Would you be surprised to learn that one of the things your husband most needs from you is your ability to help him?
Men
want a connection just like we do. They want a partnership, a teammate,
a helper to enthusiastically come alongside them and make their lives
brighter, better, and easier. That’s the way they (men) were designed.
And that’s why we (women) were designed.
Genesis
2:18 tells us the reason we, as women, were created:“The Lord God said,
‘It is not good for the man to be alone. I will make a helper suitable
for him’ because for Adam no suitable helper was found.” God designed a
perfect counterpart – not a clone – to help the man work, play, think,
decide, enjoy life, and grow old with. God even took the man’s rib to
make the woman who was designed to be, literally, at his side. God’s
plan was that the two work together, shoulder-to-shoulder, complement
one another, and balance each other with their unique strengths.
God
did not create Eve to be Adam’s mother or his maid. Nor to be his
supervisor, nor his doormat. He made her to ultimately be his helper. As
I was writing my book, 12 Ways to Experience More with Your Husband, I
asked numerous wives how they help their husbands, and I also asked many
husbands to chime in on how they are best helped by their wives.
Below is the advice they offered and it amounts to ways you can be your husband’s number 1 helper as a good wife:
1. Be his teammate.
While
it’s been said that men tend toward independence and autonomy, I have
yet to meet a man who doesn’t want a teammate. And when that teammate is
his wife, he can rest assured knowing she is working toward the same
goal as him.
Approach him about areas he might feel isolated in
and let him know you’re on his team. Is he bearing some stress over the
family finances? Offer to help him come up with a budget or tell him
“Let’s work together on this.” Is he struggling with a huge
responsibility at work? Ask him “How can I be on your support team once
you get home?” Is he trying to lose weight or manage his health? Offer
to join him in activities that will help him meet his goals. Every man
wants a teammate at some point in the process. Ask yours how you can be a
part of his team even it it’s just to be on the sidelines and cheer him
on.
2. Offer him “wife support.”
My husband, Hugh,
offered some insight on how men most want help from their wives. Having
ministered to men for nearly 30 years – including leading small-group
sessions where men talked about their innermost desires when it came to
life, their wives, and their life’s goals – Hugh offered this: “Husbands
want ‘wife support’ just like someone who is having difficulty
breathing needs ‘life support.’”
Hugh explained that one of the
ways a wife can show support to her husband and truly help him out is to
trust him when he wants to take a risk. “When he says ‘let’s do this’
and you haven’t calculated the risks, costs and other factors, realize
he desires to live spontaneously and adventurously.
“When he
says ‘trust me on this one’ he might not have all the details, he might
not be able to explain why, just trust him. Women call it a sixth sense
but men call it a gut feeling. If he says ‘I’m going with my gut’,
indulge him. Trust his male instinct at times. By doing that, you are
helping him out.”
3. Anticipate his needs.
Helping
your husband is not just about seeing to it that the children have what
they need. It’s about making sure you are helping your husband
personally by anticipating his needs and coming through for him.
“My
husband is a very simple, practical man,” a wife of five years told me.
“The little things are what he values. He feels loved through my acts
of service, especially when I do the dishes and his laundry. If he comes
home and these things aren’t done, he feels stress that he’ll need to
find time to do them. Yet, if these chores are completed when he comes
home from work, he feels loved. I don’t always have a clean kitchen, but
when I have done the simple act of cleaning up before he gets home, I
know I am showing love by helping my husband.”
4. Help him date you.
If
you and your husband don’t ever “date” because you are waiting on his
suggestion or initiation, give that up. You be the one who initiates.
Yes, in a perfect world your husband would do that and thereby make you
feel cherished. But you are his helper. And one way you can help him is
to schedule activities that the two of you would like to do that he most
likely wants to but hasn’t gotten around to planning yet.
If
your husband is one who is all talk and no action, he is needing you to
put the plans together and make it happen. If he doesn’t talk at all
about dating, perhaps he needs to be reminded that he has a wife who
still wants to date him. When we make the first move, chances are
they’ll appreciate it (and get the hint how to do it the next time
around).
5. Practice random acts of kindness.
Debbie,
a busy wife who hosts a radio show and works long hours, says when she
helps her husband, it pulls them closer together.
“I believe the
secret to our strength as a couple is truly living out Philippians 2:4 –
“do not merely look out for your own personal interests, but also for
the interests of others” (NASB) – where we both strive to consider each
other’s interest, not just our own! So, I intentionally go out of my way
to help my husband, encourage my husband, and do little random acts of
kindness every day.
“For example, when I can see my husband is
getting frustrated with a computer project, I drop what I’m doing and
assist him. When I notice that he’s feeling a bit discouraged, I drop
what I’m doing and sit down with him to listen to what has happened
during his day, and then I remind him of all the good qualities I see in
him. When he fasts on Tuesdays (in preparation for evening ministry), I
make him his favorite food, so that when he comes home late that night,
he’ll be treated to a terrific meal.”
Helping your husband like
that will most likely encourage him to help you, as well. Debbie said
“I now find my husband does little random acts of kindness every day for
me, too.”
6. Help him spiritually.
When God said He
would make a helper suitable for Adam (Genesis 2:18), God used the same
word that describes the role and ministry of the Holy Spirit in the New
Testament. The Holy Spirit is called our helper – and He is also our
counselor, comforter, intercessor, and advocate. The Hebrew word
translated helper in Genesis 2:18 can also be translated as one who
brings unique strengths and qualities to the other. These qualities,
found only in the woman, complete the union between man and woman. This
word is also used in the Old Testament in reference to God Himself in
Psalm 54:4, where David tells us that God is our helper. God was giving
your man someone who was designed to act, in some ways, as his
counselor, comforter, intercessor, and advocate.
Think about the
beauty of that. You were designed to be your husband’s helper – both
spiritually and otherwise. That means your discernment – that “sixth
sense” you get when you feel like something is wrong but you can’t put
your finger on it, your caution and practical advice when it comes to
finances, your conviction about something that he doesn’t yet see –
could all be attributed to the way you were wired by God to be your
husband’s helper.
Be his God-appointed helper with the finances
(if that’s your strong point), with the kids, with his goals, with this
health – not like a mother who hovers, but like a companion who covers.
You can cover him with your discernment, your prayers, your care, and
your love.
[written by Cindi McMenamin]