Great, great post Heather. I have to second every word of it. My husband and I will hit our second anniversary at the end of December, and the one thing that I would tell any new bride is what you've said here. We're always finding ourselves in crazy busy times, and it is really easy for me to fall back on the things I like to do when we have free time together. Intentionally spending time doing the things my husband likes, that made our courtship so amazing, makes our marriage work even better. I've seen what happens to couples that take separate vacations or spend their weekends apart - and it is NOT good! Thank you for your thoughts on this.
Oh no! Does this mean I have to climb Mt. Ranier with my husband next summer?! But I'm 5'2" and weak! I'll DIE.
I'm being facetious. Sort of. One of my husband's life goals is to climb a mountain, and he's planning on climbing Mt. Ranier next summer with some other guys. While women have climbed the summit, I'm not an athletic person, and I think it would be unrealistic for me to make that my goal. But this article does make me seriously reconsider participating in his training for it. For a while we were running together but that stopped because of my knee problems. I kinda just opted out of a shared fitness program because...I didn't have fitness goals (I like my weight - and it's a lot of effort to work out just for the heck of it). But allowing his altheticism to be his own interest, is something that I think I could easily change. As I think about how much more time we could spend together, and how much more I could get behind him in his goals and show him love, just by exercising (plus the added energy would be sweet this winter), it might just be motivation enough to do it!
my husband is really into hiking (and i sort of am too, though not to his extent- i often join my husband on easier hikes to spend time together. even if you're not planning on summitting mt. ranier with him, you can still "join" him in his pursuit. my husband really appreciates when i get excited about his planned adventures (even if it's just a guys weekend and i'm not invited). doing things like making trail mix for him, giving hiking gear as gifts, and getting him hiking books "just because" lets him know that i support his hobby. maybe just even telling him that you support his goal of hiking a mountain (even if you don't go on the hike with him) lets him know that you care about his interests. too often, us wives bemoan how much time our husband's hobbies take away from couple time. my husband's told me that it's really refreshing to be told: "i love you and i support you and i'm glad that you are going on an all-day hike with other guys." (just not every weekend, though
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