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19

The Catholic Leader, April 22, 2018

www.catholicleader.com.au

Relationships + religion

Francine and Byron Pirola

are the co-au-

thors of the SmartLoving series. Visit www.

smartloving.org

for information.

by francine and byron

pirola

SOME years ago, we attended a Smart Marriages

conference in the United States.

One of the most memorable inputs was from Dr Bill Doherty, a

family therapist and author.

Over dinner, he engaged the audience in telling stories about

their relationship rituals, before unpacking how rituals work to

strengthen marriages.

It confirmed for us some of practices that we were teaching

couples in our SmartLoving seminars over many years about the

power of ritual in marriage.

Firstly, there’s a difference between a routine and a ritual.

Routines can be useful in keeping our lives purposeful and

organised because they bring rhythm and stability.

Routines simplify life by removing unnecessary decisions. For

example, if our routine is to make our bed and brush our teeth

each morning, we don’t have to think about it or decide whether

we will or won’t do those things on any particular day.

There’s no decision to make, no deliberation or weighing up

pros and cons – we just do it.

Routines like this example are generally a constructive contribu-

tion to our lives, but some routines might be a negative – such

as checking our Facebook feed when we get into bed which can

easily lead to us “falling down the Facebook rabbit hole” leaving

us tired and with post-event regret the next day.

Rituals are like routines with one important difference – they

have positive emotional meaning.

Rituals connect us with deeper values and with others by pro-

viding a focus or activity that enables us to interact together in an

enjoyable and meaningful way.

In a ritual, an action carries an intended meaning understood by

the others involved.

So while on the surface an action may seem simple, to those

who understand its purpose it carries added meaning.

Almost anything can become a ritual when we make the focus

our relationship.

For example, some couples check in with each other by phone

during the day.

It only becomes a ritual, though, if it is used as a connection

time rather than just an exercise in exchanging information.

In this way this simple action has added meaning and purpose.

Secondly, practical marriage rituals have important features that

distinguish them.

Dr Doherty identifies these essential qualities for successful

rituals:

l

They need to be time-limited so that the ritual doesn’t be-

come long-winded and thus avoided because we “don’t have time

right now”.

l

They need to have a clear beginning and end point so that we

know when we are in the “ritual space”.

l

Successful rituals are also linked to a natural trigger so that

remembering to do it is not required. For example, linking it to the

end of dinner or when we make a cup of tea.

l

Finally, it should be primarily about being personal with each

other and building positive connection. Rituals that get regularly

ambushed by difficult discussions will be avoided by our natural

fear of conflict.

Thirdly, every marriage needs Essential Daily Rituals.

These Essential Daily Rituals keep our marriages healthy and

vibrant.

They serve to connect us on a daily basis and build our sense of

belonging and of being a team.

A married couple with children is unlikely to have the opportu-

nity for uninterrupted personal time, unless it is ritualised.

It helps to have a regular gesture calibrated to some event or a

set time (as soon as the kids are in bed) that signals the ritual has

begun.

To maintain meaning, conversation should be personal and inti-

mate. Avoid logistics and problem-solving: the goal is to connect

at a personal level.

Also resist conflict items – this makes the ritual hard work and

one or both of you are likely to start avoiding it.

Finally, agree on an exit point (e.g. after 15 minutes), as open-

ended rituals are hard to sustain.

One of our daily rituals is our evening walking-talk.

We follow the same route each evening which avoids the un-

necessary tension of having to decide which direction to take. It

gets us out of reach of the kids (now young adults) and away from

distractions.

We can speak confidentially, catching up on each other’s lives

and we get some exercise – about 4000 steps according to the

pedometer.

Fourthly, to make our marriages truly intentional, an Annual

Review Ritual is incredibly valuable.

This practice is an opportunity to review how we are going,

share our dreams and set goals for the coming year.

Some couples ritualise New Year’s Eve or their wedding anni-

versary to connect with each other by reminiscing on the past year.

If they also use the occasion to make plans for their relationship

over the coming year, they will ensure that they stay connected

build a resilient and vibrant marriage.

Finally, an “I love you” ritual is also incredibly important – sim-

ple, playful habits that remind the other of our devotion.

Some couples write regular, even daily, love letters to each

other.

One husband will randomly buy a rose and put it somewhere in

the house for his wife to unexpectedly discover.

Another leaves post-it notes in surprise places like the teapot or

in her handbag.

What makes these seemingly simple gestures powerful is the

way that formative experiences work.

The things we most remember years or decades later are those

things that were associated with intense emotion – either positive

or negative, like the birth of a baby or the trauma of a car accident

– and the things that we repeated day in and day out, like family

prayers or getting ice creams after Mass.

Repetition of meaningful rituals is the way that we proactively

form ourselves and our children in the values that really matter.

But they take effort to establish and commitment to maintain.

Like most things in life, our relationship rituals decline with

time unless we actively choose to make them part of our life.

Apathy and indifference are the enemies of rituals, eroding them

as a river wears at the shoreline.

On the other hand, commitment to our rituals provides the glue

we need to stick together during the times of stress and the seasons

of despair.

So choose your rituals carefully and they’ll keep giving back to

your marriage and to your family year after year.

The immense power of ritu

al

Powerful:

“Like most things in life, our relationship rituals decline with time unless we actively choose to make them part of our life.”