As a Christian
marriage and family therapist, I have the privilege of seeing the “ins and
outs” and the “behind the scenes” of how things happen in many marriages. What
is interesting is that for all the diversity in the demographics of the couples
that I help with in my office, some key patterns exist in nearly all
relationships universally. One of those commonalities all couples share is the
way in which decisions are made.
While there are
many different aspects of how decisions are made in marriage, in this blog
post, I hope to help clarify an important distinction in regards to the degree
of involvement both spouses have in actually making the decision. The three
types of decision making I now present are:
1. Informing
2. Conferring
3. Deferring
When spouses use
the “informing” style of decision making, one spouse is likely just telling the
other what they are planning to do and basically just giving the other a heads
up. Some of the real examples of the “informing style” I have heard in my
office are, “honey, I’m going to be a few hours late tomorrow because I’m going
golfing after work” or “I invited my parents over for the holidays, consider
yourself warned!”. Now there is a lot of value in the “informing style”,
especially when you consider the type of direct, hopefully loving,
assertiveness it takes to inform another person about what, why, how, when,
and/or where something is going to take place. However, I have learned that if
a couple only “informs” each other about the different things in their life,
they usually become more or less like roommates who often are like two ships
passing in the night, not really coordinated towards a common goal or
direction.
The second style
I often see with couples is the “conferring style”. When spouses confer with
each other, they typically take an additional step to the “informers” and ask
their spouse follow up questions like, “what are your thoughts about my idea?”
or “how do we want to work together on this?”. Just like in a conference
meeting, the “conferring style” of decision making requires two individuals who
are willing to provide and receive information in a collaborative way that will
help them to arrive at a decision that is somewhat mutually beneficial.
Now, the third
style of decision making is what I consider the “deferring style”. I can always
tell when either or both spouses are using the defer method because either one
spouse will passively concede and give in to whatever their spouse just
suggested (or informed them about), or neither spouse is capable of making a
decision because both are stuck in an endless game of deferring which ends up
sounding like: “what do you want to do this weekend?...I don’t know, what do
you want to do?...I don’t know…” and so on and so on. Again, there is a great
value in being loving, considerate and kind enough to defer to your spouse on
both big and little decisions in marriage. However, as you can imagine, if a
spouse were to only defer, either it sets up one spouse to be the only one in
charge or else it is very unlikely that anything gets decided upon and often
leads to life just happening to them rather than the couple leading with
conviction and unity (see a future blog post about “deciding versus sliding” in
your marriage).
As you read
this, there is a high likelihood that you can relate to one, two or all three
of these styles….I know I sure can. The good news is that in a healthy
marriage, we truly need to develop the ability and wisdom of knowing how and
when to use all three. Thankfully, we are called to marriage not just for
enjoyment or convenience, but rather to be “trained in righteousness” (see
Hebrews 12:11) by a God that both began the Bible with marriage and ends the
Bible with a marriage.
Justin
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