Ever Thought About Renewing Your Vows? Here’s How!

By Nina Callaway

In this world where divorce seems to be the norm, a couple managing to stay together through thick and thin deserves some celebration! If you and your spouse have made it to a significant anniversary, or you just want to have a “do-over” wedding, consider a vow renewal.

Reasons You Might Want a Vow Renewal

-You want to celebrate your 5-year, 10-year, 25-year etc. wedding anniversary

-You only got married legally before, and now want to marry religiously

-You only got married religiously before, and now want to marry legally

Your first wedding had some element of disaster, and you want a do-over

-You didn’t have much money for your first wedding, and you want a more elaborate wedding

-You got married with only a few people present, and you’d like to say wedding vows in front of lots of family and friends

You’ve had some rocky times in your relationship, and would now like to reaffirm your commitment to one another

-You think it would be romantic

A Bad Reason to Have a Vow Renewal Ceremony

-You miss wedding planning and want to throw another party. The focus of any wedding, but especially a vow renewal, should be the promises you are making to each other, and the sacred ritual of marriage, not the party.

How to renew your wedding vows

-The good news is, there are far less rules and dos and don’ts about vow renewal than almost any other kind of ritual. It can be as simple as the two of you alone in a beautiful spot reciting vows you have written, or a fancy affair with hundreds of guests.

First Steps

Just as with any wedding planning, you should begin by figuring out what style of ceremony/reception you’d like, deciding a budget, picking a date and finding a venue. Some couples who are older will have much more money than when they wed the first time; others whose parents helped the first time will have far less. The good news is that vow renewals are generally cheaper than first weddings, and with less rules on what “should” be done, you can really concentrate on the elements that are important to you.

How Elaborate Should a Vow Renewal Be?

The answer to this question lies in your own reason for wanting a vow renewal ceremony. Many people chose to renew their vows because they were so caught up in the planning and the partying of their first wedding, they felt the focus of the day was taken off of the ceremony. Therefore, most vow renewals tend to be intimate celebrations, with only close family and friends present, and a lunch afterwards at a nice restaurant. Others who didn’t have much money for their first wedding have very lavish ceremonies and parties afterwards.

Even if you want a big and expensive celebration, there are still a few things you should avoid:

Don’t have attendants. If you have children, you can give them a special role in the ceremony, but there is no need to designate them as bridesmaids or groomsmen. You may wish to invite your original bridal party and recognize them during the ceremony.

Don’t register for gifts. This is not the time to upgrade the china. Wedding gifts are to help a newly-married couple set up their household together.

Don’t throw bachelor or bachelorette parties. This is an obvious one – you aren’t bachelors or bachelorettes!

Who Should Lead the Vow Renewal?

Since presumably you have already done the legal marriage, this ceremony will not be legally binding. Therefore, you can ask a judge or clergy member to officiate, but you can also ask a friend or an adult child to lead the ceremony. For a simple vow renewal, you don’t necessarily need an officiant at all.

Vow Renewal Invitation Wording

If you are hosting it yourself:

The honor of your presence

is requested at

the reaffirmation of the wedding vows of

Sharon and Martin Jones

Saturday, March 25 etc.

Or

Please join us

as we renew our wedding vows and celebrate 25 years together

Sharon and Martin Jones

Saturday, March 25 etc.

If your children are hosting it:

The children of

Sharon and Martin Jones

Request the honor of your presence

at the vow renewal ceremony of their parents

etc.

Wedding Vows at a Vow Renewal Ceremony

You’ll probably want to say something a little different than first-time brides and grooms would. Many people write their own vows.

At the end of the day these are general guidelines and recommendations. The most important thing is that you and your sweetheart are happy and satisfied!

BLAM Fam: Anyone out there considering a vow renewal ceremony? Has the planning being going as you expected?

Nina Callaway is a writer and event planner who has guided many couples through the complicated yet rewarding process of wedding planning. She’s had the joy of being the weddings guide for About.com since 2003. Follow Nina on Twitter.

AYIZE & AIYANA Interviewed By THE FINAL CALL About BLACK MARRIAGE

‘There is a need; there is a hunger in our community for positive images, for real images of Black folks who are in love and committed to each other and committed to building family.’ —Aiyana Ma’at

Where Is The Love: By Starla Muhammad (The Final Call Oct. 4th 2011 Volume 30 # 52)

Though marriages as a whole are on the decline in the United States, successful and thriving marriages between Black men and women do exist and must be uplifted, say Black marriage advocates.

Just ask Ayize and Aiyana Ma’at of Washington, D.C. The former high school sweethearts have been together 15 years, married for eight and are the proud parents of four children. Mr. and Mrs. Ma’at coach and counsel couples and singles by offering life and relationship guidance and advice as well as pre and post-marital counseling through their organization blackloveandmarriage.com. The couple has conducted numerous workshops and classes and say Black marriage today must be rooted in what it actually means to be married.

“Yes, there are some statistics out here that reflect the fact that marriage doesn’t necessarily appear to be in the best shape in the Black community but the reality is that you have a whole bunch of people like ourselves who are out here working trying to restore that image, restore the faith,” Mr. Ma’at told The Final Call.

“You know you have a lot of married couples out here who are actually doing the thing, you know making marriage work and making marriage look good,” he adds. While there may be a large number of Black women and men that are single, there are answers within the Black community to address the issue of marriage, says Mr. Ma’at, a marriage and relationship educator and graduate of Bowie State University.

Part of the problem says, Mrs. Ma’at is that many in the Black community have “bought into this sense of individualism” instead of learning how to persevere and “be part of something that is bigger than ourselves.”

Have Black men and women bought into a manufactured “media-hype” about one another that has helped initiate fin- ger pointing and cause friction with one another? Has this distrust contributed to the fact that over 70 percent of Black children are being raised in single parent households and that marriage among Blacks has declined in recent years?

“Educated Black people are more likely to marry Whites,” “Only 3 ‘Good’ Black men for every 100 Black women,” “Why Are Black Women Less Physically Attractive Than Other Women?” “Why can’t professional Black women find a man?”, “Our men need to step up to the plate” and “The top 10 reasons why it’s hard to date a Black woman,” are just a few out of thousands of articles, online blogs and books that appear aimed at turning Black men and women against one another.

This is by design explains, Ava Muhammad, attorney and a national spokesperson for the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan. “If we can agree that Black marriage is a target, then we can begin to look objectively at how do you go about destroying it. Well, one of the primary things you want to do is make the male and female unattractive to one another,” says Atty. Muhammad.

“By nature we are all born with a genetic preference for our own kind. It’s in your genes to prefer to mate with your own kind and so to go other than that you’d have to actually be made to act in opposition to the nature in which you are created. And so that’s not going to happen unless there is something proactive to make that happen,” she adds.

Atty. Muhammad, a student minister in the Nation of Islam, wife and mother, says with the Black man and women being made “other than themselves,” the natural inclination toward one another has been altered and overcome “by constant artificial barriers between us.”

“You have the Black man with media images and concepts which continually inflict on his brain this idea that his own woman is undesirable. On the side the woman, you have her now being bombarded with this idea that the (Black) man is incapable,” says Atty. Muhammad.

“When it comes to this whole representation in the media that sisters might look outside of the community in order to find love because there’s not a good representation of Black men that are available and willing to step up to the plate, I definitely want to challenge that,” says Mr. Ma’at.

Black men are out here making moves and there are a lot of successful Black men Mr. Ma’at argues. He also challenges the notion that all successful Black men are looking to White women to be in relationships with, saying that 80 percent of Black men that are married, are married to Black women.

The ramifications of this negative propaganda have trickled down into the mindset of Black children and teens and their outlook on marriage; a reflection of what is happening with the older generation points out Mrs. Ma’at, a graduate of Clark Atlanta University and who like her husband is a certified marriage and relationship educator.

In her work with young people, Mrs. Ma’at says they do not have a high regard for marriage because they do not see good examples in their families or communities, something that must change.

“Time and time again when I’ve asked these young people … I’m talking hundreds of young people, most of them, the majority of them say, ‘I don’t have anyone that I can look to that I think has a good marriage, has a good relationship so no, why should I get married? I can just have a baby or we can just go together.’ They are literally saying they’re not seeing it (marriage) around them,” Mrs. Ma’at told The Final Call.

“So we’ve definitely got to focus on our children and being able to give them something to reference in their everyday, real and practical lives,” she adds.

Wedded Bliss Foundation, a community-based organization headquartered in Washington, D.C., is also dedicated to educating the Black community on the purpose and value of marriage. Under the direction of the group’s executive director and founder, Nisa Islam Muhammad, who is also a Final Call staff writer, Wedded Bliss helps teens, singles and couples create healthy relationships and healthy marriages so more children grow up with the benefits of a two-parent family.

Under the direction of Nisa Islam Muhammad, Black Marriage Day was created in 2002 as a way for Black communities around the country to honor, celebrate and promote marriage and family. Observed and celebrated the fourth Sunday of March, Black Marriage Day organizers encourage communities to come up with fun and creative ways to educate the community on “why marriage matters.”

Hosting events like, “First Comes Love” film festivals, inducting couples into a marriage “Hall of Fame” and other activities are a few suggestions offered by Wedded Bliss Foundation to promote marriage in the Black community.

“I try my best to really make marriage look good,” says Mr. Ma’at. “I try to be a representation not just via our social media platform but publicly … I’m proud to wear my ring; I’m proud to hold my wife’s hand; I’m proud to be out and about with my family and I have no problem at all saying that,” he adds.

On the couple’s website and on Youtube are posted over 200 videos where they discuss a variety of relationship issues that help individuals and couples navigate the joys and challenges of marriage. Response to the Ma’at’s online marriage videos has been tremendous they say.

“There is a need; there is a hunger in our community for positive images, for real images of Black folks who are in love and committed to each other and com- mitted to building family and if more people would do it, if more people would just figure out how they can contribute … it could be going and having a conversation with some little girls about marriage and that kind of thing,” says Mrs. Ma’at.

“I think that this is a thing that people want; I know that they want it but it’s just not out here enough. We’re not talk- ing about it enough,” says Mrs. Ma’at.

(This is the second in a two-part series examining Black marriage. Part one appeared in the previous edition of The Final Call.)

Federal Government Awards Nearly $120 Million For Programs That Promote Marriage And Fatherhood!!!

By Team BLAM

The federal government this week announced a new round of funding — nearly $120 million — for programs across the country that promote marriage or fatherhood, an initiative that began under President Bush and has now been continued by President Obama.

The Administration for Children and Families, (ACF), which is part of the Department of Health and Human Services, announced Monday that it was awarding $119.4 million in grants to 120 organizations — $59.9 million for 60 marriage programs and $59.3 million for 60 fatherhood programs.

There happens to be a lot of controversy around whether this much money, if any, should be invested in programs that teach and encourage skills. There are actually a lot of haters that say that Marriage Education & Fatherhood programs are a waste. We, at BLAM, simply don’t agree. The statistics speak for themselves. Our nation–our community needs to be educated and restored when it comes to learning to build satisfying, strong, healthy marriages and families. So, we are ecstatic!

Among the recipients are religious organizations, state departments of family services and nonprofit groups. The maximum grant was $2.5 million, which several organizations received, and the lowest was $338,000 for Youth and Family Services in El Reno,Okla.

“A strong and stable family is the greatest advantage any child can have,” George Sheldon, HHS acting assistant secretary for children and families, said in a press release. “These grants support programs that promote responsible parenting, encourage healthy relationships and marriage, and help families move toward self-sufficiency and economic stability.”

Hats off to President Obama for continuing funding of these worthy programs and desperately needed programs despite the opposition!

Don’t Be Afraid Of Your Struggle: Why Joy & Pain Are Needed To Grow

By Aiyana Ma’at

Struggle. Alot of people don’t like that word. Just look at it ——> STRUGGLE. Just to see it in hard print screams hard times, sadness, tears, uncertainty, sorrow, going without—you get the point. Nobody in their right mind wants to struggle. We’d much prefer the safety of dependable predictable circumstances. We’d much rather focus on the light and happy than the dark and dreary. I’m not totally sure why that is. On some level I think that we don’t want to talk about or focus on things that we’re going through or struggling with because we are afraid of looking too closely. We’re afraid of what we might find.

What if we need to change? What if we’re not as strong as we think we are?

We also wrongly believe that solely focusing on the positive in our lives and the things that we have going for ourselves is the best way to go. This simply is not true. Have you ever heard “The sunshine comes after the rain”? How can you truly appreciate real peace, joy, or victory if you’ve never looked anxiety, pain, or defeat squarely in the face—and then come out on the other side? Of course, we want to primarily look at all that we have to be grateful for in life. That’s a given. So, please understand I know that. BUT, that doesn’t mean we don’t look at and examine the places and things that we struggle in.

How can we grow if we’re not honest about where we need to stretch ourselves? How can we go to the next level if we don’t take an assessment of the level we’re on right now.  How can we truly Stop Playing & Start Pushing if we don’t allow ourselves to feel hurt, sadness, and pain AND THEN IN THE PROCESS BE TRANSFORMED BY THAT SAME PAIN??? The answer: We won’t grow if we’re not intentional about looking at and changing our lives where  we need to. Growth is not automatic. Wisdom does not come with age—it comes with intention & experience.

I, myself, am no stranger to struggle.

I’ve struggled with….

– deep feelings of abandonment created by my, now deceased, biological father’s “on again, off again” status in my life growing up

– forgiving that same father so I can be free to become all that God has created me to be

-accepting how powerful I really am

-trusting men including my hubby in the past (because of my own stuff)

-low self esteem and a need to be approved of and okay with people

-comparing myself to others

-controlling the impulse to judge others (which says more about me than it does other folks)

-being a late-a-holic C.P.T. (ya’ll know what I’m talking about)

– fear of pursuing my biggest and brightest dreams that reside deep within my soul

-being selfish in my marriage

And I’m sure I could think of some more stuff If I tried.  BUT GUESS WHAT????

I just painted a little picture for you of some of the places where I’ve struggled (and in some places still do)…..But, if you persist through your struggle and commit to staying the course you can have some sweet sweet joy.

I, myself, am no stranger to joy.

I’ve experienced perspective, life changing, and mind altering joy…..

-the day I realized that no matter how cracked and broken some parts of me are my husband really sees me. He sees all that I truly  am and have yet to be versus viewing me through the lens of my broken places.

-when I finally understood how to truly listen to people and figure out how I can serve them instead of serving my own agenda or needs.

-when I realized that deferring in my marriage and lifting my husband up in my marriage only adds to my growth and maturity and in no way takes away from me.

-when I’ve given to someone seeking nothing in return.

the moment I accepted that there is nothing I can do to make myself “good enough” and that I AM already enough just because I exist!

– when I push(ed) past fear and doubt and really looked at what God has uniquely placed in me to share with the world. When I did/do that there is no more room  for me to compare myself with other folks. Nothing can compare with what I’m called to do…just as nothing can compare with what God has called you (and only you) to do.

-when I learned that the biggest part of learning to trust someone else is learning to TRUST MYSELF FIRST.

-when I released myself from my own judgement of myself which automatically made me more compassionate and less judging of other folk

-when I allow myself to be completely vulnerable despite my fear

What I’m trying to get you to see, if nothing else, from this article is this: A whole lot of the deep satisfaction, mind blowing happiness, and sweet successes we get to experience in life come ONLY as a result of our allowing ourselves to talk about and learn from the hard times and the stuff that sucks. One of the things people say they really appreciate about BlackLoveAndMarriage.com is the fact that not only are we committed to transforming the image and understanding of marriage and commitment in our community but we’re also not afraid to talk about the painful things that we as a people need to look at—we will never shy away from looking at both sides of the coin when it comes to black men, black women, black children or our relationships. That is the only way to experience true growth, insight, joy, and peace.

So, don’t be afraid of your struggle. It is here to transform and liberate you.

Stop Playing. Start Pushing.

Aiyana Ma’at is the wife of Ayize Ma’at, mom of 4, and co-founder and owner of this website, BlackLoveAndMarriage.com, as well as PurposePusher.com. Aiyana is a Seeker, Motivator, Risk Taker, Explorer, & Overcomer. She is a self-described PurposePusher and does her best to live her life with self-awareness and intention. Some of her official titles include licensed psycho-therapist, certified marriage educator & relationship coach and speaker. She is clear that a part of the call on her life is to help bring insight and awareness to others so that they can “get out of their own way” and create the lives they want to have.

My Wife Is The Worst Workout Partner In The World

By Ayize Ma’at

I love my wife dearly. My wife is my best friend, my soulmate, my confidant, my lover, my cheerleader, my everything. My everything EXCEPT a good workout partner. My wife is the WORST workout partner in the world. I love you Queen, but I’m putting you out there cause there’s some things I need to get off my chest.

Yall are probably thinking “C’mon Ayize, is she really that bad?” YES!!! Whether it be her flat out refusals to do anything we agree on in our workout OR using her body as a weapon of mass distraction, in my mind my wife easily captures the title WORST Workout Partner In The World. You don’t believe me? Let me tell you how a workout usually goes.

Ayize: Baby you wanna go outside and workout?
Aiyana: Yeah, we can do that. How cold is it?
Ayize: Whateva the temp is we can dress for the weather?
Aiyana: You might be white, but I ain’t white…and if it’s cold I’ll pass?
Ayize: What?
Aiyana: What’s the temperature?
Ayize: (Sigh) 64 degrees
Aiyana: That’s cold
Ayize: Put some damn clothes on and c’mon
Aiyana: What?
Ayize: C’mon Boo
Aiyana: Ugghhhhhhhhh

So eventually we get outside yall (I’m in my T-shirt, Aiyana’s in her trench coat with the collar pulled up around her neck)

Ayize: Boo what are you doin’….put on something different
Aiyana: It’s cold out here mutha freaker
Ayize: Ughhhh

So we start walking……and on a 3 mile route we’re probably about 6 blocks in

Ayize: Can we run 1 block?
Aiyana: No
Ayize: C’mon Boo…just 1 block
Aiyana: No
Ayize: Boo
Aiyana: We’re walking fast enough
Ayize: I’m not sweating…I need to get a good sweat on
Aiyana: I’m not running…u can run but I ain’t running
Ayize: Ughhhhhh

So we end up walking the remaining 3 miles BECAUSE MY WIFE REFUSES TO RUN!!!

When we’re inside and it’s warm and Aiyana is comfortable I ain’t gotta worry about Aiyana being dressed in winter gear in 64 degree weather. My issues are slightly different when we’re working out at home. For instance:

When it’s time to workout, Aiyana enters the family room in a pair of tights that of course get my attention. She usually has this smirk on her face that lets me know that the workout I intend to have is not the workout I’m gonna have. I’m serious…I’m focussed….I’m determined to get a good sweat, burn some calories, and lose some pounds. Can I do that….NO…at least not when my wife is around.

Ayize: Baby let’s do some Tabatas
Aiyana: What n the hell are Tabatas?
Ayize : several rounds of exercises consisting of 20 seconds of activity and 10 seconds of rest
Aiyana: How bout Billie Blanks instead?
Ayize: No Boo…follow my lead…we’re gonna start off with front kicks
Aiyana: Ughhh

So we start off with front kicks and midway through the first set Aiyana’s front kick begins metamorphosis and somehow ends up becoming the 2 Step.

Ayize: Boo..it’s a front kick NOT A DANCE STEP!!
Aiyana: Look at me boo look at me…. do it with me.
Ayize: Aiyana STOP PLAYIN Man!!
Aiyana: and 1and 2 and 1 and 2 and 1 and 2 …..u gotta move your shoulders like this when you do it
Ayize: Boo…You blowin’ me.
Aiyana: Why you getting’ mad?
Ayize: (silence)

So we move to squats. Now mind you I’m tryin’ my best to keep a straight face and be serious HOWEVER toward the end of our squat routine Aiyana’s squats begin looking like she’s auditioning for T Pain’s BootyWork video. She just can’t be serious.

This is what I go through yall when I’m trying to get a good sweat on. This is why my wife is the WORST workout partner in the world. The workout I have in mind ain’t the type of workout she wants to have…she’s not serious, she’s on joketime, she’s satisfied with being silly, and she’s seeking a different type of sweat. #Weapons of Mass Distraction

Despite the frustration I feel when I’m working out with my wife…she’ll always be the first person I pick to work out with. And then I’ll move on to someone else…LOL.  I love my wife dearly. My wife is my best friend, my soulmate, my confidant, my lover, and my cheerleader.  Simply put….she’s my everything.

Ayize Ma’at is Co-founder and President of B Intentional, LLC, the Relationship Education company that owns and operates Blackloveandmarriage.com, the premiere cutting edge Marriage and Family web publication with the largest collection of love and marriage advice videos for African Americans. He is a Marriage & Relationship Educator certified in various Singles and Marriage Education curriculums and has a passion for inspiring others to grow and gain a deeper understanding of love. He is a devoted husband and the proud father of 4 amazing children.

In The Still Of The Night- Brother Jamil’s Music Moment

We at BLAM recognize everyone is special.  Everyone possesses unique gifts and abilities that if embraced and actualized would bring brighter days to our lives.  One person that we personally know, love, and are proud to have as a part of the B Intentional family has shined a light in our lives ever since we met him.  His name is Brother Jamil Muhammad.  Not only is he an expert orator, but he also has a vast musical vocabulary that leaves many people speechless.   So we’ve chosen to give him the stage and shine the light on his hand picked musical selections because we feel they will bring light and life to our viewers.  Enjoy Brother Jamil’s Music Moment

Salaams, Y’all….If you got it, you just GOT it. It is an indictment of the existing structure of the entertainment industry that some “singers” are rich and famous, while these brothers toil in relative obscurity in the catacombs of Gotham City…Can you dig it?

Brother Jamil Muhammad is a dedicated Marriage Educator and an avid fan of music in all its forms. He created the award-winning couples’ curriculum “Making Music in Your Marriage” and is committed to the use of music to put and keep passion and excitement in your marriage (reach him at www.weddedblissinc.com or at 202 696 5150

In The Spirit Of Black Love…Can We Ever “Bury” The N-Word?

By Ayize Ma’at

During my matriculation at Bowie State University, I was an outspoken opponent against the use of the n-word.  I participated in several spoken word events where I firmly expressed my disapproval and disdain for a word which I believed had outlived it’s historical necessity.  Initially, embracing the word nigger may have been an appropriate coping mechanism meant to minimize psychological scars from slavery.  Unfortunately, the consequence of adopting maladaptive behaviors to deal with a hostile environment may be more injurious than they are uplifting because they leave you with habits of holding on to “useless stuff” when it should’ve been let go a long time ago.  Instead of remixing the word (nigger into nigga) how bout we release the word and replace it with two words that also have two syllables “brotha” and “sista”.  I believe once a “nigga”, always a “nigga” ….unless you stop calling yourself “nigga”.  Brotha’s and Sista’s…. Stop Playin’ and Start Pushin’.

In the excerpt below from TheGrio.com Tammie Lang Campbell, founder and executive director of the Honey Brown Hope Foundation makes her position about the n-word clear: No one should be using it. Period. In an interview with the CBS affiliate KENS 5 in San Antonio, the Houston native explained, “We do a disservice to our fore-parents, to ourselves, to our mothers and fathers, to our children to use that word or to accept anyone using it.”  She along with many others share the common belief that eradicating the n-word from our vocabularies would bring about a dramatic shift in how we relate to each other, how we relate to the world, and how the world relates to us.  CLICK HERE to read more from The Grio.

BLAM Fam what do you think?  In the spirit of black love…can we ever “bury” the n-word?

Do You And Your Boo Have A Theme Song?

By Aiyana Ma’at

Do you have a song that makes you stop whatever you’re doing, put that pen or pencil down, turn the stove off for a second (so you don’t burn what you’re cooking) or tell that person you’re on the phone with that you gotta hit them back? Does the music slowly overtake you in such a way that you can’t help but to start moving your head, your hips, and snapping your fingers?

Maaaaan! If you don’t YOU NEED TO GET ONE! I’ve got a few but one of my most favoritest (I know it ain’t a word but I’m using it!) songs in the whole wide world that literally forces me onto my feet and into my imaginary world where I’m onstage and in the groove is “There’ll Never Be” by Switch.

Lawd! I looove that song and by virtue of my love for it-it it is now an automatic head bopper for the love of my life, Ayize. What started out as my super special song has become a theme song in our house that makes us stop, look at each other and start grooving. Me..all over the floor dancing, swaying, and crooning. Hubby….sitting, head bopping, snapping, and looking (at me that is). It is our cue to connect. It is our permission to let it all hang out for a few minutes. It is (one of) our theme songs and as small as that may seem it is one of the fundamental reasons we are as close and in love as we are. Some folks may say C’mon, it’s really not that serious…..but we know better.

Stop Playing. Start pushing.

How Does A Baby Change A Marriage?

By Sally aka Mrs. Trophy Wife

When you’re pregnant for the first time, everyone gives you the side-eye and says, “This baby is going to change your life and your marriage forever. FOREVER.” In cynical tones, they describe the horrors of nighttime feedings, the distance you feel from your spouse, the way this child is going to be your entire world, and how things will never, ever be the same.

And they’re right…in some ways. But what I really wish is that the cynical tones and horror stories would stop. It’s almost as though society sets up us for failure in our marriages after a child is born. A picture is painted of the incredible difficulty in raising a child AND being a wife, and no one talks about the beautiful aspects. When the rare person comes along and says that they prefer this life to their previous one, everyone thinks they’re lying.

I clearly remember being 37-weeks-pregnant and laying in bed with Braxton Hicks contractions. I was timing them and watching the TV on mute as Taylor slept. He had just driven four hours from Savannah to see me. I was already living with my parents in anticipation for Sully’s big arrival, and Taylor was gearing up for his impending deployment in a mere three weeks. I was absolutely terrified. I’d heard how hard a child is on a marriage. I’d heard how hard a deployment is on a marriage. How in the world were we going to survive both at the same time? I didn’t have much time to think on it because my water broke the next week, and suddenly, we found ourselves in the throes of new parenthood and reality.

I won’t lie and say that it was super easy at first. I was incredibly emotional, and every little word or action could set me off. Taylor laughed while I pumped breastmilk for the first time, and I almost burst into tears. Um, of course he laughed. That shit is funny looking. But after a couple days, we settled into our routine. Taylor would wake up every morning and make me pancakes with Sully on his arm while I napped. I’d take Sully mid-morning while Taylor ran to the gym. Then, we made time to focus on us.

And therein lies the key.

So simple, right? Focus on each other.

But it’s so hard. This new, tiny being is your world. Truly. In every sense, this baby depends on you…for love, for life, for food and shelter. For EVERYTHING, while your spouse is self-sufficient. Your husband can fix his own dinner. He doesn’t need his butt wiped. He doesn’t vomit on you after every meal. He doesn’t look to you to swaddle him and rock him to sleep. He can provide for himself. He has his own wants and needs. And there it goes…you let your focus on his slip through the cracks because he doesn’t need you like this baby does. He feels your focus redirect towards your child, and while he probably finds it beautiful, it also makes him distance himself some. He gives you some space. Steps in when you ask. But slowly and surely, your connection fades.

Ten years down the road, you look at him from across the kitchen table and think, “I don’t even know this man.” All you have in common are the children because they are all you’ve paid attention to for the past ten years.

But it doesn’t have to be that way. Yes, this child and all that follow will require more time and attention that you can imagine. Yes, they need you, but so does your spouse. And you need him. And your child needs a loving, stable family. Taylor and I decided that nothing is more important for Sully and Baby Dos that showing them a mommy and daddy that are in love, that will be there for each other, and that will always provide a comfortable, safe home for them. I don’t want my children growing up to think that screaming, yelling, and being hurtful is the way that a mommy and daddy should fight. Of course, they’ll see us argue at some point. But we have promised to never hurl words like stones and say things we’ll regret. I’m not just blowing smoke up Taylor’s ass. He truly has stepped up to the plate to be an amazing husband and father.

We met at eighteen and nineteen.  We will be parents for the second time at twenty-four and twenty-five. Are we the same people we were when we met? Of course not. But instead of growing apart, we’ve grown together. We’ve shaped each other. Our lives have been on the fast track, and I can hear people snickering now. “Just wait. In ten years, you’ll be as jaded as everyone else.”

But I disagree. Time and age are not the issues. The focus on our marriage, on each other, our needs; those are the issues. We check in with each other. “What do you need from me? What can I do to help you? Are you happy?” Is our marriage perfect? No. And anyone who thinks they have the perfect marriage is probably doomed to fail because they don’t believe their marriage needs work. All marriages need work. EVERYDAY. And people that say a good marriage shouldn’t need work are kidding themselves. Because work is what makes a good marriage. Without it? You have a rift that will just continue to grow. A marriage cannot run itself. I think, unfortunately, media today teaches us that it can. And when times get tough, that’s when you make a break for it.

I never want that for me, my husband, or my children. My husband is my world. My children are my life. And I vow to all them that I’m here for the long run and will always, always be the mama and wife they need from me. And in return? I get an amazing, thoughtful, husband and hopefully, children that understand the love and respect required for a functional relationship.

Again, our marriage is not perfect. I’m not here to tell anyone what they need to do to fix their own marriage. But hopefully, my words can provide a little hope to the mom-to-be, the new mom, or maybe a wife that’s feeling like there’s no hope in her own relationship. There is. It takes work, time, and commitment from both parties, but there’s always hope where there is love.

Sally aka Mrs. Trophy Wife is a twenty-four-year old, crunchy mama to two-under-two, and married to the love of her life. Visit her at her blog Military Mama where she tells the story of her crazy life as one-half of a military couple as they flounder through raising two crazy boys.

Are Black Women Invisible? Domestic Violence In The Black Community…It’s Real As A Heart Attack

By Nsenga Burton/TheRoot.com

Have you ever heard of Margaret “Missy” Allen or Nikki McPhatter? In July of 2008, attorney Margaret “Missy” Allen was killed by a boyfriend who was a former client. Calvin McKelton was found guilty of strangling Allen and then dumping her body in Cincinnati’s East End. He was also found guilty in the shooting death of Germaine Evans. Prosecutors said Evans was killed because he was going to testify against McKelton. Even with the salacious details surrounding this case — a defense attorney murdered by her former client and boyfriend — the case got scant coverage in the media.

Margaret Missy Allen

How about Nikki McPhatter? In 2009, the Charlotte, N.C.-based U.S. Airways employee had gone to South Carolina to break off a relationship with her boyfriend, Theodore Manning IV, whom she had met online. Manning shot her in the back of the head, called another girlfriend to help him dispose of McPhatter’s body, put her lifeless body in her car, set it on fire, and then went home and had sex with said girlfriend. You might have missed the case, since the media was focused on Bonnie Sweeten, the 38-year-old crackpot and Philadelphia mom who told police that she and her daughter had been abducted by two black men, when in fact she had taken her daughter to Disney World. This woman’s lies prompted a national search and media frenzy, while McPhatter’s body lay burning in her car. No one knew McPhatter’s whereabouts for weeks, and the national media did not get involved in the search, as they did with Sweeten, who was actually lying.

Nikki McPhatter

Black women who are the victims of domestic violence that results in murder rarely receive the national media coverage that white women who are murdered as a result of domestic violence do. To be fair, a lot of women are murdered whose local stories do not become national stories, but local stories about missing black women or victims of domestic violenence rarely get elevated to national headlines. Do we have to be blond, pregnant, married or housewives to get coverage? We get coverage when it comes to disease, death, getting butt implants and being unable to find a man, but not when we are victims of domestic violence.

Both of these cases went to trial during Domestic Violence Awareness Month, yet few have heard of these stories, both of which have all of the details needed for national coverage. The point is, if you haven’t heard of these two women, you should have. You probably didn’t, because black women who are victims of domestic violence are largely invisible in the media, unless we’re an international recording star being beaten up by another international recording star. That is the continued tragedy of domestic violence and how it impacts black women. Nobody is checking for us — at least the “regular” folks.

Source: The Root

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