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Marriage

The 5 Love Languages for Writers

Wed, 2015-02-11 07:43 -- Jocelyn Green
With Valentine's Day soon upon us, let's talk about love. Many of you know that I had the honor and privilege of co-authoring The 5 Love Languages Military Edition with Dr. Gary Chapman a while ago. Working on that book helped me invest in my own marriage in ways that I hadn't before. It also improved my writing when it came to developing characters and relationships. Now, I am not a romance novelist, but there is love in my books: between spouses, sweethearts, parents and children, siblings. So what I'm about to share can be applied to every loving relationship in your books, too. The love language concept is simple but profound: what feels loving to one person doesn't necessarily feel loving to another person. Dr. Chapman has identified five basic "languages" in which we express and receive love: Words of Affirmation Quality Time Receiving Gifts Acts of Service Physical Touch As you develop your characters, determine which of the above is their primary love language, and be consistent with that. If her main love language is Words of Affirmation, we should see her really respond when someone verbally affirms, encourages, and supports her. By the same token, harsh words will hurt her very deeply. If a heroine's love language is Acts of Service, for example, a bouquet of roses at the end of a hard day will not impress her nearly as much as if the hero would pitch in and clean the kitchen instead.  Love languages can spark romance or conflict, depending on how you pair them. Use them to ramp up the tension between two people. Conflict happens when two people do not express and receive love in the same way. In my book Yankee in Atlanta, Edward's love language is Physical Touch, but his wife has been abused in the past, which makes it nearly impossible for her to bestow physical affection upon him. Worse, when he tries to show her his love in the same way he wants to receive it (touch), it triggers negative feelings in her. Edward feels shunned and unloved, which erases his motivation to treat her lovingly. It's a vicious cycle. When a person feels unloved, it's very difficult to want to behave in a loving way, especially if that particular love language doesn't come naturally. In Spy of Richmond, my character Bella Jamison wonders how her husband feels about her anymore because their most recent conversation---months ago---was clipped and short. His deployment has thrust a gaping silence between them which grates on her more than it would if her love language were not Words of Affirmation. So when she sneaks into Richmond to find him a prisoner at Libby Prison, she longs to speak and hear words that will bond them together again. Here's an excerpt from their first meeting outside the prison where he is chopping wood: Light and shadow fought within Abraham's eyes, and he breathed in deeply. Bella could almost see the wheels in his mind grinding laboriously. Until finally, "I didn't ask you to come."   Bella tried not to stiffen. "I got things I need to say to you."   He picked up his axe, scanned the perimeter, but did not look at her directly. Nodded, and she understood that she was to speak, and quickly.   Bella wanted to be smooth and eloquent, when her nature was to be practical and straightforward. Perhaps a little too sharp. She wanted her words to sing to him, draw a smile from his lips. She wanted them to be a tender caress, a balm to his wounds of both body and spirit. But they were standing in an alley outside a Confederate prison, with the clatter of horses and merchants and shoppers rattling the very air about them. As the guard's voice raised itself over Peter's, Bella's speech was chopped to bits by Abraham's swinging axe, and he did not look at her as she, dressed as the slave she had once been, dropped pieces of her heart from her lips. Knowing Bella's love language helped me understand how excruciating this interaction would have been for her. As you develop the primary and secondary love languages of your characters, think about whether there is a specific reason those languages are meaningful to them. Many times, we long for the expression of love that we have gone without. Edward's longing for Physical Touch relates to the fact that his mother died when he was too young to remember her, and he was raised by a succession of nannies who didn't touch him any more than they had to. In the example from Spy of Richmond, we get the idea that Bella may not have spoken Words of Affirmation much under normal circumstances ("her nature was to be practical and straightforward"), but the fact that so few words had passed between her and Abraham during the war brought that need to the surface for her.  Perhaps a character who grew up with barely enough food on the table really appreciates the love language of Receiving Gifts now. Not every character's love language needs to be born from their personal history. My love language is Quality Time, and I can't imagine a particular reason for that. But as you get to know your characters, perhaps you'll make some connections that add to their three-dimensionality. To further explore the love languages, check out www.5lovelanguages.com or find a copy of the book The 5 Love Languages. You'll be able to draw your own connections to the characters you're developing--and your own relationships will benefit, too, I'm sure! 

Emotional Leftovers--and How to Take it Off the Menu

Fri, 2014-10-31 07:11 -- Jocelyn Green
My husband has low standards—for cooking, that is. As a bachelor, he often ate whatever he could prepare using a Mr. Coffee: Ramen noodles, macaroni and cheese, and his all-time favorite, Stove-Top stuffing, just to name a few of his specialties. His favorite food? “Leftovers.” Since we’ve been married, I’m proud to say he’s never eaten out of a coffee pot again, but he is still an enthusiastic supporter of leftovers, much to my relief. I serve them faithfully, at least once a week. I admit it. I am unashamed. But I have a bigger confession to make, and this one I’m not so proud of: the leftovers I serve don’t just come in the form of microwaved meatloaf or reheated rigatoni. More often than I care to admit, I give him my emotional leftovers, too. By the time he is done working for the day, I give him what’s left of me—and between household chores, home schooling our two children, and trying to meet writing deadlines in between, that isn’t much. It hasn’t always been this way. When we were dating and in the early years of our marriage, we saved more energy for each other. I stored up stories to share with Rob at the end of the day. I made an effort to be ready for him when he got home from work. Maybe this is the stage you are in right now, and can’t imagine it being any other way. But there will come a time when both you and your spouse pour yourselves into your day apart from each other so much that the evening hours are more of an afterthought than the highlight of your day. Watch out. Emotional leftovers are on the menu. And if they are the main staple of your marital diet, you will end up feeling more like roommates than soulmates. Now hang on a minute—before we go any further, I’d like to issue a disclaimer. One of the great things about being married is that you don’t have to put on a happy face and turn on your charm every time you’re around your spouse. We all have bad days, or quiet days, and that’s OK. If your spouse is having one of these times, try not to take it personally. Give a little space, and extend a little grace. When the bottom of the emotional barrel is truly empty, love each other anyway. Remember, it’s a choice, a commitment, not a feeling. However, having said that, we do want to guard against spending all our emotional energy on other people other than our spouse as our modus operandi. So what can we do about it? Try these suggestions to keep emotional leftovers off the menu: If something newsworthy or exciting happens during the day, think twice about telling and retelling the story several times to your friends or co-workers before you see your spouse again. With each retelling, you may lose a degree of enthusiasm—you will want to give more than a super-abbreviated, watered-down account to your spouse. Look for one thing every day that can make your spouse laugh, and share it with each other in the evening. If you have any control over your schedule, try not to do the most stressful tasks at the end of the day, right before you see your spouse again. That stress will easily spill over into your dinner time. When you are truly spent at the end of the day, tell your spouse. Then tell them what you need. For example, “Work was really stressful today, and I just need twenty minutes to myself to decompress. Then we can talk.” Or, as I often say to Rob, “I used up all my words on the kids today, so I’m sorry I don’t feel like saying much right now, but I would love to just listen to you share about your day.” If making dinner would really put you over the edge on a given day, pull out a frozen pizza or get carry-out instead. Some days it is worth the money to preserve your sanity so you can be emotionally present with your spouse. Using Facebook or Twitter to instantly poll friends when making a decision is extremely easy and gratifying. But before you do, take a moment to ask yourself if this would be something to talk about with your spouse instead. Surprise your spouse every once in a while with flowers, a favorite meal, or an impromptu date night. Recognize when your spouse needs a night for herself/himself. Virtually always, if you give your spouse the freedom to do whatever he/she wants one night (whether that’s watch a movie with friends, read a book in a coffee shop or simply go to bed early), your spouse will be able to replenish the emotional reserves tank and want to spend time with you again soon. Ask how you can pray for one another before going to bed each night. If you are perpetually serving emotional leftovers, be courageous enough to ask yourself if a lifestyle change is in order for the health of your marriage. Take a hard look at the stress factors and decide which ones you can decrease or eliminate. We all have days that completely drain us, so it’s inevitable that we will serve emotional leftovers to our spouses from time to time. But with a little intentionality to save some energy for the most important ones in our lives, we can keep our marriages fresh and satisfying.

Confessions from the Girl Who (Co-)Wrote the Book on Love

Fri, 2013-09-06 14:06 -- Jocelyn Green
AKA, What We Wish We Knew Before We Got Married by Jocelyn and Rob (the incredibly supportive husband) Green Our love story really isn’t very different from yours. We met. We hit it off. In a very short time, we knew we would end up marrying each other. We had a very intentional courtship, because when one of you is in the military, you seriously don’t have time to waste. Ten months later, we were married and—two days later—driving to Rob’s next Coast Guard duty station in Homer, Alaska. We had read a lot of books and done the premarital counseling thing, but somehow, The 5 Love Languages was not on the list. (Don’t ask me how this major oversight occurred. And don’t tell Dr. Chapman.) We wish it had been best kiwi online casino sites. The premise of The 5 Love Languages is this: 1.The things that make you feel loved may not also help your spouse feel loved. 2.You can learn to love your spouse the way he or she can receive it. But like I said, we didn’t really think about this. Here’s what happened. Read the full story here. [[{"type":"media", "view_mode":"media_large", "fid":"975", "attributes":{"class":"media-image aligncenter wp-image-1665", "typeof":"foaf:Image", "style":"", "width":"616", "height":"153", "alt":"5LLmil-MP for Web home page"}}]]
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