has a
right to feel that she is beyond comparison in the eyes of her husband.
"Betty is a very clever and winsome girl" is a statement packed with dynamite. Certainly, any husband
thus referring to the wife next door is climbing way out on a limb. It is not easy for a wife to accept
these encomiums paid to other wives without a suspicion that an unfavorable comparison is intended. If
Betty has an exciting figure and that mysterious quality called sex appeal, the husband has had it. He
has laid a great, big egg and will have a time of it covering up.
We began this chapter with the premise that women are mysterious and have many dark corners into
which no one can penetrate. However, in this matter of comparisons, she is an open book.
Unconsciously a woman regards every other woman as a rival. For this reason a beautiful and
vivacious woman has few if any women friends. Indeed, few real friendships exist between women.
Only with great effort can a woman regard another with objectivity She can be sharp in her criticism
of the charms of another, and can be vitriolic in denouncing the slightest semblance of display of
feminine assets.
Awareness on the part of husbands of these facts may amount to an ace in the hole should the game of
love turn to a showdown. Since men are babes in the woods in the game of love they must be astute in
playing their ace. If they play it right, it will help them win the game of a happy married life.
Some husbands play their game as though they do not know that they have an ace in their hands. I
remember one case in particular.
After about ten years of marriage the wife began acting high and mighty. Her husband had loved her
deeply, if not always so wisely. Constantly he had told her that she was the most beautiful woman in
the world, that he would not see another woman beside her for dust. Repeatedly he told her that he
could not live without her. She was his whole life.
She became too sure of him and began to treat him as a convenient lap dog. The more available he
was to her vanity, the more she took him for granted. She was no longer intrigued by him. Because she
was a woman of little character, she toyed with a few flirtations. His reaction was to redouble his
protestations of love and devotion. As long as he could not see another woman, she felt confident that
he would be waiting for her should she decide to come back to him.
The poor husband had either overlooked the ace he had or held on to it too long and had it trumped.
He had allowed her to become too sure of him. He lost his appeal for her.
"Competition is good for the soul," I remember a most gracious and accomplished lady saying as she
found she had a rival. It is not good for us to become too sure of even getting to Heaven.
The husband mentioned above was so carried away by infatuation that he misled his wife into
thinking that she was the only pebble on the beach. Actually she was not, as she found out a year or so
after their separation. He became just as "goofy" over another woman. Her flirtations frittered away,
and she found herself alone.
As I attempt to write down these ideas about the husband's understanding of his wife, little Peter is
climbing upon a chair next to the dining room table flooded with the mid-morning sun. Peter is
nineteen months old, already has a badly cut lip, and is scaring the life out of me that he will fall again.
Peter is the youngest member of a family whose hospitality has provided me an occasional sanctuary in
which to work on this book.
Peter is back again, the lovable little rascal; and I am not getting ahead in my work. Now he is gone,
as is evidenced from his mother's voice in the kitchen. "Peter, are you throwing Cheerios on the floor
again?"
The phone has rung, and Peter's mother is telling a girl friend about Peter's lip and his chicken pox. As
she talks she tries to fold laundry.
The young daughter of the family, home from school with a cold, now has the television blasting.
Peter is back and halfway up on the table after my paper. The front doorbell is ringing. A quick lunge
on my part saves Peter from taking a nose-dive to the floor. Peter's mother passes by on the way to the
door, takes Peter with her, and tones down the television now deserted. Janie is upstairs playing with
her dolls or cookstove. I am playing with my pencil and wondering whether publisher and I shall ever
see each other again.
The washing machine in the basement is buzzing, and the suds saving feature of the machine will be
wasted unless madam gets down there soon. The phone is ringing again. Because Peter is momentarily
out of sight, I have nothing to do but eavesdrop. The lady of the house is discussing the coming
wedding of her sister. I gather that some important decisions are being hashed over.
The marriage will have to wait. Two boys have just stormed into the kitchen from school ready for
their lunch. Thus a happy, relaxed morning has passed. In spite of chicken pox and cut lip Peter has
enjoyed himself. I have done nothing. Mrs. O'Brien wonders where the morning has gone.
A serious effort to get lunch underway is interrupted by a ringing phone. Aunt Susan wonders how
Peter is, and so forth. Before Susan can be satisfied, the children have gulped down their lunch with a
few punches exchanged.
Peter takes care of his own eating in good style, but he and an area within a radius of eight feet need
considerable mopping up after the collation.
An inside job of Peter's doing requires attention. Besides, it is nap time. So upstairs go Mama and her
little darling. In the midst of diaper change the phone rings. As much as my ears flap I cannot tell who
this might be.
After another page of pencil doodling I feel that the little boys' room needs investigating. Besides
Peter seems to be having all the fun upstairs. No sooner up there than I become involved with Peter,
who has slid away from his mother and is cavorting around in the nude. To keep him occupied while
his mother is on the phone, we both march in and out of the bedrooms in mock, exaggerated military
style.
Another phone call chucked away, mother takes over and cuddles her little boy to bed. By this time I
feel that I am exhausted from creative work and decide to gallivant around in the car for a few hours.
On returning two hours later I find the house full of neighborhood children and Mrs. O'Brien seated at
the ironing board, phone caught between shoulder and ear. Her hands are busy with something on the
ironing board. I think that A.T.&T. gleefully advertise that fifty million people can talk to Mrs. O'Brien
on the phone. And tremendous efforts are being made each year to increase the number.
There is always at work in nature a mysterious force keeping things in balance. Science and Industry
keep threatening to practically do away with housework for wives. All sorts of automatic gadgets chug
away for her. Will she one day find time hanging heavy on her hands, and thereby be in danger of
getting into mischief? Hardly. The telephone steps in and keeps her jumping. Toward the close of day
she finds herself struggling to get as much done as Grandma accomplished without a single electric
appliance.
With these profound thoughts I get back to the dining room where I can do some more doodling and
stare out the window. While daydreaming thus I notice that the lawn is dry and cracking open for want
of rain. Also, a number of children seem to be tearing off the front porch.
Remembering having seen pictures of rioting mobs held back by fire horses, I feel that I have two
good excuses for not writing. I can squirt the kids and the lawn at the same time. Both lawn and porch
may yet be saved.
While I man the hose, Peter in his birthday suit appears out of the front door with his mother in hot
pursuit. I do not squirt him and thus overcome another of life's many temptations.
As Peter's mother grabs him up in her arms she requests, "When you see the children send them in,
please. I need bread from the store and someone to watch Peter."
Evidently the lady of the house is beginning to wrestle with another meal. Fifteen minutes pass, and
no children show. I am hungry, so I decide that I had better go into the house and get Peter out of the
way of preparations for dinner.
While I entertain Peter the man of the house returns from work. As he walks past several baskets of
unironed laundry which still look about as they did in the morning, he does not say as he greets his
wife, "What did you do today?" He is an understanding man and knows how her day can be a rat race
with little to show for it.
The best cure for husbands who wonder what their wives do all day is to stay home from work and
play cook, housekeeper, and nursemaid. The experience would be an eye opener for many.
Husbands successful in their work with any tendency to be perfectionists are in danger of being
critical of what they imagine to be their wives' inefficiency around the home. Unless they actually take
their wives' place for a day, they are pure theorists. Moreover, they are inclined to evaluate their wives'
work by what they produce--ironed shirts, washed windows, cakes baked, and so forth. They forget
about how much their wives turn out in a day in the way of services rendered--time and effort with the
baby, effort with the children in directing, teaching, and admonishing them.
There are husbands who would be considerably happier if they spent less time wondering why their
wives could not do better around the house and spend more time figuring out how to bring home a
better pay check. Sympathetic understanding always produces more results than criticism. The first is
constructive; the latter is destructive.
Many a wife has had most of the spark taken out of her by a husband lacking understanding. Her day
at home is consumed by dozens of little details few of which amount to much. Frequently at the close
of day she has little to show for all her efforts. If a wife has a husband who needs a little education in
this respect, she should somehow bring it about that he has to take her place in the home for a full day.
8. HUMOR
When Smith walked down the sidewalk it was with head up, tail up like a grand and stately ass in
oriental procession. He had a dignity to maintain. He had just been appointed chief dog catcher of
Slick, a whistle stop on the Frisco. If anyone thinks that there is anything funny about all this, Smith
did not; nor did his wife. His wife found it trying to care for the swelling pouter pigeon now living with
her. She had to conduct herself with the decorum befitting the wife of a man of position.
If Smith and his confused wife provided others with amusement, it was because Smith was not
amused. He lacked a sense of humor. Because he was puffed up with no reason the incongruity tickled
the funny bone of his neighbors. The best comedians are without artifice and are not seen on TV.
What about the pompous Mr. Smiths who have cause to be proud and inflated over their success?
These are the successful businessmen, prominent doctors, lawyers and clergymen, mysterious technical
advisors and consultants. When one of these well-rewarded members of society struts, his pomposity is
hard to take even by those with a sense of humor. There is not the incongruity between his behavior and
his success as there is in the dog catcher's case. The proud with excuse to be proud are the hardest to
swallow.
The pompous individual ever and over concerned with his importance is the way he is because he
lacks a sense of humor. He has lost or never had a proper sense of balance. He cannot see things in their
true perspective. Unable to keep the world about him in focus, he is in worse plight in evaluating
himself. He imagines that his success is all due to himself. He never dreams that perchance he owes
something to his Creator, to his environment, his family, and plain good fortune. If he is an erroneously
so-called self-made man he may never even give credit to his thyroid gland.
A wife closeted with a chap of this type deserves sympathy. She cannot have much fun with the
serious little boy. Unbending and forever protecting his dignity he knows nothing of the lighter, gayer
side of life. Propriety is his watchword because he can never forget himself. He never experiences the
exuberance of playing the clown or acting a little silly with his wife.
For him life is real, life is earnest. He confuses worth with seriousness, not realizing that rottenness
and sin are just as serious as virtue. He would be surprised and even shocked to learn of the horseplay
and fun indulged in by nuns in a convent.
A sober husband of this type must find a sense of humor if he is to save himself. Only through
humility will he succeed, because humility is an objective and honest appraisal of one's self. Through
humility he is able to laugh at himself. Once able to laugh at himself he is indifferent to or even
receptive to the laughter of others at his expense.
A wife blessed with such a husband can well thank God. Her husband's sense of humor lessens greatly
the wear and tear of daily life. He is an easy person with whom to live. Contrarily, the humorless
husband is too lopsided. With him life is always a grim affair.
A husband possessing a sense of humor can let down his hair and engage in a little tomfoolery with
his wife. Saved from being a "stuffed shirt" he obviates or eases many a matrimonial strain by knowing
when to act silly. He is able to play the clown when necessary to prevent tensions from growing and
breaking out into quarrels.
Most everyone has friends or acquaintances who are particularly gifted with a sense of humor. Their
perception of the incongruous is razor sharp. Because they are of a humble and generous nature their
sense of humor never degenerates into cynicism. Incidentally it is worth observing here how one virtue
begets and fosters another just as one vice leads to another. A stingy and conceited man is likely to
allow his fine perception of human nature to deteriorate into misanthropy and cynicism. On the other
hand a humble and generous man is carried on by these virtues to a kindly and amused regard for the
antics of his fellow man.
Because a sense of humor is so important for success in marriage, all husbands could well take a self-
inventory. Some are more gifted than others. Yet, all can greatly develop their sense of humor. A virtue
is a good habit which grows only with exercise.
Family life provides innumerable opportunities to a husband to see the amusing and funny side of
situations as they arise with himself, his wife, or the children. If he trains himself to focus his attention
on only the humorous aspects of what could be exasperating incidents, he will be a happier man. The
grouch vexes himself with only the potentially irritating part of human relations.
One evening I visited a married couple. I ran into a situation worth relating. Ordinarily the dishes for
the evening meal would have been put away by the time I dropped in on them. That evening they were
off schedule, were only beginning to eat. Laughingly they told me what had happened that afternoon to
put the kitchen in such disarray.
The wife was of an adventurous nature, which sometimes got her into deep water. That day it almost
got her into water over her head. She suddenly decided to fix the leaking sink drain trap and faucet
which her husband had put on the agendum for the weekend.
The drain trap was duck soup. In no time she had it apart and cleaned. Then the fun began. She could
not get it back together. Her philosophy always was to change the direction of attack to another quarter
if she found herself up against a stone wall. A nasty little washer was the stone wall that afternoon. So
she bravely went after the faucet with a wrench. After several lunges she had the faucet spurting water
into the sink. The water poured out of the disconnected drain on to the kitchen floor. Pots and pans
were marshalled under the sink. Once filled they were a problem. The kitchen window was the only
solution, if a cold one. It was zero outside.
She made a hurried run to the basement to find the water turn-off valve. She could not find it.
Meantime the pots under the sink were overflowing. As she rushed upstairs, her fifteen-month old
human dynamo decided to add to the confusion. He brought a living-room lamp crashing to the floor.
By this time she knew a little of the problem of the Dutch attempting normal living while manning their
dykes against a storm-lashed sea.
When her husband entered the kitchen he sized up the situation at once. His wife was in need of
rescue. In a jiffy he was downstairs at the water valve. In the meantime his wife was sitting near the
sink, wet, disheveled, and defeated. She began to cry. It was not a cry of pain but of release, almost of
happiness. Her man was home and in control of things.
Her husband returned to the kitchen, walked over to her, picked her up, and kissed her. For a moment
he held her at arms length, shaking her gently and all the while smiling and laughing. Soon he had her
laughing.
What must have been a very difficult afternoon for the wife was related to me over our coffee as a
most humorous incident. Already the spritely little wife was embellishing, I suspected, her experience.
In future recountings it would grow into one of her funniest stories. Needless to say I enjoyed the
evening spent with this couple. Both had a sense of humor and were a blessing to each other.
In the episode of the wife playing at plumber the husband must be given credit for saving the whole
situation. When he arrived on the scene the wife was at her wits' end. At the moment she could see
nothing funny about the mess she had created. She was tired, dirty, and wet. The kitchen was a mess,
and no dinner was in sight.
The husband saw the incongruity of his dainty, doll-like wife in the guise of a frustrated plumber.
Because he saw the humorous side he saved himself and his wife from a miserable evening.
Suppose he had begun to rant and rave at her. "What the devil is the matter with you? You must be
crazy. No supper tonight? I've got a swell job on my hands because of you."
His wife was not jumping up and down in glee over her predicament. Had her husband greeted her
with this dumb and cranky attitude her feelings would have been hurt. An unhappy evening would have
been in store for both.
It does not take a genius but it does take a level head to see the comic features of human goings-on all
about us. Any beetle-head can arrive, if he only put himself to it, at a modicum of appreciation of the
ridiculous.
While we are born with certain temperaments, yet attitudes toward life are the result of our own
efforts. The acquired vices of pride and conceit, selfishness and niggardliness are poor soil in which to
grow a sense of humor. On the other hand, possessing the virtues of humility and generosity a man may
more easily discipline himself to see the funny aspects of human activity.
The husband just described had happily acquired the attractive attitude of taking his cue from the
amusing points in any situation. Any idiotic husband, on coming home to the kitchen scene described
above, could have reacted as a grumpy little boy. The mess of the kitchen was obvious as was the
prospect of a much delayed and skimpy dinner. Our ideal husband was not blind. He saw the grim side
of his wife's unsuccessful venture in plumbing; but, more important, he saw the need for a touch of
levity.
Many a husband would have been upset by the unpleasant reception unintentionally accorded by the
energetic wife. The pattern of his evening was cut out in a fashion he had not anticipated. Many other
husbands lacking a sense of humor would have been displeased, even cranky and severe with their
wives.
Some people are experts at detecting and then concentrating on the difficult, the unpleasant, the hard
part of their lives. How else could they be anything but gloomy Guses?
One day a golfer on vacation in Florida remarked to his elderly caddie that he always seemed cheerful
and full of fun day after day. The caddie replied that long ago he had figured things out and decided on
a philosophy of life. "Either you are happy or you are sad, because things go w ell or go bad. I
reckoned things would always go bad anyway, so I decided to be happy anyway."
Not much logic in the darky's philososphy? Perhaps not; but does anyone assume that all the problems
of life are solved by logic? Not that life is an illogicality, as Chesterton said; but it is a trap for
logicians.
There are innumerable occasions when a sense of humor serves a husband better than logic in living
with his wife. Indeed, one school of thought suggests that husbands throw logic to the four winds.
Understanding and a sense of humor are the requisites for a happy marriage. Besides, since when do
husbands have a monopoly on logic? Also, do husbands always want their wives to use the logical
approach?
9. POSITIVE LISTENING
It is vital to stress with husbands the importance of realizing that many of our problems are emotional.
They will not be solved on a rational plane until the emotions are swept away. Afforded an opportunity
we readily talk ourselves out of our frustrations.
Many a marriage would be more stable and happy, if husbands realized how much they could do for
their wives by being receptive audiences. Grievances, frustrations, and emotional conflicts can build up
in wives during the day. There is a definite need for release, otherwise these vexations are carried over
from day to day.
Perhaps the lady of the house has had a dressing down from her mother-in-law. One of the children,
grandmother's favorite, had a rather serious accident in a fall down the stairs.
"My heavens, Sarah, you've got to watch those children closer. Why, I never remember one of my
little children ever getting cut up like that. What'll Art think when he sees that poor child?" To all of
this Sarah can only splutter a few "buts."
The phone conversation over, Sarah's blood pressure began mounting. As the minutes ticked off, she
thought of all the things she should have said. "It was an accident pure and simple. The child slipped. It
could happen to anyone. I can't watch each child every minute of the day. How dare you blame me! I
feel bad enough about the whole thing. You have no right to----. Why you---- ."
After a bitter cry Sarah tried to get on with her housework. She did not accomplish much. Her mind
was not on her work. In fact, her mind was not able to function clearly at all. She was too choked with
emotion.
Just wait till Art gets home. Now she was certain that he had been leaning over too much to his
mother. His mother or not, she was not going to trample all over her. His mother would have to
apologize on her knees, or she would never let her in the house. She couldn't prevent him from letting
his mother in; but she would never open the door to her.
These and similar drastic measures swept through her mind like wave on wave flooding out any
sensible reaction to the tirade of her mother-in-law.
Art was no sooner home from work than he sensed that something was wrong with Sarah. She already
had talked to him on the phone during the day. He knew about Billy's accident. Something else seemed
to be bothering his wife. She was tense and even a little curt.
After the children were off in bed Art put his arms around Sarah and said, "Don't feel so bad about
Billy. He looks pretty ragged now, because his face is swollen. The cut will heal--maybe without even a
scar. And the tooth is just a baby tooth."
After a moment Sarah pushed away from her husband and began to cry. "It's your mother again. After
I talked to you today she called, and I told her about Billy. She climbed all over me. I'm just not a fit
mother for your children. She was so mean, I never want to see her again. I'll never let her in this
house," she sobbed.
"You bet I do," she rejoined with the hurt expression in her eyes giving way to fire and brimstone.
Art recognized this as the crucial moment. Without agreeing or disagreeing, directing or criticizing,
arguing or berating, he encouraged her to vent her feelings. The psychological safety valve was now
wide open, and Sarah blew off a good head of steam. There would be little left to Art's mother when
Sarah got through with her.
Art let her anger run its course. By his response to her uncontrolled emotions Art had enabled Sarah to
rid herself of all pent up vindictiveness.
Sarah talked herself out gradually. Because Art did not challenge her, Sarah was able to see the
ridiculousness of some of her statements. Once her emotions were out of the way, she would be able to
handle the situation with reasonable forbearance. Art had all the confidence in the world in Sarah's
intelligence. He knew that his mother was in no danger of death at his wife's hands. Her emotions spent
and no longer able to cloud her mental processes, Sarah's common sense would regain control.
"Sarah," Art said as his wife paused to get his reactions, "I have confidence that you will be able to
solve this difficulty with my mother. She must be awfully crazy about Billy."
Sarah had no sooner returned to the kitchen to finish straightening up when the phone rang. Art was
all ears as Sarah acknowledged his mother at the other end.
"I knew that you were upset, Lucille," Art heard Sarah say, "and you stop crying. I know that you did
not intend to be mean. Billy's going to be all right. Come over and see him tomorrow."
Before Sarah had hung up the phone Art called out from the front door. "I'm going out to get a paper,
Sarah." He wanted his wife to be alone with her thoughts after the phone conversation. With Sarah's
emotions out of the way her reason was back on its throne.
Art felt happy with himself as he strolled down the street. He felt satisfied with himself that he had
noticed her dammed up emotions and had had enough sense to listen attentively to her. What could
have developed into a big family row was already put quietly to rest.
Because Sarah had in great part solved her own emotional problems before his mother had called, she
had not put an obstacle in the way of his mother's effort to apologize. Had Sarah still been emotionally
distraught when Lucille had called, his wife might have lit into her. Sarah's belligerence might have
prevented his mother from apologizing.
An interesting feature about the role Art played in helping his wife out of her troubles was the restraint
he manifested. He did not remonstrate and argue, nor did he advise and agree with her. Yet he was not a
passive listener. By his attitude and a minimum of well-chosen words he let Sarah realize that he was
right with her. She had his feeling and understanding.
His wife solved her problem by talking it out in the open where it could be looked at for what it was
worth. Later on she would probably be unaware that her husband had helped her at all, had been the
vital factor for her solution of the problem.
Psychologically we are similar to a steam locomotive. We also have a pop off valve, lest the hub-bub
of our emotional stresses reach the bursting point. Unlike the steam engine, however, we cannot "pop
off" into the open air. We need someone to help us open the valve and then absorb the hot air.
We need an audience sympathetic and able to reinforce and reflect our emotions. The audience must
respond to our feelings. A mere human ventilator will not suffice. Indeed, we would be better off
talking to an air conditioner than to someone with no time for us.
Instinctively we are aware when someone is with us or merely in our presence. The one listening to
our problem is not a good audience simply because his ears are not closed with wax. How many a
person has been further frustrated by having the type of audience capable of only listening with a
magnanimous show of patience?
Some people are poor conversationalists and worse audiences because they do not know how to listen.
They give the impression that they are politely listening or rather waiting until the speaker is finished.
They are not concerned with what is being said. Patiently they are lying in wait to spring into the
slightest breach and pour forth their own verbiage.
With chagrin I remember the experience of picking out a friend to whom I wanted to unburden
myself. I had just been through an emotional upheaval, was still confused, and wanted to talk myself
out of the wringer into which I had put my neck. If this person had given encouragement and
sympathetic feeling, I am sure now that my problem would have faded away as I talked myself into the
only possible solution. Actually, I fussed over my predicament for many a long day.
My friend seemed receptive at first to my story. Of course I began by beating around the bush.
Because I did not receive from my friend the confidence required to get to the point, I hemmed and
hawed to no purpose. While I was still skirting the subject, he broke in upon me and began relating a
problem of his own-- important to him, no doubt, but the epitome of triviality to me. As he rattled on, I
sank back into myself all alone with my difficulty.
Kindness was not wanting in my friend. When I hesitated to proceed to the crux of my problem he
must have decided to save me embarrassment and went off on his own experiences. He failed to realize
what I needed was more than merely a patient listener or a distraction. He had failed to "get with" me.
I did not come to him to be distracted from my problem but to be rid of it. The easiest and most direct
way for me to have unseated the black devil riding my back was to have told him to get behind me. But
I had to tell him. Only my will was able to do the job. No one else could do it for me. In other words, I
had to talk myself into the solution of my problem. No one else could have told me to do what I knew
deep down inside had to be done.
A human being is a rational animal; but he is also an emotional animal, and in dealing with him we
may forget this second factor in his make-up. Those successful in human relations, however, do not
overlook the emotional side of their fellowmen.
During storms of emotion reason has little chance to guide us. Even during moments of calm we do
not always follow our reasons. Repulsions or attractions, feelings of insecurity or over-confidence may
lead us into courses of action not dictated by reason.
When hurricane warnings are flying along the East Coast, sensible people do not ignore them. When a
wife is about to go off her rocker into some emotional tantrum, her husband had best not ignore her.
Worse yet if he, through ignorance or ill-will, adds to her vexation.
If a husband values his own peace and happiness, he will do his part in helping his wife regain control
of her emotions. He will not accomplish a thing for her on the rational plane by arguing and advising.
By blowing his own top a charming situation is created similar to a run-a-way speed boat slapping over
the waves with no one at the controls.
Because he loves his wife and has some regard for his own contentment, he does the only sensible
thing possible. He helps his wife subdue or rid herself of emotional turmoil. He does this by
establishing the proper environment, which is an attentive and receptive ear.
Although men are less prone to emotional upsets than women, yet there are times when they are also
in need of an outlet for their feelings. In general husbands have better opportunities than wives for
airing their feelings. Men deal with other adults during work. Bricklayers are not always laying bricks.
Once in a while they straighten up an tell a fellow bricklayer along the wall what they are going to do
to the contractor when they see him. Because the grievance is off their chests they get back to work,
and the contractor is in no danger. Milady can hardly tell little wide-eyed one year old Susan how she
will stab the landlord if he turns off the heat again.
"He was a man, take him for all in all, I shall not look upon his like again." Every girl in dreaming of
her future husband, has the right to imagine him measuring up to the appraisal Hamlet made of his
father. Whatever else he is envisioned as being, The Man for Her must be a man, not just a sorry excuse
for one.
Man, that featherless plantigrade biped mammal of the genus "Homo Sapiens," has been summoned
by nature to fill the role of husband. Before we go on to the consideration of the qualities which make a
man a husband without ceasing to be a man, we must pause to point out the intangibility of the term
"man."
We can better sense what constitutes a man than define the word. He is more than just a male who
shaves and carries on the normal biological functions of his species. "Worth makes the man, and want
of it the fellow! The rest is all but leather or prunella." We feel what Pope in his Essay on Man means;
but try to explain his statement. At least we are on safe ground to say that no one can come lightly by
his manhood. It must be earned.
Moral standards have had a way of being at odds, but all peoples have had definite ideas as to what
becomes a man and what does not. "I dare do all that may become a man; who dares do more is none."
It is easy for us to agree with Shakespeare that certain things are expected of a man--not of a boy or of
a girl; and that certain things he dare not do. And if he does the things "he dare not do," although no
one else knows, he knows his shame." I am ashamed that thou hast power to shake my manhood thus."
Shakespeare, Lear I, 4, 319
Unfortunately, too many men do not seem to have much manhood to shake. A divorced woman once
came to me about problems with her little daughter. The child was doing poorly at school and was
generally maladjusted. No wonder. She loved her father, missed him, and sensed the evil of the new life
and home her mother was establishing with a new make-believe husband.
The mother readily agreed that all the trouble stemmed from her divorce. She herself was not too
happy over her new existence. Her husband would still take her back, but she could not make up her
mind. The woman's principal complaint against her husband was that he was a namby-pamby sort of
weakling.
This confused woman possessed more than her share of indecisiveness. What she needed most in her
husband was strength. A masterful man would have been her salvation. The days of men on horseback
with long swords are gone. In a way it is a pity, for the ladies then could separate the men from the
boys. Now any coward and "panty waist" can sit behind the wheel of an automobile and bully his way
down the highway.
No healthy woman wants a docile lap dog for a husband. True, most every wife, given half a chance,
will try her hand at wearing the pants. A weak husband is a constant invitation to her to assume such an
ill-becoming role. All of us become confused at times and do not know what we want. Any good wife
may be tempted to drop out of character and challenge her spouse as to who is boss; if she wins no one
is more disappointed down inside than she herself. A real woman wants to look up to her husband as
her strength and her master.
It is in the nature of a woman to want to submit (for want of a better word); but not to any poltroon.
She may rise on occasion to the heights and evidence the valor of a Joan of Arc. Yet, she does not stand
well alone against the uncertainties of the dark night. She craves the protection and security of a
husband worthy of her trust by reason of his manly virtues and character. To fill the bill the Man For
Her must give leadership, firmness during her moments of weakness, and decision in her hour of
uncertainty.
Unfortunately the husband of the woman mentioned above was a follower, not a leader. In race track
parlance he was never a winner, always a "sniffer." Atremble lest he cross her, he never made decisions.
Fearful that he might lose her favor he hung around her like a pet. He provided well enough for the
home of which he was not the head. In short he was her man Friday and a good reliable errand boy.
"Close the door, John. Open the door, John. Put the laundry in the basement, John. Bring the laundry up
from the basement, John." These and similar wifely directives were his order of the day. Her husband
possibly dreamed of telling her to trot herself down to the basement; but he never worked up enough
gumption to take the cow by the horns.
The wife in the case under consideration admittedly was no bargain. Had her husband been a
rambunctious buccaneer, she would have been crying to high heaven as likely as not. She had a timid
little husband sadly wanting virility. Yet, he had his points. He provided. He was steady, reliable, and
devoted. Had this wife counted her blessings she could have adjusted herself and worked out a
reasonably happy marriage.
The husband was not a real man and failed to live up to his responsibility as head of the home. He lost
his wife's respect and eventually whatever love of which she was capable. Because he could not lead
with a firm hand, his wife slipped away from him into the evil and stupidity of divorce.
A husband must have qualities of leadership because he is the head of the wife and the home. The foot
does not lead the head. From the head comes direction to the path the foot may take. Confusion springs
from a situation in which the head forfeits its role of leadership.
Once I lived next door to a household in which disorder reigned because the husband made only fitful,
if at times violent, attempts to be head of the house. The relationship of this man and wife was summed
up one day by a delivery man who found himself between the husband and wife. Apparently the couple
were arguing in the presence of the delivery man about the acceptance of some article recently
purchased. As the man finally left he muttered aloud, "Too many chiefs in there."
Obviously one wigwam is large enough for only one Chief. Somebody has to be plain Indian. As soon
as you say that a wigwam has two Chiefs you say that the wigwam has no Chief. A housewife would be
the first to recognize the truth that no home kitchen can survive two cooks. Too many fingers in the pie
do the pie no good. How many times has a harassed housewife laid down the ultimatum during the
preparation of a holiday dinner, "Now, everybody get out of this kitchen, if you expect anything to eat!"
In the kitchen she is boss and rightly so, if she is expected to do the job there. What is true of the
kitchen is true in a broader sense of the complete home and family.
If the husband is responsible for the coordinating of all the varied activities of a family, he must be the
big Chief. Just as no one in his right mind would deny that a family must have a head, no one would
excuse the husband of this responsibility. By nature he has been ordained to be in charge of the family.
By Divine Revelation, as expressed by St. Paul, his position is reaffirmed. "Let women be subject to
their husbands, as to the Lord; for the husband is the head of the wife, as Christ is the head of the
Church.... Therefore, as the Church is subject to Christ, so also let the wives be to their husbands in all
things."
From my own observation I suspect that wives take over only, as a rule, when husbands fail to provide
leadership. The husband may be wanting for a number of reasons. He lacks energy and initiative and is
lazy. He is short on ability, or he has a debilitating sickness, or his interests are elsewhere than with his
family. Because the wife desires the partnership to endure she takes over functions proper to the
husband. Suppose that a wife goes to work because the husband is irresponsible in his support of the
family. Can anyone be surprised if she begins to call the tunes since she is paying the fiddler? Likewise,
if the husband provides no companionship and training for the children, especially the boys, is it any
wonder that an efficient wife and mother begins to lay down all the rules of discipline? Again, if a
husband is generally indecisive and wishy-washy can a wife be blamed for taking the bull by the horns
in an attempt to save the marriage?
The conclusion seems to be that if a husband rightly wants to wear the pants, then let him keep them
on his own backside. Not many women were made to wear pants becomingly anyway.
Speaking of responsibility brings up the truism that all successful leaders know how to share
responsibility. No hard and fast rules can be laid down as to who in the partnership of marriage is
responsible for precisely this or that. One general norm expressed to me by a successful wife in the
presence of her husband is worth repeating. She felt that a wife should make the decisions and be
responsible for the little things. The husband should take care of the big things. Husbands and wives
can take it from there as to what are little and big things.
In any event no one should ever be able to long question any given family, "Who's in charge here?" To
anyone well acquainted with a particular family it should be clear that the husband is in charge.
There never was any doubt in my mind as to who was in charge of the Murphy family. This family has
always exemplified the ideal family. The parents and the children possess a deep religious faith and a
zest for life. The mother is the "cut up" and prankster of the family. The father is the bemused witness
of a household always throbbing with the activity of a railroad station.
Some families have open house on New Year's Day. With this family open house is a daily, year
around affair. At times one might have to wander off to a bedroom to find an empty chair. Mrs. Murphy
is the mistress of ceremonies; and quite a job it is, for the activities of the children and the guests spill
over even into their gracious yard during fine weather. Indeed, I doubt if there exists an equal to Mrs.
Murphy in her energy, her big-heartedness, her sociability, and her command of love and respect from
her children and many friends.
Mrs. Murphy is the dominant personality of her family, and perhaps to a casual and superficial
observer, the head of the family. It is all the more to her credit that she never challenged her husband's
position as the head of the family.
Mr. Murphy's big leather chair has always symbolized to me his unquestioned leadership. No one else
ever sat in it, except in a moment of playfulness when one of the family was pretending to dethrone the
master.
Many times I have seen Mr. Murphy grow a little weary of a house full of people and escape into the
yard for a while. His chair remained empty. It always was free for his return. The few times I witnessed
him catch some one in his chair he yelled out in mock anger, "Get out of that chair." His manner and
tone of voice gave the poacher an opportunity to save face by leaping out of the chair in feigned fright.
I have always wondered what would happen if the intruder thought that Mr. Murphy was only joking.
Mr. Murphy as head of the family seldom had to lay down the law. He wisely set the general policies
and allowed Mrs. Murphy and the children a broad latitude within which to lead their daily lives. In
other words, Mr. Murphy did not have to go around all day giving orders. Each member of the family
knew his or her position, duties, and privileges.
Mr. Murphy took care of the finances. (Mrs. Murphy would have spent or have given away every last
cent.) Mr. Murphy decided when one of the children was ready to learn to drive the family car, when
and if some one could use the car. Mr. Murphy never evidenced tyranny in his leadership but always a
kind and mild firmness.
Although Mr. and Mrs. Murphy took a vigorous interest through the years in religious and civic
affairs, their first concern was the home. As a family they prayed, worked, and played together. Mrs.
Murphy was a happy wife, and the children all turned out happy and successful. In great part all this
was due to the wisdom of Mr. Murphy as head of the home.
As Mr. Murphy nears the end of his life he exemplifies what I have always envisioned as the benign
patriarch. Would that the world had more of them, for we are in danger that our society become
matriarchal.
When a wife and mother becomes head of the husband and family, there is a real inversion of the right
order of things as ordained by God Himself; and no good will come of it.
I do not wish here to take back anything I wrote about the glorification of woman in The Wife
Desired. God Himself placed woman on a pedestal when He created Our Blessed Lady. Man, at least
Christian man, has rightly glorified woman on a pedestal. But he does not have to glorify her from a
supine position. Indeed, little glory can be given to woman by a debased and inferior man. Standing on
his own two feet and maintaining his God-given leadership over woman, only then can he give full and
proper glory to woman.
Somebody should make a study of the growing danger that our country become a matriarchal society.
Are more and more husbands becoming the victims of a soft and easy life and thereby losing the virility
of their frontier forefathers? What effect has fierce, modern advertising on the situation? Does the wife
and mother tend to take over more and more because the present day breadwinner no longer works in
his own shop attached to the home? Has our modern husband gradually and unwittingly surrendered
leadership in the home to his wife because he works away from home and returns at the end of day as a
sort of tolerated evening boarder?
Concerning the impact advertising has on the development of a matriarchal society consider the
method and tone of advertising conducted by the Automobile Industry. Cars are made today for "hot
rods" and women. The "hot rods" get the high-powered motors. Women get the styling. Car
manufacturers appeal to women in the selling of their product. The ads depict m'lady lounging as a
glamorous young matron against a flashy, two-tone job parked on the lawn of a swanky country club.
The ad appeals to the lady of the house. The bill is footed by a carpenter or bricklayer who should be
very dubious as to how much all this expensive styling adds anything to the value of the car and fulfills
his particular, workday requirements of a car.
The modern-day urban husband drives off to work away from the home in his stylish car. Because a
great portion of his time and energies is spent away from his home making a living, the wife must take
over the running of the house. The danger is that gradually she takes over completely, especially if the
husband is too tired upon his return to be interested in the affairs and problems of the home.
No one can criticize the wife for assuming the matriarchal role if the husband abandons his leadership.
Somebody has to run the show. Whatever be the causes and excuses, the utter nonsense of a matriarchal
society is the shame of husbands who have abandoned the ramparts.
During an evening spent with some friends of mine the husband expressed his worry over a close
friend. His friend, he felt, had spoiled his wife and was leading a dog's life. At once we got off on the
subject of husbands spoiling their wives and how this helps to promote the whole matriarchal business.
Can a husband spoil his wife? Can he be so good to her that she becomes pampered and takes
advantage of him? Before we explore the subject I admit to the prejudice of wanting the answer to be
"No." So often I have heard young mothers say, while cuddling their little babies, that a baby cannot be
spoiled with love and affection. Because young mothers and babies are so close to the Source of life
and truth, their instincts are all the convincing I need. Instinctively a young mother empties herself of
her love. She does not dole out her love to her babies in measured quantities. After all, has there ever
been found a yardstick for measuring love?
I do not think that a husband can measure out his love for his wife any more than a mother can for her
baby. When the husband loves completely he is doing his part. If the wife is spoiled it is not his fault.
The trouble lies in her. Love should beget love. If the husband's love develops selfishness in the wife,
there is something wrong with her.
Once I asked a wife if she thought husbands could spoil their wives. This particular wife had a
husband who went all out for her. "Yes, I think so," she answered. "And it sure makes for a happy
marriage."
Now, of course, this is a woman's point of view. Some disgruntled males might not agree. The wife
quoted felt that a wife "spoiled" by love and devotion would reciprocate in kind. As a matter of fact, I
know that her husband felt himself richly rewarded for all his efforts at "spoiling" his wife.
It must take a bit of doing, but I felt that this husband had remained the master--all the while
showering unlimited love upon his wife. It appears, then, that limitless love does not spoil a wife as
long as the husband maintains his position of mastery.
Without question there are some self-centered women made all the more selfish by an over-zealous
husband. I have dealt with some of them. The more husbands dote upon these wives the more the wives
regard their husbands as being in their dotage. A wife of this type is interested in others only to the
extent that they affect and promote her welfare. She is not interested in her husband or anyone else for
his own sake.
A husband closeted with a wife unable to return love for love has no choice but to continue his full
love with the hope that an awakening will come. There is no future in an effort at measuring out his
love to equal her small effort. Most people learn, as they grow older, that a loaf of bread thrown upon
the waters comes washed back twofold. It may take a selfish wife some years of marriage to grasp this
truth. A husband who deliberately chokes his full love will fail in carrying his wife through her early,
ungenerous years. Furthermore, he will stunt his own character and personality development.
Showering love and affection on wives in itself does not spoil them, does not, for example, unduly
innate them, so that they want to be matriarchs. I do not believe that the normal, healthy wife fully
loved by her husband wants to be the matriarch. Only under the stress of circumstances will she
unintentionally assume the ungainly role. The circumstances are the failures of the husband to live up
to his responsibility as head.
Following fast upon the heels of a husband is the responsibility of being a father. It is not in the scope
of this book to deal with all the aspects of fatherhood. However, a husband is expected to be a father
and cannot be successful in the first role and a failure in the second. No husband can bring real
happiness and contentment to his wife unless he be a good father to her children.
Once I asked a lovely young lady to paint a little word picture of her future dream husband. For a
moment she hesitated and then said that she could not dream long about her husband-to-be before she
begins to picture him as the father of her children.
Here we must avoid going off the deep end about wives who forget that these fathers are still their
husbands. In passing, however, no husband should allow himself to be maneuvered into the sole role of
fatherhood to the expense of his position as husband. He is first her husband before he is the father of
her children; and his wife should not be permitted to forget it. The masterful husband bears no
resemblance to the prize resident of a stud farm.
Children bring new sacrifices and a deepening of love between husband and wife. They also bring
added responsibilities and problems. If a young man is looking forward to these problems as being
almost insurmountable, he should choose a wife of different religion and culture, different outlook on
life and social position. Even when parents have the same principles of life, minor disagreements over
the raising of the children are inevitable.
We would be carried too far afield from our subject matter were we to enter into a consideration of all
the complexities of raising a family. One idea the man of the house must never lose sight of, however.
He and his wife living in harmony are the parents who raise their children. The children do not raise the
parents. The husband is primarily responsible that this crazy derangement be not found in his home.
The day when children were seen and not heard, docile and reverent to parents is a thing of the past.
Perhaps our parents and grandparents were a little too stern. In relation to their children they meant
business, and there was little horseplay. The pendulum has swung to the other side. Now parents listen
with docility to the self-expression of their offspring and wait obediently to satisfy the children's
slightest whim. These days many parents think that one of their principal functions and duties is to
entertain their young. Supervised play is the watchword. The child becomes a little tin god and service
must be rendered by doting parents.
Should parents have a moment of sanity and question the absurd situation in which they find
themselves dancing to the tune of their children, chances are a Brownie Leader, a District Chairman of
the Boy Scouts, or a Supervisor of the Marshmallow Girls will call on the erring and delinquent
parents. The confused parents are quickly straightened out with the profound question, "Don't you
know that the children of today are the men and women of tomorrow?" Face to face with this startling
truth the parents bow their heads in shame and promise the infallible youth leader that they will be sure
to come to the next Cub Pack meeting and tie knots with little junior.
It is a pretty confused and bamboozled father who allows some self-appointed youth leader to enter
his home and ladle out such humbug. So much nonsense is heard today about the causes and cures of
juvenile delinquency. Scouting can no more prevent delinquency than soda pop can prevent worms.
Soda pop will never take the place of good bread, butter, meat, and potatoes in the bringing up of
junior. Scouting will never take the place of the home in the making of a God-fearing citizen out of
junior.
The masterful husband wisely never altercates with his wife in the presence of his children about
discipline. Also, he knows that mothers have a tendency to raise their boys as little girls. Children need
a father; and boys need him like they need nothing else. This fact becomes painfully apparent when the
father of a young family dies. The boys so often flounder. Either they get too much control or not
enough. So many situations arise where the father must give the proper balance in regulating the boys'
activities. Mother love can become too protective. At times a father has to come to the rescue of his
boys, loosen the apron strings, and let them run as boys must.
In the matter of raising the children, as in so many other phases of marriage, the husband must
contribute common sense and reason. Let us concede that a man, in comparison to a woman, is
immature in the question of emotions. He cannot skip rope with her in the intangible things of the heart.
But the human being is a rational animal--sometimes. In family life there are situations demanding a
rational approach. Here is where the husband should deliver. Of the two he may not be the "brain." Yet,
the husband is expected to keep his feet on the ground and prevent his emotions from upsetting his
judgment.
There is a silly idea abroad in some circles that a strong man should be devoid of emotions. A man has
feelings and can be hurt; but, because he is a man, he will not let his emotions lead him into any
prolonged course of action.
Some women seem to think that their husbands should be too big for any such thing as hurt feelings.
Any dumb bunny who has ever experienced the exhilaration of love knows different. The deeper a
husband loves the more susceptible he is to being hurt by his wife. A real man does not, however, nurse
his hurt. He swallows his pride and looks to the future. Some one has said that the difference between a
sinner and a saint is that a sinner has a past, and a saint has a future. This is a man's true greatness--not
in not being hurt, but in healing up quickly.
11. TESTING
"One, two, three--testing. One, two, three--testing." Most everyone at some time or other has been in
an auditorium where a microphone was being readied and tested. The familiar "One, two, three"
informs all present that their attention is not being sought. Only a half-wit would call out "Fire" in
testing the microphone. A stampede might ensue.
A practical joker might even get into trouble by announcing, "The first to reach me will be awarded a
fifty dollar bill." Some old codger might break a leg in the rush.
Danger often accompanies testing. Test pilots lead a precarious life. During my days with the Air
Corps I became friendly with a test pilot. One day he asked me to go up with him. He wanted to put a
plane through its paces. Maybe it was the heat of Arkansas. I went up with him. We flew around for
awhile; and when my friend began stalling the plane and sort of popping the wings, I became
concerned and asked him what he was doing. He casually replied, "I'm testing the wings. If they stay on
for this they'll take anything." I casually swallowed my tongue, reached for my rosary, and decided to
see a psychiatrist the minute I had feet on the ground.
When married people test each other--their love, their loyalty, or their honesty, their marriage is in
danger. Often, without realizing it, they are subjecting their marriage to undue and senseless stress.
One wife, in talking over with me her marriage problems, admitted that she had made the mistake of
testing her husband. Married less than a year, she felt that her husband was more attached to his mother
than to her. One day she decided to test him.
While the couple was at his mother's for Thanksgiving, the young wife feigned a dizzy, sick spell just
before dinner. She requested that her husband take her home to their little apartment. She had made up
her mind, if he refused or even tried unduly to persuade her to lie down at his mother's, that he loved
his mother more than her. He would rather stay with his mother.
Unaware that a plot was brewing, her husband did the natural thing. He persuaded his wife to lie down
in one of the bedrooms where she would be quiet. "Please take me home, John, I feel terrible," she
pleaded.
"We had better wait, Hilda, if you feel that badly. The long ride will do you no good now. Rest here
awhile. You haven't had a thing to eat all day--I'll bring you something a little later. Maybe you'll feel
like eating something then."
Hilda let him go back to the dining room convinced that her husband was a little mama's boy. She had
tested her husband and had found him wanting.
Not too many husbands have ever admitted to me that they have made similar outlandish and arbitrary
tests of their wives. When a marriage counselor is at first surprised to hear from a husband how
important some little incident was, he should suspect that the husband was testing. To him the petty
business was very important because it was a test of his wife's love and affection.
When I pressed a particular husband to give evidence that his wife no longer had any affection for
him, he finally cited an incident. "Oh, my wife is too busy or tired to have much time for me. Last
summer was a good example. At last I had saved up enough to take my wife and children to a lake for a
few weeks."
"After practically nagging her for several days, she came down to the beach and sat a few minutes
with me."
"It was important to you that she spend some time with you on the beach."
"Well, yes," he began to open up. "She used to spend whole days with me there."
"Oh, you two had been to this lake before?" I encouraged him to continue.
"Many times before we were married. Those days she was nature girl herself. 'Let's go in the water,
John,' and 'Show me how to float,' and 'Don't you just love it here on the beach, John?'"
"You feel that she was different last summer, that a change had come over her?"
"Of course! For a long time before the vacation last summer I felt that she was drifting away from me.
Always too busy, always too tired. I thought if we went back to our old lake, things would be the same
again."
I kept the story rolling along by asking, "How did she spend her time at the lake last summer?"
"Not with me. I could have done cartwheels the length of the beach. She wouldn't even leave the
cottage. Before, all I had to do was dive off the pier, and she thought I was Beach Boy himself."
"Oh, no. She just fussed around in the kitchen up at the cottage. Meals and dishes, naps for Nick, and
diapers for Bunny. She had to monkey with some darn sewing. Part of the time she just lolled around
the cottage."
The picture became very clear as he continued to talk himself into some realization that he had made a
mountain out of nothing. His wife had acted as thousands of others would have. She busied herself
during the day, confident that she was promoting a wonderful vacation for the children and her
husband. For herself she was content to take it easy for a few hours in the comparative quiet of mid-
afternoon.
Actually, of course, she would have been more appreciated by her whole family had she chucked the
dishes at times and cavorted on the beach. Obviously, from her husband's narrative she would have had
him standing on his head for her had she taken some interest in their activities on the beach. By no
means, however, did she dream that her husband was testing her.
One cute feature about this testing between husband and wife is that only one plays at the game. The
non-playing member of the club goes blithely on his or her way, unaware that the other is playing a
lonely and losing game. The better games of life require at least two players. Playing it alone usually
brings disappointment.
No one could blame John for feeling a little put out that his wife did not join him on the beach. His
memories of their past good times at the lake made it all the more difficult to accept what he considered
a cold, indifferent attitude toward him. But to make her absence on the beach a proof of her lack of
affection was far- fetched. This wife could have pointed to dozens of activities as evidence of her love
for her husband.
I suppose all who have been in love have worried themselves at testing. If the silly business is carried
on to any extent, it is a sure- fire way to unhappiness. Frequently the tester becomes so concerned with
the repeated failure of his wife to measure up to his arbitrary test, that he himself becomes remiss in
evidencing the love and affection his wife expects.
The arbitrary nature of testing seems paten, to all except the one testing. "If my wife runs wild all
night with a neighboring man, if she stabs me in the back as we lie in bed, then she doesn't love me."
Anyone would concede this. But what about the following examples of testing? "Unless my wife has
strudel for dinner, unless she sews that button on my overcoat soon, unless she wears those earrings
tonight, unless she comes running over to me when the orchestra breaks into 'Tea for Two,' I'm positive
that she no longer loves me."
With five small children on her back she may go days without even thinking of apple strudel, much
less get around to making it. As for the "Tea for Two" test, her Uncle Pete took care of that one at a
wedding reception. Pete knew when he had hold of something good and insisted on finishing the dance.
Moreover, neither she nor Uncle Pete knew that testing was going on at the moment.
The man who marries should be something of an adventurer, for marriage has all the elements of an
exciting and even dangerous undertaking. It is little wonder that even the least imaginative of young
men become nervous and apprehensive as they pronounce the marriage vows.
Discovering the North Pole is a minor adventure compared to taking on a little lady "for better, for
worse, in sickness and in health." What are the perils of a jaunt to the North Pole compared to a march
to the altar?
The rich man sets out for the North Pole well-equipped and with his route all marked out for him. Yet,
he is considered, and with some justification, a bold adventurer. The young man enters marriage with
trust in God and confidence in himself and little else besides. He faces the unknown and is undaunted,
because he is an adventurer at heart.
All things else being equal, the adventuresome will be more successful in the married career. The
adventurer is not obstructed by too many preconceived ideas. Men like La Salle and Father Marquette
canoed down the Mississippi taking each bend in the river as it came. They had not made up their
minds that beyond each bend there lay in ambush a savage tribe of Indians. Although they knew that
they wore their scalps lightly, they were of a mind to meet situations as they developed.
One man was driven on by a vision of empire, the other was impelled by a love of God and the
salvation of souls. Both had courage to face the unknown because they had knowledge of themselves
and the task at hand.
It is expected that a man entering marriage have many preconceived notions as to what his life with
his wife will be like. In great part the actuality will be much different from the pre- marriage dream
picture. His spirit of adventure and ability to accept the unforeseen will prevent disillusionment and
discouragement. With his wife he makes a new life by living each day as it comes. The young husband
must be an optimist and have a firm belief in the Providence of God. In his daily prayers one line of a
song finds prominence. "For tomorrow and it needs I do not pray. Just keep me for today."
If Father Marquette had worried overmuch about the difficulties and mortal dangers ahead, he never
would have put his canoe in the Mississippi. He would have quickly and fearfully turned back to
Montreal. Because he trusted in God and thereby became an adventurer, he met his destiny and made
history.
The young groom likewise stands on the threshold of the future known only to God. His is the
thrilling adventure not only of discovering new worlds but of creating them. He does not fritter away
the present in worry over the future. With his young spouse he establishes a new family and thus
creates in cooperation with God a new little world all in itself. He becomes the head of a new basic unit
for which empires exist, upon which empires stand or fall. In the true and eternal sense he makes
history to be correctly and fully evaluated only in the next world.
As the husband joyfully walks out of the Church with his bride on his arm, he has no idea where they
will be living a year, ten years, twenty years hence. What will their health be in five years? With how
many children will God trust them? Will the children be healthy or sickly? In what manner will he be
able to provide for them?
An adventurer exploring the upper reaches of the Amazon is faced with less uncertainties. And for this
reason alone the husband and father of a family leads a more exciting and interesting life, for the
unexpected keeps life from sagging into the doldrums.
The married life, if not an easy one, is full and satisfying. Especially is this true of the husband big
enough to accept the full quota of children God wishes to send him. Indeed, the having and raising of
children puts the greater part of adventure into any marriage.
The following story was told me by the father of nine children. It illustrates that his life had few dull
moments. Many years after the event he told me of his wild night. The tears of laughter and nostalgia
evidenced that the happenings of the evening were among his most treasured memories.
John, my oldest boy, was serving at his first Benediction at St. Mary's. I took him in our old Betsy,
because I wanted to be with him. Also, it was below zero, and I wanted to warm up the car in case I had
to run Alice to the hospital. She was expecting our fifth any moment.
Before services John appeared all decked out in his cassock and surplice to light the altar candles. He
did all right at first but then bogged down. For ages he struggled with one candle. Mentally I was
sending up all sorts of suggestions and encouragement. Finally, another boy appeared and likewise
failed. Then the young assistant took over. Later on I learned from John that some little imp had put
water on the wick.
On the way home I could see that John was duly impressed that being an altar boy was no simple
matter. No sooner had we entered the house than Alice yelled for help. This was it.
Why Alice ever had an obstetrician on tap I'll never know. When Alice was to have a baby, she didn't
fool around. I should like to see a Doctor try to stop Alice from having a baby. This time she carried
things a little too far, or, as you will see, not far enough.
I staggered out to the car with Alice and what I was sure must be the heaviest unborn triplets in
medical annals. With Alice on the back seat I pointed Betsy toward the hospital and took off. St.
Christopher had a wild ride and didn't do his reputation any harm. As Alice was giving birth to
Kathleen, I almost crashed head-on. It took several blocks for my heart to drop down out of my throat.
Alice had to fend for herself.
I rushed Alice into the hospital with the baby on her lap. I'll never know what happened to me
between our home and the hospital. But then the whole works seemed light as a feather as I skipped up
the stairs.
After a few hours I felt I had better get back to home base. Alice and Kathleen had cut up enough for
one night and were sleeping peacefully.
I opened the front door and walked into smoke. What now? Apparently this was going to be my big
night. I ran to the kitchen to see a red hot pot belching smoke.
John, feeling his oats a little, had made himself some cocoa. He forgot to turn off the gas. I almost
dashed upstairs to ask him to keep his pyrotechnics for the altar candles. I thought better of it, though,
and sat down to relax with a glass of milk. After all, things, though coming fast and furious, were
working out pretty well--I thought.
An insistent banging on the front door could not be ignored. Mrs. Jones, the next door neighbor, stood
there in her night gown fearful and pleading. Could she come in? Joe was on another drunken spree.
Once before this had happened. But then Alice was home and took her in for the night in spite of my
reluctance to become embroiled. What if Joe comes barging over? The fire in Alice's eyes answered
that question. She would slay him with one look.
This night I didn't have Alice to hide behind. I hesitated just long enough, and Mrs. Jones was inside. I
should have been ready for it, because once a crisis for a woman is over, she collapses. She did-- right
in my arms. I could see Joe's face in every window. In his befuddled condition he might not have
understood. Soon she came to and spent the remainder of the night on the living room couch.
Mrs. Jones' presence in our home was a blessing in disguise. The next morning she made breakfast for
the children and held the fort while I went over to the hospital and phoned Granny.
Romance
Our discussion of Romanticism will have little appeal to those who regard marriage as a practical
arrangement of convenience. For this group only the visible, material things of life are of concern.
Because they live in ignorance or denial of the spiritual and unseen realities of life, anything romantic
is quixotic and silly.
It has been said that for some men marriage is a situation in which they acquire housekeepers and let
them think that they are partners.
No wife can derive happiness from the task of washing dishes just for the sake of having clean dishes.
The dishes then become her master, and no child of God can be happy a slave to anything.
I knew a wife who was a good cook and housekeeper. Her husband died and so did her interest in her
home. Well-cooked meals and a clean, tidy home? For what? Her husband was gone. She had no heart
for these things any more. Her heart was far away with him.
One day during the first month of her loneliness she began preparing a dinner as was her wont. Before
she was half through, she broke down crying. Through habit she had begun a task which had lost all
purpose. She had never cooked for herself or merely for the sake of cooking.
Obviously this husband had regarded his wife as much more than his cook and housekeeper. She had
been his wife whom he had treasured above all else in life. He was an ordinary, solid citizen with no
outstanding gifts or abilities. He had to work hard to support his family. Just one of the thundering herd
now buried away and forgotten by most. He lived on, however, in the soul of his wife, because he had
lifted her up out of the drab, humdrum, menial tasks of a wife. He had put her on a pedestal. It seemed
that the more she was made to realize that she was his queen, the more delight she took in doing the
many necessary, menial tasks for him.
As a laboring man he was unable to build her a mansion and surround her with finery. He wanted to
do these things for her, though; and for her that was what counted. She knew that she was no ravishing
beauty; but she felt like one in his presence.
When a man is in love he becomes imaginative and fanciful. When a man looks at the sky above
Jerusalem or the Mediterranean Sea and thinks of the blue eyes of some one, he is in love. When he
dreams of her as an angel, he is in love. When he looks at her and wonders how God can be more
beautiful, he is in love. When he stares at a necklace of blue diamonds in a showcase and sees them
around someone's neck, he is in love. Should he ever give voice to these thoughts, he is considered too
romantic by his friends, not by the object of his love.
A wife blessed with a romantic husband knows his worth. I am always afraid that a woman who looks
down her nose at romance has never been loved or has never been capable of recognizing, accepting,
and responding to love.
Romance springs from the spirit of chivalry, gallantry, love, and religion. The more religious a man,
the more conscious he is of the image of God in his fellowman. When he is in love with a woman and
looks into her eyes, he is sure something of God is there. When a husband tells his wife that she is
divine he is being romantic. Silly, some would say. Not in the least. Indeed, he is being down right
factual, since God does dwell within her. Reminding her of this fact does her no harm. Unless she be a
lump of dough, she becomes godly. Since God is beauty, she partakes much of the beauty of God.
Unless a husband romances his wife on occasions, he can have no idea how beautiful she is. He has
no idea what he is missing. The nearest thing to a vision of God he can have in life is the love light in
his wife's eyes. (Some lads never light the light.) All he has to do is to tell her how beautiful and God-
like she is. Plain though she may be to others, to him she becomes beautiful with the unearthly beauty
of love.
Toads, billy goats, and jackasses are incapable of romance. They are concerned only in filling their
bellies and propagating themselves. Lacking a soul, the billy goat sees nothing in the eyes of his mate.
He has no way of comprehending beauty.
A husband can see more than the mere sunset. He can see God in the beauty of the color and cloud
formations. Because he has a soul his comprehension is not limited to the material. He can grasp the
spiritual, the unseen realities of life.
The eyes of his wife are not merely organs of vision, like the eyes of a rabbit. They are the gateway to
heaven, avenues of light guiding him to the source of all goodness. He knows that God is good, is
beautiful, is desirable. He has seen it in the eyes of his wife.
The romanticist is in touch with reality, the reality which evades the so-called realist. To dwarfs big
men seem exaggerated. To the realist, grasping only the appearances of things, the romanticist seems an
exaggeration. The romantic man is accused of being carried away by his imagination. The romantic
husband is carried away--not by imagination--but by his wife. And she is very real, not because she is a
bundle of skin and bones, but because she is a temple of the Holy Spirit.
To expect the irreligious to be truly romantic is like asking the blind to appreciate the Milky Way. A
girl who marries an irreligious man should never complain of lack of appreciation. If he does not
appreciate God, how can he value her, how can he understand her true worth?
"My husband act romantic?" wails an innumerable chorus of wives. "Should he ever, I would take his
temperature, unless I had already collapsed. I wouldn't know how to act; the shock would be too great."
These men, on being prodded, claim that they love and appreciate their wives. "She knows that I love
her and appreciate her. Need I tell her all the time?"
Why of course not, Jerkus Majerka. You devour her meals without complaint, wear her carefully
ironed shirts, and accept her wifely affection magnanimously. All this tells her how much you love her.
You would be a redundant fool to express by word your love and appreciation.
The Sun, Moon, and Stars glorify God. But it takes a free agent with intellect to give full praise to
God.
Well-cooked meals, ironed shirts, and a multitude of solicitous endeavors attest to a wife's worth. Yet,
it takes a husband to praise her for all these efforts. Mute husbands, all their fine qualities
notwithstanding, leave their wives empty and frustrated. An occasional verbal recognition would buoy
them up. A little romancing would set them sparkling with life.
Young ladies on the look-out for a husband must not ignore in a young man the qualities conducive to
romance. From a chivalrous, gallant, and religious nature romance springs. Unless a girl awakens a
spirit of romance in her fiance, she well may question his love.
Should she have definite proof of his love, she still should realize that she may be taking on a partner
lacking a complete and well- rounded personality. Appearances may be deceiving. A girl may misjudge
an utter lack of imagination for stability, stupidity for manly aversion to being over-demonstrative, lack
of affection and sympathy for respect and virtuous reserve. So often before marriage girls mistake
virility, initiative, and get-up for wildness. A young man is not necessarily bad because he is alive, nor
good because he is lifeless.
Weak young men do not become fireballs merely because they have pronounced the marriage vows.
Young men too dull to be romantic before marriage will seldom bubble with enthusiasm over their
wives. Some people are incapable of getting excited over anything or anybody.
Enthusiasm
In evaluating young men for marriage young ladies should not overlook an important factor for
success--namely, enthusiasm. Give me the boy, the young man capable of enthusiasm. He will go
places. Only those who "eat and sleep" golf become Ben Hogans. Only those who are carried away
with mathematics become great engineers. Success in any walk of life is preceded by an all out
preoccupation.
The enthusiast, the "fan" is as capable of as he is unaware of sacrifice. The boy who is bitten by the
fishing bug will get out of bed before dawn and labor all day in anticipation of landing a fish. He loses
himself in his interest and is unmindful of all the inconveniences incumbent on his pursuit of the
denizens of the deep. If he falls in love with golf, he will abandon his dull bed in the middle of the
night to reach some city public golf links before the early morning crowd.
For the successful husband-to-be, give me the boy capable of these youthful enthusiasms. When the
right girl comes along his native enthusiasm is transferred to a more worthy object. His interest in
running after golf balls slackens, not because he is becoming a sluggish and dull boy, but because he is
now in hot pursuit of something close to God--certainly a very good image of God.
He has other fish to fry. Lakes and rivers are a thing of the past. Now he buzzes around his lady love
like an excited bee seeking a flower's nectar. Everything about her interests him. Day by day she
intrigues him more. Like a puppy dog he feels like running in circles for sheer delight in contemplating
the pearl of great price he now possesses.
He worships at her shrine and would be surprised to hear that he is self-sacrificial in his service.
Because he is carried away in his enthusiasm over his wife, his marriage, his whole family, he has
forgotten himself. All his interest being outside himself, he is too excited over his job of being a
husband to count the cost.
If a job is worth being done it is worth being done right. One sure and easy road to failure in any
vocation is the penchant for daydreaming of other possible fields of activity. Often the grass seems
greener and more lush on the other side of the fence. A person with his mind on the other side of the
barbed wire will accomplish little on his own side.
A carpenter droning along with regrets that he did not become a doctor or business man, will be a poor
craftsman. The carpenter who is interested in and proud of his work will be a happy man. Dissatisfied
tradesmen as likely as not would be misfits in other walks of life. People are content and happy in their
work because they have given it their full attention. They are not distracted by every will o' the wisp.
Husbands can best become enthusiastic over their great calling by attention to details. Absorbed in the
many facets of his full and even exacting life, the happy husband has no time for picturing himself in
any other role but the one he is playing with his own wife and set of circumstances.
Enthusiasm does for a husband what a spark plug does for an automobile. It gives get up and go. If the
plug is fouled, it fails to fire. If a husband is beset with the "blues," seldom does he accomplish
anything worthwhile. Mired down in melancholy, a man is useless to himself as well as to others. These
black nights of the soul come occasionally to most of us. The unhappy moods are generally the result
of too much introspection and self- concern. The best remedy is to do something for someone. By
getting interested in someone else the victim of the "blues" escapes from himself and shakes the black
devils riding his back.
The husband mooching along with the "blues" is no bargain for his wife. His heavy and lugubrious
mood casts a spell of gloom about the house. While in this sad state a man has no spirit and enthusiasm
for anything. He mopes around feeling sorry for himself. Should these black moods reoccur frequently,
a husband may well examine his conscience on selfishness. Likely he is the center, the sum, and total of
his little orbit.
All know what is meant when a football team is said to have spirit. Without this spiritual quality a
good team can easily stumble into defeat at the hands of an inferior team all fired up to take on giants.
It would seem that a husband should readily come by enthusiasm. Love and enthusiasm promote each
other as one hand washes the other. How can a man love a woman more than life and not be
enthusiastic over her? Love is of the essence of life; enthusiasm is its manifestation.
Make believe is a favorite pastime of children. "Let's pretend we are in school," LaVerne says to her
playmate. "I am teacher. You are the bad girl who never does her home work. Now, Pati, I must speak
to your mother."
Little boys can amuse themselves by the hour playing games based on illusion. The timeless game of
cops and robbers can keep them banging away and tearing around the yards and streets for hours.
When a boy grows up he puts aside the things of a child and much of his make believe yields to the
exigencies of what is commonly called reality. No one would expect him to keep on playing at cops
and robbers after he has grown up and thrown in his lot with the cops or the robbers. Whether or not he
ends up in maturity on the side of the cops, one thing is, unfortunately, generally true--he has lost a lot
of his imagination and poetry. Forced to concentrate on concrete, material things to keep roof over
head, his sensibility to spiritual realities is dulled.
As a child his vision was clear. He could drop into poetry as readily as Silas Wegg. He could perceive
that the material world about him was not essential but only the stage setting for the real conflict of
good and evil. Heroes and villains and their struggles were the sum and substance of his stories. He
lived with his stories because they always carried a moral.
The young do not beat around the bush. Their faculty of coming quickly to the point can be
disconcerting to those jaded by the pretenses of life. Children accept and live the age old fairy tales and
stories because they are reality, are the exact representation of life.
It took Chesterton to point out that the story of Cinderella is the same as that of the Magnificat--
exaltavie humiles. Also, "Jack, the Giant Killer" is a chivalrous lesson that giants should be killed
because they are gigantic. The story is a call to arms against pride as such.
When a child grows up and trades in his fairy tales for so-called realism, he is in for a very dull and
unreal existence. There is nothing exciting about hearing that Johnny opened a door. There is
something exciting about hearing that Johnny opened a door and saw a dragon. A child of three can be
thrilled by the mere opening of a door, because all of life is so new and interesting. Once a child begins
to grow up he wants to know what is behind the door. He knows that a dragon could be behind any
door, because evil usually hides behind doors.
When a person becomes too blase or senile to accept fairy tales, life loses interest because he can no
longer go back to the wide- eyed amazement of a three year old. As Chesterton again remarks, only a
baby could read the realistic novels without being bored.
A boy making believe that he is Jack the Giant Killer or Casey at the Bat may be sneered at that he is
in a dream world. Of course he is in a dream world; but it takes a live human being to dream. Sticks
and stones can not dream. It takes a live dreamer to raise dead sticks and stones into castles in the air.
So when a child relives the fairy tales, plays cops and robbers, or improvises his own make believe he
is not escaping from reality. He is escaping into reality, from the dead material world into the reality of
the living spirit. His make believe is an act of belief in the kingdom of the spirit. The soul with mind
and imagination and memory functions in this world.
It is a real tragedy when the boy grows into manhood, becomes a husband, and loses the faculty of
making believe. With his nose to the grindstone in earning a living for his family the young husband is
in danger of losing his inner spark and animation. Life becomes a dull, lifeless, materialistic affair
without inspiration and joy. Engaged in providing his family with the material necessities of life, he
feels that he has no time to make believe.
His children, if he gives enough time to them, can be his salvation. In playing with them he finds it
easy and natural to get back to make believe. Once again he can play-act. As long as his energies hold
out he can ride the open range with little junior as his cowboy. In reading to his son many of the fairy
tales of his own childhood, he lives them again with a deeper appreciation of their sound philosophic
and ethical content.
His son does not question why Cinderella must return from the ball at twelve. The joys of fairyland
depend on an "if." "If you do not say the word 'cow,' you may live in a palace of gold and sapphire"; or
"You may live happily with the king's daughter, if you do not show her an onion." To borrow again
from Chesterton, all the tremendous things given depend upon one thing forbidden, like an apple, for
example.
Should junior ask why he could not show the king's daughter an onion, his father might well reply,
"why should you have the king's daughter at all?"
The father too pompous, too preoccupied with the problems of his work, or too grouchy and self-
centered to enter into the make believe of his children is missing a lot of life. By taking part in their
make believe he will be rewarded with even more happiness than he gives to his children. Likewise, he
will be more capable of responding to his wife's efforts to play-act.
Many wives are always too tired--between the ears--to make believe. Of course, a little imagination,
poetry, and get-up are necessary. It is easier just to squat and watch television. Any husband, blessed
with a playacting wife, needs his head examined if he discourages her in these attempts at make
believe. A grumpy "Be your self," or "Act your age" is enough to put any wife back in her shell.
When a wife is spritely enough to take off with the exaggerated air of the current movie queen, her
lucky and wise husband goes along with her mood. "Tom, do you think this skirt does anything for
me?" Grace asked as she jumped upon her bedroom chair and struck a fetching poise characteristic of a
hopeful young film starlet.
"Why Grace," Tom responded, "it'll whip your public into a lather." Then, assuming the air of a movie
director, he began yelling orders to various imaginary technicians. "Quiet! Now lights, action, cameras.
Let's get this shot perfect."
All the while Grace was flashing a smile of gracious acceptance of adulation from her vast following.
"That was perfect, Grace. Now let's go over that scene in 'Scalawags' where you are terrified by the
escaped convict, Black Jack Dalton. Remember, you are alone in a remote farm house. Your husband is
off somewhere punching cattle."
"I'll play the part of Black Jack and then your husband coming to the rescue. You must manage an
expression of deep terror. Black Jack threatens to kill you, unless you show him the hidden money. You
pull all the stops as you plead with him to think of your little babies."
As Tom stepped out of the room to muscle up a terrible, desperate Dalton-like look, Grace readied
herself for the ordeal. When Dalton entered the bedroom Grace threw herself at his feet, and emoted,
"if you cannot consider me, think of my little babies without a mother."
This stopped Black Jack. In fact, as he looked down into the piteous eyes of Grace, Tom could not
stifle a broad grin of amusement. His little girl really could act. "Dalton must have been a cad not to
have been softened by such eyes," Tom complimented Grace. "But take courage, Grace, your husband
is galloping to the rescue. His sensitive nature sensed that you were in danger. Already the road is
smoking behind him as he lashes his pony without mercy."
"Your husband worships the ground you walk on," Tom informs Grace, who is now looking at him
bug-eyed. "Prepare yourself emotionally for the terrible scene of mortal, hand to hand conflict between
Dalton and your husband."
"When your husband bursts into this room he is the embodiment of fury," Tom continues. "He could
tear tigers apart with his bare hands. What chance has Dalton? But you are not concerned with Black
Jack. You fear for your dear husband. For this scene best you kneel upon the bed here with your eyes
toward heaven praying for your husband. Your hands are crossed thus upon your breast. That's fine.
Now keep that position and expression while I get over here and take care of Dalton."
Tom gave Black Jack a few licks and then felt that he had better check and see if Grace was properly
placed for the camera. As he pretended to determine if Grace had sufficient lighting, he gently kissed
her and whispered with mock seriousness, "I'll take care of that scoundrel in a moment."
With effort Grace maintained her attitude of imploring heaven for help. Her head was tilted back, and
her lips were slightly parted. Her eyes were wide open and becoming a little moist.
It took Tom many return trips to finish off Dalton, because he stayed with him so short a time. He
spent more time going back to kiss Grace, who was none too anxious to put an end to the new game
Tom had come up with. In fact, there was nothing unusual about the way Grace's and Tom's efforts at
make believe developed. Their make believe generally got side tracked somewhere along the line with
Tom forgetting his part. He seemed to get confused or distracted with the way Grace looked, with her
eyes, with the blue in her eyes.
From the standpoint of the finished story, the scene nailed down with a crashing climax, Tom was
often found wanting. Frequently he took liberties with the script and tossed in a kiss or two. This would
not have been too detrimental to the smooth flow of the story they were acting. But for some reason or
other one kiss usually led to another. Grace always became glassy-eyed and oblivious of time.
Indeed, make believe by Tom and Grace generally led to a frightful waste of time. If they did not go in
for make believe so much, Grace could have drummed around hours more in the kitchen and Tom
could have stared at many more TV horse operas.
The conclusion to all this should be obvious. No staid young married couple should resort to make
believe. It is unbecoming to them and they have no right to experience the joy and gaiety of little
children playing at make believe.
The Skibo family was just about ready to sit down to its evening meal--that is, if ten year old Dolly
would ever get the table set. Between an exchange of punches with her younger brother, Billy, and a
few sorties into the parlor to tease her older brother, Andy, the silverware was slowly finding its way to
the table.
As Mr. Phil Skibo walked into the kitchen, home from work, Mrs. Skibo was fully occupied. With her
hands she was juggling several steaming pots over the stove. With one leg she was maneuvering her
two year old Nick away from the hot oven. Her rising tone of voice gave sufficient warning to Dolly
that she had better finish setting the table.
Phil welcomed his wife's preoccupation as an excuse for ignoring her. He picked up Nick and sat at
the table.
"Good evening," Silvia directed at her husband in a tone of voice which said three things--you didn't
kiss me or say hello when you walked into the kitchen, you look grumpy, you can jump into the lake.
Phil's "Good evening" was easily recognized by his wife as, "And the same to you."
So supper got off to an unauspicious start. War broke out between Dolly and Billy, who was not
interested in beef stew. He was chuck full of cookies and candy.
The young master of the house, Andy, sensed the ice between his parents; but it worried him none. He
had seen these freezes come and go. He was more absorbed with the stew and plans to duck out of the
dishwashing. His best opportunity came during dessert while the father of the home was laying Billy's
soul to rest over some infraction of table etiquette.
"Andy, come back here," his mother called. "Who excused you? When your father and I finish dessert,
you can begin clearing the table."
During the meal practically all the conversation involved the children. How often the presence of
children at the family table provides the safety valve, giving some relief to the pent-up and explosive
tension between husband and wife.
Silvia made one attempt to engage her husband's attention. Phil pretended to be more distracted by
one of the children than he really was. He definitely was giving his wife the cold shoulder treatment.
The male ego was still smarting from his wife's refusal of the night before. She had been too tired, not
in the mood.
"Well, I'm too tired this evening to chit-chat with you," he said to himself. Phil would have resented
the imputation that he was giving in to the hurt child's strategy of tit for tat. Yet, he knew that he was
guilty of the silly business and was as vexed with himself for showing his hurt pride, as he was
resentful against his wife for upsetting him.
No one appears to good advantage when he is doling out a tit for a tat. Realizing this, the adult will
not show his hand as openly as a child giving in to tit for tat. When confronted with a mean display, the
child will generally retort, "Well, he did it to me." A husband with any self-respect would be ashamed
to admit that his actions were the result of an effort to get even.
Between husband and wife tit for tat may develop because they are human and love each other. A
slight, real or imagined, an inconsiderateness, or even ill-temper, can easily be taken in stride from a
stranger or casual acquaintance. Because they are in love, they can be hurt by each other more than by
any one else. This is particularly true, if they are trapped in the vice of pride.
Since pride is at the root of all sin and is the great destroyer of love between human beings, husbands
and wives must guard against the vice. Thomas-a-Kempis points out, a humble man cannot be hurt. The
actions of the proud are sufficient testimony that they go through life nursing injured feelings.
If any husband wastes time brooding over real or imagined slights from his wife, he had better
investigate the virtue of humility. Life is too short to be frittered away in the negation of tit for tat. The
practice does not necessarily lead all the way to the divorce court. Yet, it is a strain on the family tie and
can destroy a marriage.
Just the other day a couple talked to me about their planned action for divorce. Neither has the
slightest cause for divorce, even under the lax legal justifications. From the day of their marriage they
have acted toward one another like mean, savage little children. They never would have dreamed of
treating their business and social acquaintances the way they galled each other.
"Why in the world would you leave the house at five in the afternoon, go to a movie, and return at ten
in the evening?" I asked this estranged wife.
"Well, he does things like that to me. He didn't come home for dinner the evening before."
With him it was the same story, although he was not as honest in admitting the child's play of tit for
tat. It seemed that most of their waking hours were spent in getting even with each other. They were not
half-wits, and they must have known the end result of their manner of living. The devil is where he is
today, not because he was dumb.
Some years ago I had a case which illustrates how a married person stooped to tit for tat to the extent
of cutting off his own nose to spite his face.
When I talked to the unhappy wife, her husband would have nothing to do with her. He was through.
The case aroused my curiosity for the simple reason that the wife seemed to be all that any lucky
husband could want. She was exceptionally attractive to the degree of being beautiful. She was gifted
in many ways and sparkled with life and personality. She indicated a sincere desire to do anything to be
reconciled. She admitted that she had been more at fault than he.
"Now I realize that I was a total loss as an inspiration to my husband. I nagged and prodded him the
first years of our marriage."
"About his job. I was a silly, ambitious creature. I guess I was even ashamed of him--I mean the job
he had."
"He was some sort of assistant construction superintendent," she answered vaguely. "He came home
in overalls looking like a common laborer. Jim is intelligent and had a good education. I felt that he
could do better. Now I realize that Jim knew what he was doing. He was learning his business from the
bottom up."
"You felt that he was on the bottom of the ladder, so to speak?" I encouraged her to continue.
"I didn't think he ever got up out of the foundation, the way he looked when he got home. My laundry
was a pile of blue work- shirts and overalls."
"Did he ever confide in you what his ambitions were?"
"Yes, in the beginning. He asked me to have confidence and patience. Our day would come. I was a
vain little fool and failed him as a wife. I wanted a white-collar man like the neighbors."
"I suppose you felt that there wasn't much glamour to your marriage," I suggested.
"There wasn't any glamour, companionship, or any thing else. And I'm afraid it was mostly my fault."
"Why?"
"Well, Jim was either dead-tired after working all day in the open air, or he worked at blueprints and
specifications till the cows came home. We drifted apart first in understanding and then in interests. My
dissatisfaction with him was ill-concealed. Instead of inspiring him and building him up, I looked down
my nose at him. I must have hurt him terribly."
"I really don't know. Resentful over my early lack of interest in him, his job, and its problems, he told
me nothing as time went on and success came to him."
"Do you think the present situation between you and your husband could be described as one in which
he is punishing you for your early errors?"
"Exactly."
"He sports the most expensive Cadillac and maintains an apartment in the Edgewater Beach Hotel."
"Yes. He keeps up the mortgage payments on the home and gives me the meager expense account we
had the first years of our marriage. Frequently he brings over expensive toys and clothes for our little
daughter."
When I told her that I felt that he still loved her, she replied that she would like to have some evidence
of it.
"He is still interested in you," I wanted to reassure her. "He would much rather have you sharing his
good fortune. But you did not help him. Now he is punishing you and having a miserable time of it
himself. I'll admit that he is more concerned with nursing his hurt pride than with promoting love and
happiness. Once he sees the futility of this childish tit for tat business, he should be ready to come back
to you. Be sure that you leave the road open for him. In fact, you had better get down the road to him
more than halfway before it is too late."
Any human being can be off-color momentarily and succumb to tit for tat. It is another thing to play
the part of a hurt child habitually, as was evidenced in the case above. Competitive sports are
wonderful for boys and young men for many reasons. The character of a young man will evidence itself
in the stress of competition. Vindictive characteristics will soon manifest themselves in the give and
take of baseball, football, and basketball. If he is a poor sport and cannot take it, as we say, he is
thereby a poor prospect for marriage.
If young ladies could observe their prospective husbands in competitive sports, they would have no
better opportunity of separating the men from the boys. And the demands of marriage are not for boys.
14. COMPANIONSHIP
The funeral was over. Mr. Peters and the children were trying to establish as normal a home life as
was possible without their queen.
The shock of his wife's death had left Mr. Peters numb with grief. The exigencies of the wake and
funeral past, he was beginning to feel all the more his loss. When he walked into the kitchen, he
expected to see his wife, Kathy, standing at the sink. His memory began to work overtime. As he went
about the house trying to bring about some sort of readjustment for the children and himself, Kathy's
face was constantly before his eyes.
Except for his deep religious faith Mr. Peters' work was his best therapy. He wrote advertising.
Concentration was now all the more imperative, for he was behind in his work. Under pressure he
turned out the usual run-of-the-mill stuff. At heart, however, he was an artist. He preferred to mull over
an impression, a feeling until he could give it birth in concise words. His effort in this direction had
paid off well. He had to his credit one nationally known slogan.
Several nights after the funeral he lay awake searching for the right word to bring an elusive idea to
light. He was getting nowhere, so he tried to sleep. From habit he still lay on his side of the bed.
Restless, he tossed about. He stretched out his arm on the far side of the bed. After a moment his heart
suddenly jumped a beat, as he felt a pang which seemed to run up from his hand. His wife, Kathy, was
not there.
As is the case with most of us, Mr. Peters did not fully appreciate something until he had lost it. What
he missed most, now that Kathy was gone, was her companionship. If he could only hear again the
familiar sounds as she went about her work; if only he could see her face again, he would gladly give
away one of his eyes. During the first week of his loss he could not stand the quiet of the house after
the children were off to bed. He feared that he would go crazy.
Companionship of husband and wife is their greatest reward for living together in love. When two
people love they want to be in each other's presence. How or where they spend their time matters little.
Their peace, contentment, and joy is simply in being together.
Love of man and wife is no guarantee that they will not have problems, difficulties, and tragedies.
Sickness or economic strain may bring them anything but an easy life. Yet, neither the difficulties
inherent in married life nor any force from without should cheat them of companionship. Only if either
husband or wife fails to love will companionship go by the boards.
In "The Wife Desired" we considered at some length a number of causes for loss or at least a
diminution of companionship between husband and wife. Irresponsibility, suspicion, mother-in-law
situations, and other dangers to companionship were discussed.
Here we wish to avoid repetition. After all, most of the ideas treated in The Wife Desired are just as
applicable to husbands as to wives. However, the histories of happy and unhappy marriages are replete
with evidence as to how husbands have succeeded or failed in the all-important phase of marriage
known as companionship.
First of all, every husband should reflect on the accepted truism: "It pays to advertise." There is no
other way to bring a product to the attention of the public except through advertising. Once the product
finds wide acceptance because of its usefulness and fine quality, it still pays to advertise, lest the public
forget the particular product and turn to another.
A husband found a wife who wanted him because he advertised himself. Before marriage he put his
best foot forward. Often enough after marriage he went around with his foot in his mouth. Before
marriage he had enough sense to realize some of his shortcomings and unattractive characteristics or
habits. Carefully he concealed or subdued anything possibly offensive or objectionable to his future
wife.
From time to time it behooves a husband to take stock of himself. Has he fallen into any personal
habits annoying to his wife? Love overlooks many a fault; but it does not make sense for a husband to
drive his wife away by offensive traits and then wonder why she leaves him.
Suspicion and jealousy are dirty cousins. Often they sneak about roiling up the waters of matrimony
to the extent that smooth sailing in companionship is out of the question. It has been said that it is
natural for those in love to be a little suspicious and jealous. Then it is recommended that they be a
little less natural and much more supernatural. Suspicion and jealousy are vicious evils and have utterly
wrecked many a marriage. Because the vices are petty they should not be regarded lightly, any more
than vipers should be ignored because they are small.
A certain amount of possessiveness goes along with human love. But it must be remembered that it is
not of the essence of love. Some husbands act as though they own their wives, body and soul. An
owner-slave relationship is not conducive to companionship. Because his wife is pleasant and friendly
to all, this type of husband imagines that her quiver is open to every arrow.
Insecurity is at the bottom of most suspicion. An insecure person lives behind protective barriers out
of which he peers at the world with apprehension. Because he feels that he has something to hide, he
looks upon all as potential enemies bent on ferreting out his secret. The only companion and confidant
he wants is a good bird dog to keep him posted on the doings of those living in his little orbit.
Just as one virtue promotes others, vices in the soul of a man have a way of inviting chums to take up
residence. The suspicious and insecure are without generosity. They are so small that they could pole
vault under a dresser. Why a girl will marry this type of man is mysterious, unless she is unaware of his
personality.
A moody person is a difficult companion. At one moment he can be a jolly good fellow, full of cheer
and fun. The next breath he can turn into a touchy grouch. One day he is receptive of, even looking for,
visible signs of love--a hug, a kiss and so forth. Another day he is annoyed, ill-tempered, and even
repels his wife's attentions. He has to be handled with kid gloves. Moods are the result generally of too
much introspection and self-concern or a sin-troubled conscience.
A moody husband so often fails to contribute companionship. Also, he makes it difficult for his wife
to be a good companion. She never knows how to take him. Soon she sinks back into her shell and does
not take him at all.
Another characteristic of some husbands merits a few comments. It is sensitivity. There is a fairly
common misconception that the development of the virtues diminishes the passions. This is nonsense.
The stronger becomes a man's virtues, the stronger are his passions. For example, an increase in the
virtue of love steps up the sex passions. Likewise, a man in love is more sensitive than a man only
physically alive.
I am always amused to hear some one refer to a sensitive man in a derogatory manner. A head of
cabbage is not sensitive. Feeling distinguishes the human being from a clod of earth. Men driven by
love to the accomplishment of great deeds are sensitive men.
Obviously, all men must control their passions which are good but blind forces. A husband in love
should not be surprised to find himself sensitive. Because he is sensitive he is in tune with his wife and
makes a fine husband. Between some husbands and wives communication seems to end with the
physical. But it should not be surprising that between couples deeply in love there can be a
communication of spirit, a sensitivity of soul. A husband once told me that his wife could not approach
him without his sensing her presence.
Feelings must be controlled and properly channeled, however, otherwise they cause mischief.
Companionship of husband and wife can suffer, if a man lets his feelings run wild. If he becomes what
we call "over-sensitive," then he loses balance. He is in danger of magnifying any slight from his wife.
He may distort an innocent playful remark and take hurt, making a mountain out of a molehill.
The spiritual communion of husband and wife is the basis for a full and happy companionship. Since
conversation is the ordinary method of communication husbands must reflect upon its importance.
Because many husbands have to talk all day at work, they naturally yearn for moments of quiet and
relaxation at home. Because many wives have had no one to talk to all day except small children, they
are anxiously waiting for adult conversation with their husbands.
"Anything interesting happen at the office today, dear?" Ann tries to get the ball rolling.
Valiant is the word for Ann, so she gives it another go. "Well, Mark did the funniest thing today." Her
relating of the incident falls flat for want of a receptive audience. Now even Ann wonders what seemed
funny about Mark's escapade.
Perhaps Jim needs a shock to bring him around. "Ruth shot Duke today," Ann tries to startle Jim. No
response. By this time Ann gives up with the realization that her husband's mind is miles away or just a
comfortable blank. "Yes, by golly, she shot him full of holes with Kevin's Davey Crockett pistol."
A feeble "What's that" from Jim follows Ann out to the kitchen where she gets on the phone with Ruth
and chats over the day's doings. The phone conversation over, Ann pulls out the ironing board with the
feeling that she might as well do something.
I know of a husband from whom men like Jim might take a tip or two. This ideal husband has laid
down a strict rule that his wife do no housework after he is home, at least not by herself. Well and
good, if they work together on some project.
Some responsible husbands do not realize that there is more to their job than providing for the family.
A husband may do well in keeping his family in shoes, clothing, and food. Yet, his wife is starving. She
needs more than food to live other than merely biologically. She craves and requires adult attention and
conversation. Since he married her he has elected himself to provide all these intangible things every
bit as vital as food and clothing.
We do not discuss alcoholics, those irresponsible about support of their families, and psychopaths
unwilling to live with one woman. This book is for young men and husbands sincerely desirous of
making happy marriages.
The best-intentioned husband is fortunate who has never experienced an in-law problem. We should
say mother-in-law, for the reason that father-in-law problems are rare. This is one place where men can
take a bow. If husband and wife make it clear to themselves and to all degrees of in-laws and out-laws
that they come first to each other, no difficulty with outsiders can get out of hand. Confident of each
other, husband and wife stand together. Relatives fit into their lives--do not throw them into fits.
In-laws are high on the list of causes for unhappy and broken marriages. My own experience,
however, is that in most cases either husband or wife is immature and unprepared for marriage.
It has been well said that those who marry out of puppy love will lead a dog's life. Little mama's boys
and girls are incapable of more than puppy love. Bound to their mother's apron strings, these pitiful
creatures are unwilling to live their own lives. They are but an extension or projection of their
domineering mothers.
The man who marries an unfortunate girl of this type soon finds himself married to his mother-in-law.
Marrying a girl irrationally attached to her mother, a man makes the mistake of thinking that she will
free herself after marriage. Either he should be fully satisfied that his future wife possesses a
personality of her own, or he should run as far from her as possible, no matter how much he thinks they
are in love. The agonies of a number of acquaintances prompts the above advice.
So often these mentally and spiritually undeveloped mothers' darlings are, to all appearances, docile
and affectionate. Frequently of the blushing violet type, they attract strong men with protective
instincts. Enough said. On guard, men!
While the greater part of companionship of husband and wife takes place in the home, yet husbands
must realize that their wives need a change. Bound to the house day after day with little children, she is
in danger of going "stir crazy." Most conscientious wives in modest circumstances hesitate to ask their
husbands to take them out for an evening. First of all, no wife should have to ask. Half the thrill is lost.
No matter how meager their budget may be, a husband solicitous about the well-being of his wife and
anxious for her companionship will take her out now and then for an evening. The more limited his
means, the more the challenge to his ingenuity. Couples can have barrels of fun many places other than
in expensive restaurants and theaters.
Companionship in marriage has to be worked at; it does not just happen by chance. Its rewards are
worth the effort, as countless couples testify. That the effort must be intelligent is exemplified in the
matter of children.
Love for and care of their children, particularly while in the baby stage, promote companionship of
husband and wife. Two people converging on the same third thing are brought together. Their care for
the baby, their playful moments with the baby, their interest in its efforts to walk and talk--these and
many other mutual concerns deepen companionship.
However, if parents utterly spoil their children and raise little monsters, their own companionship
suffers. If children are ruined by their parents, they will pay back in like coin. In a family where the
children are raising the parents, the bickering can reach a deafening crescendo destroying all harmony
in the home.
Angelic little babies are potential little savages. It takes a lot of common sense and much doing for
parents to see to it that their children become civilized. Fathers who become the obedient slaves of their
children allowing them to call the tunes are a ridiculous spectacle. Cat and dog fights between the
children and between the parents are the result. Out the window go all order and peace necessary for
companionship of husband and wife.
Frequently estranged husbands and wives have made such statements as the following: "I stayed with
him because of the children;" and "We never did get along. The children are gone. There's no reason for
keeping a home and fighting with her."
For some reason or other these couples lost the companionship with which they had begun their
marriages. For years they drifted farther apart during the raising of the children. The children became
more important. They neglected themselves. Their marriages grew to be more of a convenience than a
mutually sanctifying union of love. Lacking each other they turned to the children in compensation.
To make such a mistake is to face a bleak, empty and lonely life without companionship. It is a sad
experience to see couples break up as they pass middle age and need each other all the more to fight off
the loneliness of declining years. On the contrary, what a pleasant picture an aging couple presents who
still has and appreciates each other. Time does not hang heavily on their hands. They fill the few
remaining years of their lives devotedly taking care of one another.
If a husband is lethargic, not vibrating with enthusiasm to do big things for his wife, I am inclined to
assume that the wife is to blame. She does not inspire. If a marriage lacks companionship, the husband
is at fault more often than the wife. Because of the circumstances of her life a wife and mother depends
for companionship more upon her husband than he requires her. He has more outside business and
social contacts.
Thus it is the lot of husbands actively to promote companionship. On their initiative depends success.
Alert husbands do not ignore the well-recognized practices conducive to companionship.
The role of a successful husband is not easily accomplished. One reason is that he must lead a sort of
double life. A third to half of his life is occupied making a living away from his wife and family. A big
portion of time left to him is spent at home sleeping. Precious little is left for his wife, his children, and
himself. How he uses these fleeting hours determines his success as a husband.
A person's capacity for pleasure of the senses diminishes with time. The spiritual rewards of
companionship increase as the years stretch out to the grave. Because these are two incontestable facts,
husbands and wives should pause from time to time and ask themselves where they are heading in the
matter of companionship. Are they allowing the pressure of circumstances and the hubbub of their daily
lives to cheat them of the full happiness of marriage?
An elderly widow once told me of a sort of pact which her husband made with her in the early days of
their marriage. "Our first baby," she related, "was a few weeks old. One day as my husband and I sat
next to the bassinet admiring our baby, he took my hands in his. 'Jane,' he said, 'God has given us
something wonderful here. I hope and expect that He will send us many more. They will steal away a
great deal of our hearts. We must expect some turmoil in raising them. As they leave us one by one,
they will take part of us with them. Because they will take our love with them, they will leave us with
more love for each other than we have even now. It's something like your nursing of little Jane here.
The more milk she takes the more you are able to bring forth. So, let's stay close together these coming
years and see the love and companionship grow with which we have begun our lives.'"
"As you should see," she smiled, "I had quite a wonderful husband."
15. LOVE
People are a nuisance who expect others to lead their lives, to have their arbitrary set of values, their
mode of living, their habits and hobbies. These people have little concept of living and letting live.
Others must jump when they jump, rest when they rest. I once had a pastor who thought that it was
outrageous to take a nap--unless it was the time of day sacrosanct for his nap.
Marriage is a difficult vocation because man and wife must lead each other's lives. They can never be
happy except through sacrificing their individual lives. Only love can turn the trick. When a man loves,
he wants to get right inside the other person. He wants to become a part of her, to lead her life, and to
know her secrets, her joys, her fears--in short, everything about her. For this reason all who understand
love should rush into the Catholic Church because of the Sacrament of the Eucharist.
A young man is less ready for marriage than a goat, unless he wants to live for the girl he thinks of
marrying. This concept of living entirely for his wife-to-be is not one for which he must struggle, like
the concept of being kind to boors and pests. Love is not just feeling kind toward someone. Love is an
overpowering thing, not a very comfortable thing. Out the window goes self. In comes someone else,
someone else's life, needs, likes and dislikes, prejudices and whims. No one plans for, works for, or
wants such a situation. Love gives no choice.
A young man looking for an easy, comfortable life has no business getting married for the simple
reason that love is not easy and comfortable. Love is not easy in the sense that it gives its victims no
ease. Love is an expanding and dynamic thing, hurrying the lover on to new experiences. Because God
is love, love is not static.
To love is to give and to give of one's self, of one's possessions. A person in love gives spontaneously,
recklessly, and without reason oblivious of the cost in time or money. The first thing a husband in love
gives is himself. Literally, he sacrifices himself. Because he senses the inadequacy of himself he
reaches out after other things to give.
The gift may be a rose, a kiss, a precious jewel, a fortune. What the gift is matters little. What matters
much is that the giver wanted to give, could not hold back from giving. The thought of solving some
social obligation never enters the mind of the lover. It may enter the mind of a time server, a sycophant,
or a jaded lover whose fire has burned out.
Is anyone thrilled by a gift which the giver felt had to be given? The "must gift" brings joy to neither
the giver nor to the receiver. "I must give my wife a gift for her birthday, for Christmas. I must give a
gift to the boss, to the janitor, to my mother-in-law." No one enjoys shopping for a "must gift." No one
is tickled to death getting a gift which someone felt he had to give to preserve appearances of love.
The giving of gifts is not supposed to cause pain. And it can be painful to receive a "must gift" from
one who once gave out of love. Perhaps the best test for the giver is the question: "Do I give this gift in
joy?" If the honest answer is that the whole business is just another job, why carry it through? Everyone
has given "must gifts" for some silly reason. And there was no fun in it. Everyone has given out of
love. And there was joy in it. If we can speak of measuring love, the joy experienced in giving is its
best and easiest measure. When a man begins to rush around in the giving of himself or something else
to a woman and has joy in the doing of it, warning signals should be flying. He is falling in love.
Because we were made by God to love and be loved, we should be able to overcome all obstacles to
love. The first obstacle to love and from which all others spring is selfishness. Love and selfishness do
not keep company. Love is spiritual and resides in the will. Simply, it is the desire to bring happiness to
someone.
Too many people think that, to have success in marriage, all they have to do is find the right person
who will love them, who will bring them the sweet feeling of being needed and wanted. No one wants
to be hated. To want to be loved is as natural as breathing. Yet, no man should confuse the receiving of
love with the active virtue of love. Being loved certainly makes it easier to love. All are inclined to
make some effort at loving those who love them.
A self-deception producing much discontent and unhappiness in marriage is the confusing of the mere
reception of love for the virtue of love. Generally the receiving of love brings a glowing pleasure. The
giving of love is accomplished so often in pain and suffering. Understandable, then, that so many seek
the former and shun the latter. Be it one of the mysteries of life or not, the receiving of love without
giving love brings no lasting happiness to man.
Also, just because a man finds a woman capable of love is no guarantee that he will reciprocate. How
many young men are void of love in the face of the sacrificing love of their parents?
The love upon which happy marriages is based comes from the soul of a man, not from someone else.
Many a marriage would be happier were the couples more interested in examining their own wills for
evidence of love. Many a husband frets and worries himself that his wife does not love him as much as
she should.
There is a tendency to expect too much of love. While no one is even alive, much less happy, unless
he is in love, yet love has its limitations in this life. There are too many flies in the ointment. Perfect
love and happiness can come only through final union with God. True, there are times when God
manifests Himself to us in a striking manner, and we seem to stand very close to Him in love.
No doubt these moments occur more often to the saints. Yet, to all men of any depth of soul these
visions of beauty must be experienced at some time or other in their lives. I hope that every husband
can look back upon some high experience of this nature.
Maybe he sat on some pier a hot summer night with the girl he loved and married. As they dangled
their feet in the water of the lake, they felt very near to each other and all alone. As they talked of
themselves, he must have told of what he was going to do for her, how he was going to care for her.
She turned her face to him, and then the heavens opened. What he saw he has never forgotten. He could
never put it into words. All he knows is that somehow God was there, and beauty and love.
Like the Apostles on Mount Tabor he can say that it was good that he was there. If he is much of a
realist, he knows that the evening will never be reduplicated exactly. Also, he is aware that he could not
remain forever on this high pinnacle of emotion. That is just not life. Down he must come into the
lowlands. Here love for his wife will grow through sacrifice. High peaks of ecstasy will reoccur; but he
cannot expect that they will be the everyday fare. Because love is of the will, it must grow and be
proven without the sensible joys which are the rewards of love and not the virtue itself.
Without doubt the spiritual and sensible joys so often following close upon an act of love promote the
virtue. Yet, they must not be confused with love. They are like a capricious little girl bestowing her
favors when the mood moves and withholding when we want them most.
Disappointment is inevitable for those who seek the rewards of love without practicing the virtue. No
one can expect to reap the harvest without plowing and sowing. If attention is given to working the soil
and planting the seed, the harvest will come in due time.
Many a husband has been disappointed in love because he sought himself in these sensible
experiences. He wanted his wife really because she was a reflection of himself. He did not seek and
accept her for herself, for what she was. His love was only possessive. He reached out for his wife to
receive and not to give.
16. SEX
When a nineteen year old girl golfer out-drives the average male "duffer," it becomes obvious that she
does so not because of power but because she has developed a high degree of control of her physical
assets. Success in any walk of life requires control of one sort or another. Baseball pitchers cannot be
without it, no matter what speed and "stuff" they may have. Wild and uncontrolled physical strength
lashes itself into frustration. The better women golfers, swimmers, and ice skaters can easily put to
shame the average strong male who has never coordinated his mind and physical potential in these
particular sports.
At the age of puberty a boy becomes aware that he has a new force within himself with which he must
deal. While he is intrigued with the mystery of it, yet he is not too interested in any prolonged and
rational explanation of sex. However, he does not have to be very old or bright before he notices the
pleasures connected with his developing sex powers. At once he is faced with the problem of control.
Will he control sex, or will it dominate him? Thus, at an early age, long before the possibility of
marriage the boy and young man are well on their way to an established pattern of sex behavior.
By the grace of God many a boy passes through the early stages of his sex life in complete control.
During high school days he is busy with school and sports. Already he has begun to appreciate the
cleavage between the sheep and the goats, is thankful that he started off with the sheep, and becomes
more determined with time to avoid becoming a goat.
Before he is out of high school he recognizes that the enslaved victims of self-abuse are the jerks,
nitwits, and spastics among his acquaintances. Their pitiful example is sufficient deterrence to him
from giving in to the sting of the flesh.
By their fruits you shall know them. As he grows older in years and experience he perceives that the
sex victim produces a rotten basket of fruit. Nor is he fooled by the intelligent but weak-willed and
Godless crowd. Hedonists do not first become followers of the philosophy of pleasure and then give
themselves over to the pursuit of sex pleasure. They first become the enslaved victims of sex pleasure
and then advocates of Hedonism in self-justification. A man must live with himself and justify his
actions to himself, even if he cannot to others.
During the last war I overheard one night in a barracks what I have always considered a remarkable
discussion. A half dozen officers were sitting around on their bunks listening to an old-timer relating
his experiences in France during the First World War. The speaker was one of the oldest and most
popular men on the air field, a real two-fisted old war dog. He had been a machine gunner and had been
badly shot up. Because of his deafness and age he had influence somewhere to be able to get back in
the Army.
As he related some of his experiences, a few good-natured hecklers kept interrupting him.
"Tell us about the French girls, Harry. How did you get along with them?"
After a few thrusts of this nature, Harry stopped for a moment. Off in the darkness of my cot I could
sense the sudden silence as a challenge to the storyteller. He met it in a way I shall never forget.
"Men," Harry's voice had that quiet, confident ring about it that indicated the truth and sincerity of his
words. "Men, sex is all in the mind. When I was a young man in France my mind was on winning the
war. I didn't spend myself on sex. I gave my whole being to Uncle Sam."
As the gab fest broke up, I lay in bed a long time thinking of these patriotic words: "I gave my whole
being to Uncle Sam." What a challenge to young men in their fight to control sex!
During the years before marriage a young man's sex urge becomes more insistent. An established
pattern of virtue behind him will be of great help during these difficult years. Moreover, he is beginning
to look ahead to marriage and is determined to present himself to the young lady of his choice a man
and no spastic. If ever in a weak moment he should sinfully waste his manhood before marriage, he
knows that it is one thing to fall in mud, another thing to grovel in it.
Because he has carried his fragile vessel with honor, he can stand before the altar with his bride a man
confident that he comes well- tested and prepared for marriage, not a dissipated shadow of one.
It is not within the scope of this chapter to go into the trials and tribulations of young lovers during the
days of courtship. Yet, a few comments are in order regarding the pre-marriage years of young men.
How many young, unmarried lovers during a night of trial have been spared an everlasting shame
because at least one of them kept hearing the challenging words sounding from the depths of his
troubled soul: "Did I not love honor more, I would not love thee so much."
One idea too prevalent among young men, if not among married men, we must pounce upon here and
attempt to expose for all its meanness. We could label it the double standard of morality. Some young
men are guilty of the hypocrisy of a double standard of morality--one for themselves and another for
the ladies. The one for themselves is not too exacting. It allows for an escapade here and there. The one
for the ladies is very exacting. It allows for no fooling around. Here all is serious business. What is
sauce for the gander is not sauce for the goose. Any moral laxity on the part of the ladies brands them
for life. When he looks in upon himself, his conscience is not so tender. He can see that mote in the eye
of his girl friend. The beam in his own goes unnoticed. For a sin of impurity she is regarded as a
woman of the street. He is more kind in judging himself.
The double standard of morality begins among the high school crowd. We are not referring to the little
morons without any concept of morality. First of all, they would never read these pages. No pictures.
We are concerned with the large group of young men essentially on the right side of decency. They
have accepted a high code of morality; but they may deviate on an occasion. Often the reason is poor
association.
Thus heavy petting, and sometimes worse, may come to be regarded lightly--just an escapade to be
expected of a young blade. Not for the girls, however. These girls quickly get a name, an unsavory one.
The double standard of morality is in play.
Boys and young men active in competitive sports generally appreciate the unsportsman-like attitude at
bottom of the double standard. Trained to play fair they cannot abide a cheat--even themselves.
One evidence of the male ego is the assumption on the part of every man that it is a foregone
conclusion that he could not possibly fail as a successful husband in the matter of sexual relations.
Simply because he is a male he knows that he must be the answer to every woman's prayer. Nothing
could be more false, as every marriage counselor knows.
The first reason why so many men are miserable failures or only half fill the bill in this respect is
found in the sad fact that a boy does not become a man simply by putting on a pair of trousers. Modern
civilization seems to assume that he does. Primitive societies rightly thought otherwise and had all sorts
of requirements, tests, and even ordeals which the youth had to pass through, before he was accepted as
a man.
The word vir meant much more among the Romans than a boy who had hung around until he became
twenty-one. Much goes into the making of a man; and high on the list is self-restraint. Holding back,
not necessarily forever, but at least until the right moment is as good a definition as any. Little boys are
not good at holding back. They jump at the first impulse.
Self-denial is the only exercise whereby the human will conditions itself for self-restraint. Hard,
grueling physical exercise is the only road open to a young man wishing to excel at football. There is
no substitute, no alternate route. Similarly there is no other way to acquire self-restraint except by self-
denial.
Some men envision marriage as the end of sexual self-denial. Nothing could be further from the truth.
A man entering marriage with such a false concept is in for an unhappy marriage, unless he quickly
adjust his thinking to reality. The privilege of sexual relations leaves plenty of room for the exercise of
restraint and self-denial, as every married man well knows.
This Chapter does not purport to be a treatise on the techniques of successful marriage relations.
Elsewhere plenty of material is accessible on this subject. The burden of the following pages will be a
discussion of ideas about sex which experience has shown to be important in the furthering of happy
marriage relations.
Many husbands are content and happy with their wives as regards sex. Other husbands are miserable
and frustrated. What ideas and attitudes have contributed to the happiness of the first and to the misery
of the second group?
In dealing with unhappy failures as husbands it becomes obvious that many other factors besides sex
contribute to their unhappiness. When all goes well between husband and wife as regards sex, then sex
is a small, if important, part of their lives. When there is a sex problem in marriage then sex is
magnified all out of proportion. Then the grievances of husband and wife over sex set up a constant
turmoil obviating a sane and dispassionate approach to all phases of marriage.
High on the list of stupid attitudes among husbands sexually frustrated with their wives is the idea that
marriage is the opportunity long awaited for sexual gratification. "I left him," an estranged wife once
indignantly proclaimed, "because he could think of nothing but sex."
"Didn't you enjoy sex relations with your husband?" I questioned her.
"In the beginning, yes. But then it became obvious all he wanted was a bed partner. I expected more
from marriage than that."
Husbands who are regarded by their wives as married only for sexual self-gratification should be
separated into two groups. The first group seems incapable of spiritual concepts and rightly merits the
low appraisal of their wives. Only the physical appeals to them, and they are over sex conscious. Self-
centered and seeking their own pleasure they cannot be happy in marriage. They have no concept of
making their wives happy. As a result they fail as husbands and are miserable for the simple reason that
happiness can come in this life only through making others happy. Husbands who regard this simple
statement as only a pious platitude are the sad evidence of its veracity.
Husbands in the second group are misjudged by their wives. These husbands truly love and thus seek
their wives' happiness. Yet, some wives gain the impression that their husbands are primarily interested
in them for their bodies. Actually, these husbands are in love with their wives' whole being--mind,
body, and soul.
"My husband," said the wife of a relatively happy marriage, "evidences affection, tenderness, and
interest only, it seems, when he wants relations. The rest of the time I might as well be his
housekeeper."
I felt that she was exaggerating. Still, it was obvious that her husband was missing the boat some way
or other.
In this business of being wanted physically by their husbands wives can be an enigma. The mentally
and physically healthy wife will contrive to be desired sexually by her husband. It would crush her to
find that her husband is growing indifferent to her charms. She glows with satisfaction in the
knowledge that her husband is attracted to her physical being. Does that put her in seventh heaven? Not
quite. And here is one of the many evidences that we can never be completely happy and satisfied on
this earth. Frequently she has misgivings that her husband is interested in her only for the sake of sex.
"Sure, when he wants me that way, he's a jolly good boy. But I'd like a little affection and consideration
at other times as well."
So, it does seem that if a husband wishes to arrive at happiness through the happiness of his wife, he
must accomplish two things. First, he gives evidence to his wife that she does things to him physically.
For most husbands this accomplishment is easy enough. Second, he must give his wife assurance, that,
should their sex life, God forbid, come to an end, he still would be her devoted lover. How to
accomplish this may well be left to the ingenuity of the individual husband. In various ways he must
prove to her that he is interested in his wife more than just for the sake of her body. Suffice it to say that
a husband in various ways can convince his wife of love and devotion regardless of sex.
One legitimate complaint of wives is that husbands have a tendency to think that sex can solve all
difficulties, all their own shortcomings. Even if a husband is blessed with a warm-blooded and sexually
eager wife, he deludes himself to think that all her needs end with sex. If a husband becomes remiss in
his support of the family, negligent of the children, and in general just a lazy gigolo, his best efforts to
please his wife in marriage relations w-ill begin to leave her cold.
J. P. could not leave the poker game at eleven P.M. with all the money in the game. So what did J. P.
do? Why, of course, he stayed until two A.M. and came home in the proverbial barrel. Was Mrs. J. P.
sore? Now you take it from there.
No one can be blamed for getting in the doghouse once in a while. The shame is in staying in there. J.
P. resolved to get out at once. What better way than to make love to his wife? That would soften her up,
he thought. Repelled as if by a buzz saw, he soon dropped off to sleep reflecting on the unaccountable
reactions of women.
There is no question but that many couples would find their marriages pretty hard going were they not
completely compatible sexually. But a husband is stretching his luck too far who thinks that he can be
indifferent to his other responsibilities because he is able to bring complete satisfaction to his wife's
emotional and sexual needs.
Likewise, a husband is egotistic and presumptuous to think that his love making is adequate
compensation to his wife for days on end of a grouchy and inconsiderate mood. When Mr. Bumkin
condescends to be pleasant and interested in his wife, she knows the hour is near at hand. He may think
that she is all aglow at the prospect; but her heart is not in the effort. A wife should be psychologically
conditioned for marriage relations. Hurting her by neglect or being selfish over some family decision is
not recommended as good remote preparation for relations. A sudden right about face and cozy
demeanor can raise suspicions that his change of attitude has an ulterior motive behind it, to wit, self-
gratification. At best, she merely goes along with him as a dutiful, but somewhat confused wife. In no
sense does she give it the old college try.
Many husbands are being cheated in marriage relations because their wives are prevented from
enjoying sex because of various misconceptions and phobias. In The Wife Desired we discussed some
of the more common causes for failure on the part of wives to be all God intended them to be. A
husband playing house with a so-called frigid wife should read the Chapter, The Wife Is a Physical
Being. The first step in solving a problem is recognition and understanding. Later on, we shall return to
the consideration of the problem of maladjustment in sex life where the cause is primarily in the wife.
For the present, let us consider the husbands themselves to blame for missing the fun God intended for
them in marriage.
It has always bewildered me to meet so many wives lacking any interest in marriage relations. Not
only can they take it or leave it; but they would just as soon leave it. How many husbands have I talked
with who complained that their wives seldom would concede to relations. When they did their
cooperation was at a minimum. Yet, I felt that these men had no one to blame but themselves. In some
way or another they had not filled the bill.
Many a failure at marriage relations has failed to recognize the importance of being gentle and tender
with his wife. It is the conception of savages, nitwits, and spiritual bankrupts that a real he-man must be
rough and callous. Frequently little boys who never attain the stature of real manhood and thus lack
confidence in their virility, hide behind a bluster of vulgarity and boorishness. All this fools few.
There would be fewer frustrated husbands, if they had enough sense to stop and ponder the
importance of tenderness. Few normal women can resist the gentle and tender approach. They gobble it
up gook, line, and stinker.
A wife cannot receive too much solicitude. She responds to it like a flower to the sun. However, the
loving care and attention does not begin a mere five minutes before the final act. Preoccupation with
self, cold disregard, and a sulky and gloomy disposition for days is poor preparation for relations.
Marriage relations are intended by God to be much more than an opportunity for the release of sexual
urges. The Man for Her sees to it that relations are more, much more for his wife and himself. In this
matter, as in every phase of life, we get out of any project just what we put into it.
If a husband seeks relations in about as prosaic a manner as he would order a humburger, he should
not be surprised that the experience falls flat for both. It is a very dull and unimaginative husband who
asks his wife for relations. The wise man knows that God made his wife to want intercourse as much as
he does. If a husband is all he should be, is respected, admired by his wife, and intrigues her, she will
easily be led along gradually to the anticipation of relations.
From living with his wife the wise husband knows to what stimuli she responds. Because she loves
him her affection can readily be aroused. Gradually she becomes spiritually and physically conditioned
to love making. Their little intimacies of caressing and fondling are their expression of love for each
other. Without necessarily intending or anticipating relations they are swept along to a loving and
passionate embrace culminating in the final orgasm of copulation. Spent, they rest quietly in each
others arms flooded with a deep and abiding gratitude for possessing one another.
So, it is not the sexual orgasm alone that makes a husband successful and happy. Any animal can have
that. It is the ecstasy of loving and being loved. Because God made us the way He did, sex cannot be
left out of the picture of love between husband and wife anymore than breathing can be left out of
living.
The full ecstasy of orgasm can be enjoyed only by those in love, because God made sex only for those
in love. Likewise, it is impossible for husband and wife to be in love and shy away from sex. If sex
does not fit naturally into the pattern of their love, they are abnormal. Likely as not one or the other is
nuts.
Many husbands are sexually frustrated because they neglect what may be called emotional
calisthenics. Frequently and for a considerable period of time a husband may not feel like any
emotional display--a kiss, a hug, and so forth. Because there may be no internal feeling, he may think
that any demonstration would be hypocritical. Such a husband indicates that he is more self- centered
than hypocritical. If he were more forgetful of self and more aware of his wife, he would consider the
possibility that she might appreciate, even need a little attention no matter what be his lack of feeling at
the moment.
Besides, just as muscles wither away for lack of use, so also spiritual faculties diminish and die
because of neglect. Emotional calisthenics are as much in order for husbands as are setting up exercises
for athletes. A little smooching now and then, even when the husband may not feel up to it, will go a
long way toward fostering in him and his wife the emotional seed bed whence can spring full-grown
love. Little signs of affection, a kiss or hug, are the best and most natural environment for a steady
growth of love between man and wife.
Regarding the actual moments of love making immediately preceding sexual climax, a husband
cannot ignore a few established facts. While he knows that all activity at love making is morally
legitimate, excepting only efforts at preventing conception, yet he abstains from anything repulsive or
even objectionable to his wife. Men who repel their wives in this way and then wonder why they are
not eager for relations are idiots. Here, of course, we are not referring to the sorry semblance of a wife
laboring under the impression that sex is unwholesome or shameful. Later on in this Chapter we shall
make a few remarks about this type of wife and how a husband can deal with her.
Successful husbands know that women vary emotionally and physically. Some are fragile and dainty.
Others are strong and even athletic. Some seem to have no nerves at all. Others jump at the mere touch.
It is the mistake of some young grooms to have preconceived ideas about their wives and how their
relations will be. They will have to explore, and they should be happy to realize that this exploration
can be an interesting and lifelong pursuit, for a wife is no shallow pie plate. She is as deep as the wells
of life. For this reason marriage relations do not become perfunctory and even stale for happy couples.
Most wives who have loving husbands and yet complain that they receive little satisfaction from
relations complain because they are very slow to arrive at their climax. These women require prolonged
caressing and love-making before they are at the point of climax.
These well-intentioned husbands fail to completely satisfy their wives either because they cannot
control themselves long enough, or they are ignorant of their wives' situation. How husbands may not
realize that they fail to satisfy their wives escapes the imagination. Yet, those are the facts disclosed in
the Separation Court, as well as in the confessional.
It would seem that if a husband is very solicitous for his wife's welfare, he would make it his business
to know how he is doing. It certainly is no feather in his cap as a man to frustrate his wife. Of course,
many a wife contributes to the failure by not indicating anything is amiss. Many wives seem to be
influenced by one of the silly "old wives' tales" that a wife simply does not allow her husband to know
that he fails to appease her needs.
The other group of husbands wants to do right by their wives but fail for lack of self-control. Love
making is scarcely under way when they get too excited to wait for her. Many of these are the little
boys who never learned restraint and self-control. It is not surprising that they are unable to contain
themselves as husbands.
So control is important to others besides baseball pitchers and golfers. It is just as much a requisite for
husbands. Boys and young men who have mastered themselves, all things else being equal, will be the
more successful husbands. Because a young man has begun his married life with little evidence of
control is no reason why he should be a jerk the rest of his life. A sense of pride in his manhood, if
nothing else, should bring him around to the ability to satisfy his wife.
Now we should consider the problems of husbands whose wives are giving them a hard time over
marriage relations. These are the marriages wherein wives are primarily at fault for creating a sex
problem where there need be none.
Space requires us to limit ourselves to those wives who have no excuse for being only half a wife.
Obviously, for example, a wife with constantly recurring vaginal tumors will merit the patient
understanding of any husband but a savage. The wife who makes her husband's life a Purgatory on
earth is our concern.
Husbands short-changed by their wives in this matter of sex will be more successful in their efforts to
bring their wives around, if they accept the problem as a challenge. Success will not come through
pouting, sulking, or feeling sorry for themselves. Some misconception or phobia is preventing their
wives from enjoying and wanting relations. Motivated by love to bring to their wives what they should
not be missing, these husbands have good cause for confidence in final success. These wives will find
it hard to resist, if they see that their husbands' concern over the sex maladjustment does not spring
from any desire of self- gratification.
Many of these disappointed husbands would be more patient, if they were aware as to how much
nature is on their side. Women were made by God to want relations just as much as men. Invariably the
reason for wives' being a trial to their husbands are mental and not physical. Therefore husbands must
help their wives cultivate healthy concepts of sex.
Many a young woman of the best family and religious background has made the mistake of carrying
over into her married life virginal ideas about sex. The marriage vows did not alter her aversion to the
function of sex as sinful, shameful, deplorable, and so forth. Perhaps she may even have had a warped
idea that sex in itself was evil.
If a girl was reticent, retiring, and an introvert personality, her husband will have to be all the more
understanding. One wife of these dispositions once told me that a few remarks dropped by her husband
put her on the right track the very first weeks of their marriage. "If you think sex is uncouth or
shameful aren't you bordering on the blasphemous? Didn't God make sex? You are right, and God is
wrong?"
"Thank heavens," she told me, "I couldn't get around his reasoning. I took myself to the confessional
and was further straightened out."
As of now this couple is most happy, has six children, and is still going strong. Replaced by true
concepts, the false ideas vanished and no longer could rob them of happiness. If a man's wife is beset
only by mistaken ideas about the propriety of relations, time and nature and God's grace are on his side.
A husband suffering through marriage with a so-called frigid wife has a more difficult job on his
hands. First of all, a husband should be aware that there really are no frigid women so constituted by
nature. God cannot be blamed. If, after a few years of marriage, his wife bears all the ear marks of
frigidity, she has brought about the unnatural situation. A husband trying to get at the bottom of such a
problem will do well to look for the solution outside of sex.
We are assuming here that the husband is not the cause. If the husband forfeits the respect and love of
his wife through irresponsibility in supporting the family, for example, it is little wonder that his wife
runs from relations. Many a wife has frozen up after a few children because she found no security in
marriage for herself or her children. Her life became a constant question as to how and if the grocery
money was forthcoming. Her husband was loafing or spending it on drink or the horses.
The most common phobia suffered by wives is a fear of children. Because of the sacrifices entailed in
bearing and raising children many wives choose the unrewarding and unhappy road of frigidity. They
never seek and seldom acquiesce in good grace to their husbands' desire for relations. They pretend to
be annoyed, pained, martyred, or disgusted by the whole business. Because these wives are
fundamentally selfish they would not change their stripes, were their husbands to come into a million
dollars and thus solve all their economic worries. Some other convenient phobia, such as fear of
childbirth, would arise.
The biggest separation of all mankind is into the selfish and the unselfish; and happy family life is not
for the selfish. If a young man marries a selfish girl with an eye cast to the material advantages of life,
he can expect trouble somewhere along the line. It frequently begins after the second child or so. The
difficulty may seem to be sex, but it actually is not. She begins to feel sorry for herself and fears that
life and its comforts are slipping past her.
Paradoxically, the selfish never seek the things best for themselves. They trade the substance for its
shadow. They would jeopardize and even sacrifice the happiness of family life for material gewgaws.
The spontaneity of their love is replaced by a studied and charted aversion to sex, all because children
deny her the material comforts of life. A husband can stand on his head in an effort to solve the
problem on the basis of sex. He will fail, simply because the difficulty is not one of sex. His wife's
trouble is mental, spiritual.
No one can give what he does not possess. A husband lacking a sound philosophy of life cannot
impart truth to his wife. If he is not conscious that he is a child of God and heir of heaven, that all his
activities have meaning only from the viewpoint of eternity, how can he rescue her from the pit of
weary, crass materialism?
A woman needs a husband even more than he needs her. She is not self-sufficient. In her husband she
looks for security for self and children. If her husband is always moaning about the uncertainties of his
economic future, he lends nothing to his partner's sense of security. If he scares the daylights out of his
wife by grousing continually about the difficulties of supporting and providing for the future of his few
children, how can he expect his wife to be spontaneous, unreserved, and uncharted in her love making?
He cannot keep his pie and eat it. He cannot expect his wife to spring into his arms, if he worries her
about the future.
He has as much control over the future as he has over the wind. By fretting about the future he loses
the present. He must put more stock in Christ's advice: "Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow;
they labor not neither do they spin. Yet, I say to you that not even Solomon in all his glory was arrayed
like one of these."
A wife looks beyond marriage relations more than a husband. She will carry the possible child. She
will deliver it, nurse it, and be its constant companion. Unless she is assured of the abiding presence of
God and the all-out cooperation of her husband, she may drift into unrewarding frigidity. If a husband's
strong confidence in God's Providence flows over into his wife and if he gets off his britches and does
something about providing security, he will have his wife's love making to his heart's content.
In these pages we have passed over birth prevention. Nor do we now wish to deal with the subject.
This Chapter is for men, strong- hearted men who wish to live the full life of marriage. Those who,
defective in some way spiritually or physically, feel need for literature on birth prevention must look
elsewhere.
17. RELIGION
Our appreciation of the genuine is accentuated when we are forced to put up with what became known
during the last war as ersatz. As the war machine ate up more and more materials, the search mounted
for substitutes. If a manufacturer was drastically restricted in his use of copper, he skimped or got by
with a substitute.
In Europe the situation was much worse than in our own country. Vividly I remember trying to drink
ersatz coffee while in France during the war. The awful concoction was rumored to have been made of
chicory and barley. Also, smoking a few of the local brands of cigarettes brought back poignant
memories of a boyhood fling at smoking dried corn silk.
As soon as the war was over and supply of materials began to catch up with demand, consumers
became more selective in their buying. No longer would they be satisfied with ersatz commodities.
You can fool some of the people some of the time, but not all the people all the time. All recognize the
source and truth of the statement. A quack doctor is soon found out. A thieving politician in time is
discovered to be no statesman and is turned out of office.
A man may be a great artist and yet live an immoral life. The outstanding baseball pitcher may be a
mean, uncharitable, and dishonest man. They are not fraudulent in their claims. The artist is successful
in his efforts at genuine creative work. The baseball pitcher is recognized by all managers in the big
leagues as the best in the game. Every manager would like to have him on his team. No manager would
want his daughter to marry the man.
Obviously a man may be genuine as an artist or athlete and a complete fraud as a husband. While
there are certain physical requirements, most of the requisites for success as a husband are in the moral
order.
Conceivably, a man may lie like the devil and yet be a capable farmer, carpenter, or what have you--
never a successful and happy husband. A successful financier may be the meanest and most tightfisted
man in town. Many are. No man with these qualities of soul can pretend to be a genuine husband. As
such he is a faker, just as much as a pretender at high finances ignorant of simple arithmetic.
A self-centered and egotistic man may be a successful business man. Possessing these characteristics
he will never make a woman happy, and therefore he fails to be happy himself. It is much easier to be a
successful man of the world than to be a happy husband. The mistaken idea is too common that any
jasper can be a good husband, while it takes character to be a real go-getter in the business world. The
divorce courts are ample testimony to the contrary.
No one would argue that dishonesty, lying, and immorality further business careers. Yet, it has been
heard that dishonest, untruthful, and immoral men have become leaders of business. No one has heard
of a dishonest, untruthful, and immoral man being a successful husband.
Our contention is that an irreligious man beset with vices has no right to offer himself as a husband.
He is not genuine; he is ersatz material for marriage.
Since religion is fundamentally a recognition of dependence on God, the irreligious man is not
genuine for the simple reason that he is masquerading as something he is not. He is not independent of
God. He needs God for his very existence, the breath in his body, the pulse in his veins.
When a man considers himself independent of God, it is not surprising that he acts independently of
his neighbor. If he brushes aside God, what is to keep him from brushing aside his fellow man? If he is
low-minded about God, he will be highhanded about man.
When people pick out irreligious partners for marriage, they are not gambling on the future. They are
betting on a sure thing-- trouble. Marriage is not another career like medicine, law, merchandising,
selling, or one of the skilled trades. Marriage is a vocation and dedication of one's self to a way of life
determined by God. A labor union specifies how a bricklayer lays bricks. God has ordained how a
husband uses his marriage bed.
In other words, marriage is not something thought up by man. It is an institution of God. It should be
no cause for wonder that those who pay no attention to God have no particular concern for the
preservation of the religious and sacred aspects of marriage.
Appearances are often deceiving. A young lady of no religion, or much worse, an apostate may seem
to be a fine prospect for marriage. The man who marries her, though, had better keep his fingers
crossed. As long as it is convenient for her she will live up to the moral demands of marriage. If her
husband becomes successful and rich and is the popular man about town, she may have little trouble,
for example, with fidelity. Suppose her husband turns out to be no bargain. Will she honor her marriage
vow: " . . . until death do us part?" Unless she is physically attracted to her husband, she is likely to
take the easy way out. Since she has no religious convictions to motivate her actions, she cannot be
expected to do other than what fits her convenience.
Another reason why the irreligious make poor husbands, or wives for that matter, rests in the fact that
the irreligious are a law unto themselves. The religious man recognizes a Power for good outside of
himself. He knows that he does not stand by himself. His recognition of God is the best antidote against
being self- centered. The irreligious man makes himself out to be God.
One of the medieval emperors after leading an irreligious life repented on his deathbed. Because of
his Godless attitude he had been a scourge to all who crossed his path. In preparing his confession he
summed up his evil life by saying, "My great sin was in trying to be God."
The husband who tries to be God is a little out of character. High on the list of those whom he fails to
fool is his suffering wife. The more a man tries to be God, the less he resembles God and less lovable
he becomes.
A much larger group of husbands would not want to be considered irreligious. These men express
belief in God, although they do little about it. Perhaps on Christmas or Easter they can manage a little
emotional jag. The practice of religion leaves them cold, because they are materialists. Spiritual
concepts elude them. Food in their stomachs, clothes on their backs, roof over head, and a comfortable
bed absorb all their interests. They are not opposed to church. Simply, they have no time for it.
"My husband," many a wife has exclaimed, "put me on a pedestal! Does he look upon me as a vision
of God? Are you kidding?"
The almost indignant disappointment of these wives is unreasonable. They married men whose
spiritual perception was nil. They never bothered to practice a religion, much less arrive at any degree
of closeness to God. If these men have no perception of the presence of God in themselves, how can
they be expected to see even a glimmering of God in their wives?
These husbands engage themselves in waistline thinking. Seldom, if ever, do they get up to the level
of their wives' eyes where God has a chance to look out at them. These men are long on the physical
and short on the spiritual. The physical nature of their wives intrigues them. Their spiritual side escapes
them.
"Inspiration!" exclaimed a wife. "I'm afraid I never got through to him with inspiration."
She should not have been surprised. Inspiration belongs to the spiritual order. Her husband was little
concerned with spiritual realities. He lived in the world of matter, and any brief excursion into the
realm of the spirit left him feeling uncomfortable and out of place.
This wife did not complain that her husband was without love for her. She acknowledged his
attraction for her. He was not without kindness and consideration. What she did complain about was the
degree and caliber of his love.
She wanted from him a glorifying love elevating her into seventh heaven. All her husband could
manage was a bargain basement variety letting her feel like a five-and-ten-cent store doll. Instead of
thinking of God when he looked at her, all he saw was something cute.
It would be just as ridiculous to maintain that the irreligious are utterly incapable of human love, as it
would be to say that those practicing a religion are necessarily suffused with Divine love. From long
experience, though, I am certain that those without God are very limited in their capacity to love.
On the other hand, we are painfully aware that we who practice religion are not always aglow with
love. I have the sad recollection of many unhappy husbands and wives who, though not on fire, yet had
not abandoned the religious practices of their youth. Perhaps they prayed in the same home and the
same church, yet they had failed to pray together and had drifted apart.
Too much unhappiness and too many separations and even divorces among church going people are
evidence that attendance at church alone is no guarantee of marital happiness. Religious people do not
miss the rewards of being level-headed, nor do they escape the penalties of being flat-headed.
Many couples in the flat-headed group have missed happiness because they ignored the natural and
psychological aspects of marriage. A husband may neglect complimenting his wife or he may pay no
heed to her emotional needs year in and year out. By never responding he may kill her efforts at
inspiration. His attendance at church in itself is not filling the void he leaves in his wife's being.
"Ann, you are getting to be an awfully bad girl," Jack teased his loving wife as they lingered at the
kitchen table. "You didn't make one night of the mission."
As Ann began sputtering some excuses, her husband got up from the table. "Well, I guess I had better
be on my way over to church. Tonight's speaker is excellent." Jack was good at play acting, and he put
on a smug, holier-than-thou face as he made for the door.
With a sweet, meaningful smile Ann countered, "Oh, don't worry, dear, about the dishes. They're a
snap. Baths for all the children will take only a minute. In just a matter of seconds I'll be lounging
around waiting for your return."
An hour later, as Ann busied herself with putting the children to bed, she fell into a serious, perplexed
mood. The mother of six children and a weekly recipient of the Sacraments she valued her religion and
felt that she was living up to it. Perhaps she could do more, though. Maybe she should have dumped the
children in Jack's lap every night last week and gone to the women's mission.
Ann was immensely proud of her husband and happy over the fact that he was not a half-baked
Catholic. His religion did not just go with his Sunday-best clothes. Yet, was his judgment perfect in
leaving her alone so much with the children? She would have enjoyed making the mission at least a
few nights the previous week; but she hesitated to impose on her husband. Last week he did not tease
about missing the mission.
"Am I too concerned with my job as wife and mother to the neglect of myself?" Ann asked the
reflection of her face as she stood before her dresser. Screams of conflict from the bathtub banished her
reverie. For the time being the questions would have to be unanswered.
This book was written because the author had seen too many couples of religious backgrounds
missing a lot of the happiness God intended for them. "Why should this happen to me," wail many
husbands over their broken or unhappy marriages. "I always went to church."
Either their religion amounted to church on Sunday and did not permeate and sanctify their everyday
lives, or they ignored human nature and some of the natural phases of marriage with which this book
deals.
Because it is folly for married people to ignore the natural helps and hindrances to love and happiness,
it is no less foolish to live without God. The great enemies of happiness in marriage, pride and
selfishness, cannot survive the true religious spirit.
The Man For Her is not a follower. He does not tag along after his wife in so important a phase of
marriage as the practice of religion. He is a leader who requires less back-seat driving in finding the
way to God than he does in getting home from a bridge party.
I am happy to say that I have known a great number of husbands who were more deeply religious than
their wives. Except for one or two psychopaths these men were wonderful husbands. Why wouldn't
they be ideal husbands? Their wives married these men because they saw in them the goodness of God.
Good always attracts.
Because these husbands continued during all their married lives to evidence and even radiate the
goodness of God, their wives loved them more as the years went by.
Frequently the very young ask whether true love can ever die. He who replies in the affirmative may
be regarded as jaundiced by the inexperienced. Yet, life teaches us that human love must be merited
constantly. Few human beings win and keep the love of others except by manifesting the attractive
goodness of God within themselves.
When a man is fortunate enough to come across a woman in life who is capable of sifting through all
his human failings and spiritual ineptitude and can find the beautiful image of God in him, is he not
some bumpkin to lose her love? He will cease to have her love unless he merits it. And who can say
that he merits love, unless God dwells within him?
The honest husband remains completely mystified all his life as to how his wife could ever have
begun to love him. Somehow, he knows, she must have seen in him a bit of God and therefore would
have nothing else in life but him. Unless a man be a vegetable, his wife's love for him makes him aware
of God. How else can he explain her love to himself?
"It is better to have loved and lost than never to have loved." The saying is true because no one ever
really loses when he loves. He has come closer to God and is a better person for his love, whether it be
requited or not. "It is worse to have been loved and lose the love than never to have been loved." This
statement is also true, because the love was killed by turning away from God. God was so shut out of
the soul that His image could no longer be seen.
The Christian husband who destroys his wife's love for him fails in a mission bestowed upon him by
Christ Himself. The love of Christian man and wife should be much more than merely their human love
for each other. Christ wishes their love to be a manifestation to the world of His love for His followers.
The cynical and jaded world can never scoffingly ask, "Where is God, where is His love?" For those
who have eyes to see, just let them look around. Husbands and wives evidence through their love the
love of the Shepherd for His sheep. Because man could never accomplish this by himself, Christ gives
to married Christians a special grace. With His sacramental help married couples have the ability and
privilege of showing Christ to the world.
Their love transcends the merely human and is identified with the divine plan of redemption. Christ
did redeem the human race nineteen centuries ago; but salvation is had today as His merits are applied
to individual souls. Christ did not love us only in the dim past; He loves today. Christ is not gone these
many centuries; He dwells with us today. How do we know? What is the sign or proof? The love of
husband and wife. Christian marriage, then, is a vocation. Husband and wife have been destined to
keep alive the knowledge of Christ's abiding presence.
When the Cana Conference broke up, I waited at the exit of the hall. I wanted to talk over some details
of a coming parish party with Mrs. Lewis. The last discussion period had been an unusually interesting
one, and the forty married couples were slow to leave the hall for the church where they would renew
marriage vows and receive benediction of the Blessed Sacrament.
The couples who attend Cana Conferences have always intrigued me. What fascinates me most is how
they react upon each other. The subject of family finances took up a big portion of this particular
Sunday afternoon. As several husbands and wives related their methods of keeping the wolf from the
door, various reactions were evident from facial expressions. A skeptical wrinkling of the forehead, a
knowing grin between a couple, a sidelong glance of a wife at her none-too-convinced spouse--these
and other signs gave some hint to what was going on in the minds of those present.
While I was musing over these various reactions and was forgetting to wear the martyred look of one
who had given up a Sunday afternoon game of golf, Mrs. Lewis appeared. As she was new in the
parish, I had met her only once before. She had the glowing health of a young mother expecting her
seventh child. Besides, she was beautiful.
As we began to walk toward the church, her husband excused himself. He wished to catch up with a
neighbor before he entered the church. In talking with her I made some remark which presupposed that
they had an automobile.
"Oh, but Father, we don't have a car. We're having babies now. Perhaps someday we'll have a car and
things like that."
What made these words all the more wonderful was the simple, casual manner of their utterance. She
was seemingly unaware of the tremendous thing she had said almost in the way of an apology. Only
now and then does a person say a few words which someone else will never forget.
As we entered the church, I wondered how some men deserve such wives. Mr. Lewis soon
unknowingly told me. And with his expression of love this little book comes to an end.
Mr. Lewis was waiting in the last pew for his wife. As she knelt along side of her husband she
whispered, "Did you think that I was lost?"
He leaned over slightly and replied, "You could never become lost in any sense of that word. God
would never have poured so much of His beauty into your eyes, unless He wanted you to come back to
Him."