A client of mine has a wife who’s “organizationally challenged.” (She would agree.) He, on the other hand, leans toward OCD when it comes to keeping their home clean and picked up. A few days ago, he organized his daughter’s bedroom from top to bottom. The next morning he noticed her washed and folded laundry sitting on the dresser. His wife had placed it there instead of sorting it into the drawers. He emailed me: “She totally disregards the work I do around here! She could care less that I spent over an hour cleaning our daughter’s bedroom last night. She’s determined to keep us living in squalor! How will we ever dig ourselves out of this hole when she keeps digging a deeper one?!” Obviously, this has been an ongoing issue. I asked him: “When Lisa ‘messes up’ the bedroom you just cleaned and you feel irritated and bothered, what’s the story you’re telling yourself?” Think about it ... The sight of clothes on a dresser doesn’t have the power to irritate us, but the meaning we attach to it does. The story we tell ourselves does.
It's not things that upset us, it's our judgment about things. (Epictetus)
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I was a mediocre husband for 15 years. Today, I teach husbands how to avoid the mistakes I made. How to grow and become great men. The kind their wives swoon over. New content delivered monthly. 👊🏼
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