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Why Trying Harder Is Hurting Your Marriage
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Most people think a better marriage requires more discipline. More patience, effort, or self-control. But what if discipline isn't creating the closeness you're looking for? In this video, Rabbi Josh Zebberman explains why many couples work incredibly hard on their relationship and still feel disconnected—and what actually creates connection, intimacy, and genuine closeness. If you're tired of trying harder and getting nowhere, this video is for you. 📅 Schedule a consultation: rabbijosh.org 📧 Join my weekly newsletter: https://substack.com/@joshzebberman #Marriage #Relationships #MarriageAdvice #Couples #JewishRelationships #Connection #Communication #RelationshipAdvice
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Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
There's one word that a lot of people
think would help their marriage, but
it's actually hurting your marriage. You
know what that one word is? Discipline.
Because people keep expecting discipline
to create something it was never
designed to create. People think that if
they are more disciplined in their
relationship or if their spouse is more
disciplined in their relationship,
they're going to feel more closeness,
connection, intimacy. And by the end of
this video, you're going to understand
why some couples work incredibly hard on
the relationship and still feel
disconnected.
What's missing? What can you do instead?
If you ever thought that I need to be
more patient
or my spouse needs to be more patient,
we need to work harder. We need to be
pushing harder and putting in more
effort. and you find that not working,
this video is for you because I want to
offer you a different way of looking at
relationships that will change how you
approach them entirely. So you could
position yourself to actually feel more
connected to be the kind of person who
becomes a source of connection rather
than a source of frustration. Most
people assume that happy couples are
simply more disciplined. they show up
and do things more often for each other
in a very disciplined way. It's just not
true, man. And once you see why, you'll
understand why there's so many couples
who are trying to work harder rather
than work smarter in the relationships
and it just doesn't work. They don't
feel connected. My name is Josh Zerman
and I work with individuals and couples
who want to feel closer, more connected,
and more hopeful in their relationships.
And one thing I've noticed is that
people often confuse the outcome with
the cause. Think about the person who
loses 50 pounds.
It was really hard for them to take that
weight off and they they finally did it.
You see them making intentional food
choices. You see them exercising. You
see them walking more. You see the
consistency. And most people will call
that discipline. You're not actually
seeing discipline. What you're seeing is
the result of something much deeper.
You're seeing motivation. You're seeing
a meaningful reason to be disciplined to
keep that weight off. You might not know
what that meaningful reason is by
looking at them. But what is compelling
them to actually be disciplined is
something much deeper. Maybe they want
to feel healthier. Maybe they want more
confidence or energy. Maybe they're
tired of feeling uncomfortable.
in their own body. What creates the
consistency is the desire. And what you
see is the discipline. And we do the
exact same thing in relationships, guys.
We see a happy couple. We see patience.
We see kindness,
affection. We see them making time for
each other. Oh, you guys are
disciplined, aren't you? But that's not
what's happening. Discipline helps you
like control yourself. It helps you bite
your tongue when you shouldn't be saying
something. That could be good sometimes.
Maybe that will prevent things from
getting worse. Sometimes discipline
alone will not create intimacy.
Discipline has a context. And if you
have discipline without the meaningful
context, which is the meaningful reason,
the meaningful motivation, it's going to
be very dry, very fake. It's going to
crumble very quickly. It's actually
going to make you feel further rather
than closer. If every conversation with
your spouse requires you to be
disciplined and edit yourself, if you're
constantly monitoring every word,
forcing yourself to be patient, you
should be patient, but if you're forcing
it, you might prevent some arguments.
What you'll probably be preventing is a
relationship. There's going to be nobody
to talk to. That might keep things civil
on the outside. That is not closest.
That's management. Nobody wants to be in
a relationship where they feel managed
even by themselves. Management does have
its place. But that is not intimacy.
That is not closeness. That is not
depth. If you want to have intimacy, if
you want depth in your relationship, you
need to show up in a way that is
authentic.
You have to have authentic interest. You
have to present a version of yourself
that your spouse is genuinely interested
in seeing. And very often people don't
just think they need more discipline.
They also think their spouse needs more
discipline. My spouse needs to make more
time for me. My spouse needs to be a
better listener. My spouse needs to show
more affection.
That might be true, but you're not
looking for discipline. That's not what
you want. Do you actually want your
spouse forcing themselves to spend time
with you when when they're not
interested? Do you want them forcing
themselves to ask how your day was as if
they're reading off a script? Do you
want them acting interested because
there's this obligation and what's going
to happen to you if they don't do it? Or
do you want them to genuinely care? What
you actually want is not a more
disciplined spouse. You want a spouse
who's interested. And the way you
attract a spouse who is interested, one
of the ways is presenting a version of
yourself that your spouse is interested
in. By the way, if you're listening to
this and realizing that you've spent a
lot of time trying to figure out how to
get your spouse to change or how to get
yourself to change, you feel like your
relationship is not going where you need
to go. Reach out to me. Look in the show
notes. There'll be a link to schedule a
30-inut consultation and I'll walk you
through exactly how I help couples that
are in your situation. The goal isn't
becoming more disciplined. The goal is
becoming more interested. Interested in
understanding your spouse, interested in
creating a relationship you enjoy being
in, interested in becoming the kind of
person that your spouse actually wants
to be around. the kind of person that
attracts a version of your spouse that's
interested in you, like when you first
got married. Because when something
becomes meaningful enough, many of the
behaviors people call discipline,
actually happen naturally.
Discipline is the outcome of a
meaningful reason, not the cause that
creates meaning. I want you to imagine
you come home from work one day and
instead of sitting in the car on your
driveway scrolling through your phone
because you're afraid to walk through
the door because you're just exhausted
from your relationship and it feels like
work to go home and it feels like home
when you're at work. Instead of doing
that, somehow you decided to walk
through the door as a version of
yourself that you were proud of for your
spouse to see. a version of yourself
that you know your spouse
takes more interest in. What would be
the first thing your spouse would
notice?
What would he or she see in you? What
would make you smile if they noticed
that quality in you? And if you saw the
positive impacts of displaying that
quality and you somehow began to do it
more often, what would you hope to
notice starts changing in your
relationship and in your interactions
with your spouse? By the way, if you
think communication is the biggest
problem in your relationship, watch this
next video because most couples spend
years trying to improve communication
and never get the closeness they're
looking for. Communication is where the
problem shows up. It's not the problem
itself. And in this video, I'm going to
show you what's exactly driving this
connection underneath the communication
struggles. And once you see it, you
won't be able to unsee it. And I'm
excited to see what that might do for
your relationship.